5 Manly Sports That Will Seriously Kick Your Ass

Mainstream sport can be pretty tame. Although there are some big hits in American football, the players have more padding than a teenage girl in a training bra. In Europe, soccer players will collapse to the floor in apparent agony at the slightest hint of physical contact. Here, we like to see sports that challenge men to push themselves beyond the mental, emotional, and physical boundaries of these rather soft sporting occasions.

With this in mind we have scoured the four corners of the globe to find our favorite manly sports that will literally kick your ass.

Sepik War Canoe Racing in Papua New Guinea

What is it?

Exactly what it says. Competitors have to race 14km upstream while standing in a canoe in the finale to the War Canoe & Kundu Festival. In terms of flow, the Sepik River is one of the largest in the world, just to make it a bit more challenging.

Why is it so manly?

Forget for a second about the crocodiles and other dangerous creatures lurking in the river and focus on the race itself. Have you ever tried standing up in a canoe? It’s not as easy as it looks to keep your balance! Add that to the fact that you’ve then got to row yourself almost 9 miles against a very strong current and you’re looking at a very grueling afternoons work ahead of you. To complete the race you’ll need balance, stamina and the mental strength to continue when you really don’t want to.

Nguni Stick Fighting in South Africa

What is it?

This is a martial art practiced by young men in South Africa. Combatants are armed with two long sticks. One is used for defending blows and the other is used to whack your opponent without mercy until they bleed or give up from the pain.

Why is it so manly?

Didn’t you hear what we just said? You hit your opponent with unrelenting fury until they either bleed in copious amounts or give up due to the extreme pain of being repeatedly battered across the shins with a long stick. The Zulu guys are hardcore. They wear no armor or protective padding. They are also looking to develop this into a recognized martial art with rules and competitions so look out for an Nguni stick fighting school near you soon.

Laamb Wrestling in Senegal

What is it?

It’s a Senegalese martial art that combines orthodox wrestling with bare-knuckle boxing. Traditionally, young men fought to prove their manliness, court the ladies and bring honor to their village. Nowadays, they fight for money.

Why is it so manly?

Well, aside from the funny dancing the competitors perform prior to the fight, it’s a true display of strength and courage. You have to beat your opponent down so that both knees or his back are touching the ground. This is done by punching them constantly with bare-knuckles and then flinging them around like a rag doll in the hands of a devilish 6 year-old girl. Proper macho mano-a-mano alpha male type shenanigans.

Self-Transcendence 3,100 Mile Race in Jamaica

What is it?

Well it’s a 3,100 mile race around a track in Queens, Jamaica of course. What were you expecting from that title?

Why is it so manly?

Strictly speaking, it could be womanly too – seeing as more than one woman has completed the course. Regardless, it’s manly because runners must complete 5,649 laps of a .5488 of a mile course in a mere 51 days. That equates to about 61 miles a day, every day, for almost two months. You’ll need tremendous courage, physical stamina, concentration and the capacity to endure fatigue and boredom. You might also need to rest your feet for a while before going back to your 9-to-5.

The Tough Guy Survival Course in England

What is it?

It’s an endurance race based just 30 minutes from our HQ (that we had never heard of until researching for this article) that involves an eight-mile cross country run before being faced with an obstacle course requiring ‘the athletes‘ to crawl under barbed wire, run over burning bales of hay, swim in underwater tunnels full of icy water and negotiate their way through underground pipes.

Why is it so manly?

You mean besides the regular broken legs and bouts of hypothermia? Well, according to the Tough Guy organizer Billy Wilson, there is no other one day survival course as grueling as his. The closest, he says, is the Navy S.E.A.L’s ‘Grinder’ Assault Course but even that pales in comparison to the Tough Guy circuit. Don’t believe it? Check out the website and decide for yourself.

If you’ve uncovered a sport or physical activity more brutal than these then please let us know in the comments. We enjoy nothing more than seeing grown men beating each other to death or weeping from exhaustion and dehydration. Sadistic, we know.

10 Of The World’s Smallest Things

World’s Smallest Gun

The SwissMiniGun is the size of a key fob but fires tiny 270mph bullets powerful enough to kill at close range.

Officially the world’s smallest working revolver, the gun is being marketed as a collector’s item and measures just 2.16 inches long (5.5cm). It can fire real 4.53 bullets up to a range of 367ft (112m).
The stainless steel gun costs £3,000 although the manufacturers also produce extravagant, made-to-order versions made out of 18-carat gold with customised diamond studs which sell for up to £30,000.

World’s Smallest Fish

The world’s smallest fish has been discovered in the peat swamps of the Indonesian Island of Sumatra. The picture on the right shows its size against a thumb. At maturity, the fish can be about 7.9 mm in length.

World’s Smallest Teddy Bear

At 5mm tall, this teddy bear by German artist Bettina Kaminski is the World’s Smallest Teddy Bear. Definitely one teddy bear that every little girl wishes for.

World’s Smallest Horse

Thumbelina, officially the world’s smallest horse stands at an astounding 17 inches tall. She was born on a farm in America to a couple specialising in breeding miniature horses. Thumbelina was a dwarf among the dwarves, which her owner calls it a complete fluke. Normal horses lives to about 35 years while she is only likely to live for 17 years.

World’s Smallest Dog

Tiny Pinnochio is possibly the world’s smallest dog weighing at one pound and only the size of a coke can. She had been on Oprah’s show in the past and rose to stardom. However she is not alive anymore where her owner found her dead after overeating herself to death. Here is the rant of mudpiglet regarding the ordeal of the dog.

World’s Smallest Burger

This is a real edible cheeseburger made with real miniature buns and complete with a micro portion of fries…

World’s Smallest Baby

Meet Amillia Taylor – or what she looked like on October 24th 2006 , when she was born as the world’s youngest surviving premature baby. Amillia was born at a Miami hospital after less than 22 weeks of development. Is there nothing more amazing than those teeny tiny translucent feet. Hold your own hand out in front of you, and imagine those feet poking through your fingers. She was 10 ounces when born (280 grams), and 9.5 inches (240 cm). That’s just longer than the length of your hand.

Smallest Teapot In The World

The world’s smallest teapot made of ceramic is created by 73 year old Chinese renowned pottery master, Wu Ruishen. Weighing at just 1.4 grams this is no easy feat since clay would not be easy to mold at such scale and has to be functional as a teapot as well.

World’s Smallest Known Lizard

The world’s smallest known lizard, the Jaragua Sphaero or dwarf gecko, measures only 0.6in from the base of its tail to its snout. This endangered species lives in Jaragua National Park in the Dominican Republic and on Beata Island off the southern coast of Hispaniola.

World’s Smallest and Most Wondrous Works of Art

Born in 1957 in Birmingham, Willard Wigan MBE began his artistic life at a tender age. Suffering from dyslexia and learning difficulties, he struggled at school, finding solace in creating art of such minute proportions that it virtually could not be seen with the naked eye.

He’s sculptures are so small they can rest on the head of a pin or in the eye of a needle, like his Statue of Liberty sculpture.

World Most Unusual Places To Sleep At Night

Hotel de Glace

Hotel de Glace

Hotel de Glace is a very unique hotel in Quebec, Canada, that’s made of ice and snow. With a total surface area of more than 32,000 square feet (3,000 square meters), it’s no surprise that this ice hotel is grand and has 36 rooms, suites (one has a fireplace!), a bar, and a chapel. Various packages are available and can include massages, buffet breakfasts, dog sledding, and luxurious dinners. The hotel has won awards including “Best Recreational Tourism Enterprise.”

Hotel de Glace

Monastery Ostrog

Monastery Ostrog

Monastery Ostrog, a miracle build by nature and human interactions, carved almost in its entirety in a vertical mountain cliff, is today the pearl of Montenegrin spiritualism that is annually visited by more then a hundred thousand pilgrims from around the world and of all religions. It is one of three most visited Christian destinations on the planet with its cave-like chapel and monastery complex that preserves the sacrilege of Saint Basil the Orthodox Saint of Miracles. All of Montenegrin spiritualism, belief and cultural treasures found their home high up in the Ostrog cliffs. This destination which will take your breath away will fill your soul with elevated feelings of love toward God.

Monastery Ostrog

Underground Motels Australia

Underground Motels

The Underground Motel was the first underground motel to be built in Coober Pedy back in 1984, with all rooms being dug into a sandstone hill. Upgrading and renovating has created very comfortable rooms with a unique individual style sympathetic with the arid desert environment. The décor is very tasteful and reflects the owners’ care for detail. The standard rooms are accessed from the veranda through a beautifully tiled hallway; the suites are accessed straight from the outside, sheltered by their private veranda.

Underground Motels

Poseidon Undersea Resort Fiji

Poseidon Undersea Resort

The new Poseidon Undersea Resort hopes to fulfill the dream of a lifetime by combining a luxury hotel with submarine technology to create the world’s first undersea resort. It is the world’s first permanent one-atmosphere sea floor structure and it is a high-end luxury resort in a turquoise lagoon in Fiji.

Poseidon Undersea Resort

Yunak Evleri Urgup

Yunak Evleri,Yunak Houses

Yunak Evleri (Yunak Houses) is a combination of six cave houses with a total of 30 private cave rooms dating back to the 5th and 6th centuries and crowned with a 19th century Greek Mansion. These exceptional cave houses are renovated and decorated with care and in their own distinct style with strictly respecting the local character. The decor is elegant and personalized with beautiful hand-crafted furnishings and antiques. With 30 rooms, Yunak Evleri is small enough to be intimate, yet large enough to offer you privacy.

Yunak Evleri,Yunak Houses

Edisto River Treehouses

Edisto River Treehouses

This small tree-house-sized cabin is nestled in the woods. It comes simply equipped with a gas stove and a gas lamp. Those not sleeping in the loft have a double futon. These comfortable wooden treehouses with tiny kitchens and cozy sleeping lofts sit 16 feet above the riverbank in a private refuge on the Edisto River. Paddle a leisurely 12 miles, stopping at sandbars to swim and picnic, then step across a rope swing bridge to your secluded porched treehouse with songbirds and owls your only neighbors.

Edisto River Treehouses

35 Amazing Coincidences

Childhood Book

While American novelist Anne Parrish was browsing bookstores in Paris in the 1920s, she came upon a book that was one of her childhood favorites – Jack Frost and Other Stories. She picked up the old book and showed it to her husband, telling him of the book she fondly remembered as a child. Her husband took the book, opened it, and on the flyleaf found the inscription: “Anne Parrish, 209 N. Weber Street, Colorado Springs.” It was Anne’s very own book.

Poker Luck

In 1858, Robert Fallon was shot dead, an act of vengeance by those with whom he was playing poker. Fallon, they claimed, had won the $600 pot through cheating. With Fallon’s seat empty and none of the other players willing to take the now-unlucky $600, they found a new player to take Fallon’s place and staked him with the dead man’s $600. By the time the police had arrived to investigate the killing, the new player had turned the $600 into $2,200 in winnings. The police demanded the original $600 to pass on to Fallon’s next of kin – only to discover that the new player turned out to be Fallon’s son, who had not seen his father in seven years!

Twin Deaths

On 2002, Seventy-year-old twin brothers have died within hours of one another after separate accidents on the same road in northern Finland. The first of the twins died when he was hit by a lorry while riding his bike in Raahe, 600 kilometres north of the capital, Helsinki. He died just 1.5km from the spot where his brother was killed. “This is simply a historic coincidence. Although the road is a busy one, accidents don’t occur every day,” police officer Marja-Leena Huhtala told Reuters. “It made my hair stand on end when I heard the two were brothers, and identical twins at that. It came to mind that perhaps someone from upstairs had a say in this,” she said.

Poe Coincidence

In the 19th century, the famous horror writer, Egdar Allan Poe, wrote a book called ‘The narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym’. It was about four survivors of a shipwreck who were in an open boat for many days before they decided to kill and eat the cabin boy whose name was Richard Parker. Some years later, in 1884, the yawl, Mignonette, foundered, with only four survivors, who were in an open boat for many days. Eventually the three senior members of the crew, killed and ate the cabin boy. The name of the cabin boy was Richard Parker.

Royal Coincidence

In Monza, Italy, King Umberto I, went to a small restaurant for dinner, accompanied by his aide-de-camp, General Emilio Ponzia- Vaglia. When the owner took King Umberto’s order, the King noticed that he and the restaurant owner were virtual doubles, in face and in build. Both men began discussing the striking resemblances between each other and found many more similarities;

  1. Both men were born on the same day, of the same year, (March 14th, 1844).
  2. Both men had been born in the same town.
  3. Both men married a woman with same name, Margherita.
  4. The restauranteur opened his restaurant on the same day that King Umberto was crowned King of Italy.
  5. On the 29th July 1900, King Umberto was informed that the restauranteur had died that day in a mysterious shooting accident, and as he expressed his regret, he was then assassinated by an anarchist in the crowd.

Falling Baby

In 1930s Detroit, a man named Joseph Figlock was to become an amazing figure in a young (and, apparently, incredibly careless) mother’s life. As Figlock was walking down the street, the mother’s baby fell from a high window onto Figlock. The baby’s fall was broken and Figlock and the baby were unharmed. A year later, the selfsame baby fell from the selfsame window, again falling onto Mr. Figlock as he was passing beneath. Once again, both of them survived the event.

Mystery Monk

In 19th century Austria, a near-famous painter named Joseph Aigner attempted suicide on several occasions. During his first attempt to hang himself at the age of 18, Aigner was interrupted by a mysterious Capuchin monk. And again at age 22, he was prevented from hanging himself by the very same monk. Eight years later, he was sentenced to the gallows for his political activities. But again, his life was saved by the intervention of the same monk. At age 68, Joseph Aigner finally succeeded in suicide, using a pistol to shoot himself. Not surprisingly, his funeral ceremony was conducted by the very same Capuchin monk – a man whose name Aiger never even knew.

Photographic Coincidence

A German mother who photographed her infant son in 1914 left the film to be developed at a store in Strasbourg. In those days some film plates were sold individually. World War I broke out and unable to return to Strasbourg, the woman gave up the picture for lost. Two years later she bought a film plate in Frankfurt, over 100 miles away, to take a picture of her newborn daughter. When developed the film turned out to be a double exposure, with the picture of her daughter superimposed on the earlier picture of her son. Through some incredible twist of fate, her original film, never developed, had been mislabeled as unused, and had eventually been resold to her.

Book Find

In 1973, actor Anthony Hopkins agreed to appear in “The Girl From Petrovka”, based on a novel by George Feifer. Unable to find a copy of the book anywhere in London, Hopkins was surprised to discover one lying on a bench in a train station. It turned out to be George Feifer’s own annotated (personal) copy, which Feifer had lent to a friend, and which had been stolen from his friend’s car.

Twins

The twin brothers, Jim Lewis and Jim Springer, were separated at birth, adopted by different families. Unknown to each other, both families named the boys James. Both James grew up not knowing of the other, yet both sought law-enforcement training, both had abilities in mechanical drawing and carpentry, and each had married women named Linda. Both had sons, one of whom was named James Alan and the other named James Allan. The twin brothers also divorced their wives and married other women – both named Betty. And they both owned dogs which they named Toy.

Revenge Killing

In 1883, Henry Ziegland broke off a relationship with his girlfriend who, out of distress, committed suicide. The girl’s enraged brother hunted down Ziegland and shot him. Believing he had killed Ziegland, the brother then took his own life. In fact, however, Ziegland had not been killed. The bullet had only grazed his face, lodging into a tree. It was a narrow escape. Years later, Ziegland decided to cut down the same tree, which still had the bullet in it. The huge tree seemed so formidable that he decided to blow it up with dynamite. The explosion propelled the bullet into Ziegland’s head, killing him.

Golden Scarab

From The Structure and Dynamics of the Psyche: “A young woman I was treating had, at a critical moment, a dream in which she was given a golden scarab. While she was telling me this dream I sat with my back to the closed window. Suddenly I heard a noise behind me, like a gentle tapping. I turned round and saw a flying insect knocking against the window-pane from outside. I opened the window and caught the creature in the air as it flew in. It was the nearest analogy to the golden scarab that one finds in our latitudes, a scarabaeid beetle, the common rose-chafer (Cetonia aurata) which contrary to its usual habits had evidently felt an urge to get into a dark room at this particular moment. I must admit that nothing like it ever happened to me before or since, and that the dream of the patient has remained unique in my experience.” – Carl Jung

Taxi

In 1975, while riding a moped in Bermuda, a man was accidentally struck and killed by a taxi. One year later, this man’s bother was killed in the very same way. In fact, he was riding the very same moped. And to stretch the odds even further, he was struck by the very same taxi driven by the same driver – and even carrying the very same passenger!

Hotel Discovery

In 1953, television reporter Irv Kupcinet was in London to cover the coronation of Ellizabeth II. In one of the drawers in his room at the Savoy he found found some items that, by their identification, belonged to a man named Harry Hannin. Coincidentally, Harry Hannin – a basketball star with the famed Harlem Globetrotters – was a good friend of Kupcinet’s.

But the story has yet another twist. Just two days later, and before he could tell Hannin of his lucky discovery, Kupcinet received a letter from Hannin. In the letter, Hannin told Kucinet that while staying at the Hotel Meurice in Paris, he found in a drawer a tie – with Kupcinet’s name on it.

Historical Coincidence

The lives of Thomas Jefferson and John Adams, two of America’s founders. Jefferson crafted the Declaration of Independence, showing drafts of it to Adams, who (with Benjamin Franklin) helped to edit and hone it. The document was approved by the Continental Congress on July 4, 1776. Surprisingly, both Jefferson and Adams died on the same day, July 4, 1826 – exactly 50 years from the signing of the Declaration of Independence.

Emergency Landing

In 1979, Das Besteran, a German Magazine, held a writing competition. Readers had to send in unusual stories based on real life occurrences. Walter Kellner from Munich won with his story about flying a Cessna 41 between Sardinia and Sicily. In his story he had engine trouble, landed in the water, and was later rescued. An Austrian man, also named Waltner Kellner, wrote to the paper and told them that the winner of the prize had plagiarized the story because virtually the same thing had happened to him. The magazine checked out both stories and found that they were both true, despite being nearly identical.

Lucky Number

In the 1930s in New York, a commuter train dove off an open drawbridge into Newark Bay killing 30 passengers. The newspaper published photographs of the incident and the number ‘932? could be seen clearly on the side of one of the coaches. A large number of people selected that number for the Manhattan numbers game and the number came up! Thousands of people won.

Bad Lightning

In 1899 a man was killed by a bolt of lightning as he stood in his backyard in Taranto, Italy. Thirty years later, his son was killed in the very same spot by another bolt of lightning. On October 8, 1949, Rolla Primarda, the second victim’s son (and grandson of the first victim) was also killed in the same spot by yet another bolt of lightning.

Patricide

Jean Marie Dubarry, a Frenchman, was executed on February 13, 1746 for the murder of his father. 100 years, to the day, another Frenchman also named Jean Marie Dubarry was executed… also for the murder of his father.

Coincidental Murder

On the 26th November, 1911, three men were hanged at Greenberry Hill in London after being convicted of the murder of Sir Edmund Berry Godfrey. The killers names were Robert Green, Henry Berry and Lawrence Hill (Green, Berry, and Hill).

Plum Pudding

19th century poet, Emile Deschamps, once said that when he was a schoolboy, he shared a table at a restaurant with M. de Fortgibu, who had recently returned from England with a taste for plum puddings, which were unavailable in France at that time. He insisted that Deschamps sample one.

Ten years later Deschamps passed a restaurant and saw that it was serving plum pudding, so Deschamps went in and ordered a slice, to be told that it was reserved for another customer. Deschamps went over to the customer to beg his favour and it turned out to be M. de Fortgibu, both men being astonished at meeting again after so long a time over the same dish.

Many years passed by, and Deschamps was invited to a dinner party which featured plum pudding. At the party Deschamps was telling his hosts about the extraordinary encounter with Fortgibu, the hosts joking about the possibility of the old man turning up when suddenly, there was Fortgibu again, who had also been invited to the party.

Deschamps said, “Three times in my life I have eaten plum pudding, and three times I have seen M. Fortgibu. My hair stood up on my head!”

Dueling Luck – or not

Henri Trange fought five duels in Marseilles, France, between the years of 1861 and 1878. The first four of his opponents died before any shots were fired. Just before any shots were fired in the fifth duel, Trange himself dropped dead.

Mysterious Murder Link

Barbara Forrest (Born 1954) and Mary Ashford (Born 1797) were both the victims of murder 157 years apart yet both instances have remarkable similarities. They were both found murdered on the same day, 27th May, in the same town, both in 1817 and 1974 the 26th of May was Whit Monday, they had both been raped before they were murdered, they were both found within 400 yards of each other, they were both murdered at about the same time of day, there were attempts to hide both bodies, both girls had visited a friend on the evening of Whit Monday, both changed into a new dress that night, and both went to a dance.

The man accused of each murder had the same name – Thornton, and both men were acquitted of murder, both girls have very similar facial features and 10 days before, 17th May 1974, Barbara Forrest said to a friend, “This is going to be my unlucky month. I just know it. Don’t ask me why.”

Lucky for Some

Oregon’s Columbian newspaper announced the winning Pick 4 lottery numbers for June 28, 2000 in advance. The newspaper had intended to print the previous set of winning numbers but erroneously printed those for the state of Virginia, namely 6-8-5-5. In the next Oregon lottery, those same numbers were drawn.

Rest in Peace

In Texas, USA, in 1899, Canadian actor Charles Francis Coghlan became ill and died whilst he was in Galveston. Because it was too far to return his remains to his home on Prince Edward Island, 3500 miles away, he was instead buried in a lead coffin inside a granite vault.

A year after his death, in September 1900, a hurricane hit Galveston, flooding the graveyard, shattering Charles Coghlan’s granite vault and carrying away his lead coffin out into the Gulf of Mexico.

In October 1908, eight years after the hurricane, fishermen on Prince Edward Island spotted a weathered box floating near the shore. It was the coffin of Charles Coghlan, which had finally returned home. He was buried in the nearby church where he had been christened as a baby.

The Golden Matchbox

In the 1890s, the Prince of Wales gave a gift of a golden matchbox to a friend and fellow fox hunter Edward Southern. On a hunt one day, Southern fell from his horse and the matchbox broke from the chain and was lost. Southern had a duplicate made which he left to his son, Sam, upon his death. While traveling in Australia, Sam gave the matchbox to a friend: Mr Labertouche. When he returned to England, Sam discovered that a farmer had found the original matchbox (twenty years after it was lost) when he was ploughing in his field. Sam wrote to his brother who was traveling in America to tell him the good news. His brother read the letter aloud to his traveling companion on the train. By a stroke of bizarre luck, his friend was carrying the duplicate matchbox which had been given to him by Mr Labertouche.

Lightning Shock

The chances of being struck by lightning are very slim; the chances of being struck by lightning twice (on different days) is seemingly impossible; so what are the odds of being struck by lightning seven times? With our world record holder, Roy Sullivan, the events happened as follows:

1942 – Sullivan was hit for the first time when he was in a lookout tower. The lightning bolt struck him in a leg and he lost a nail on his big toe.
1969 – The second bolt hit him in his truck when he was driving on a mountain road. It knocked him unconscious and burned his eyebrows.
1970 – The third strike burned his left shoulder while in his front yard.
1972 – The next hit happened in a ranger station. The strike set his hair on fire. After that, he began to carry a pitcher of water with him.
1973 – A lightning bolt hit Sullivan on the head, blasted him out of his car, and again set his hair on fire.
1974 – Sullivan was struck by the sixth bolt in a campground, injuring his ankle.
1977 – The seventh and final lightning bolt hit him when he was fishing. Sullivan was hospitalized for burns in his chest and stomach.

His “lightning hats” are on display in New York’s and South Carolina’ s Guinness World Exhibit Hall.

Rail Crossing

In 1991, Cristina Vernoni, aged 19, was killed at an unguarded railway crossing in Reggio Emilia, Northern Italy. Four years later, her 57 year old father was driving to work on his regular route which took him over the same railway crossing when his car was struck by a train. It was dragged for several dozen yards before the train finally stopped. Even more coincidentally, the driver of the train, Domenico Serafino, was the very same driver who had killed Vernoni’s daughter four years earlier. Investigators said that the death was entirely accidental – ruling out suicide.

Menacing Coincidence

In 1951 in the month of March, Dennis the Menace was born… twice. With only three days apart (but an identical debut day), both Hank Ketcham (US) and David Law (UK) created their first comics containing a character with an identical name. The two men were unaware of each others cartoons but when the coincidence was made known to them, they agreed to simply both continue writing their strips without interfering with the other. Even more coincidental was the fact that both Dennis the Menace characters wore striped jerseys (as is evident in the comparison picture above).

Mr Robertson…

On October 15, 1952, Robert Paterson tried to board an Amtrak train from Phoenix to Los Angeles. The conductor told him that Robert Paterson was already onboard. After a quick check, they discovered that both men had tickets. The men were similar height, weight and appearance.

On the way to LA, the train made an emergency stop in Barstow to pick up another passenger: Robert Paterson. The third Mr. Paterson was also similar in appearance to the first two. The train now had three men with the same name and appearance, all headed for LA.

Once they train arrived in Los Angeles, the three Robert Patersons disembarked and went their separate ways. The baggage was unloaded and the train was prepared for the return trip to Phoenix. As the new passengers were boarding, the conductor couldn’t believe his eyes when he saw a familiar name on the passenger list: a fourth Robert Paterson.

The Spy Next Door

When Norman Mailer began his novel Barbary Shore, there was no plan to have a Russian spy as a character. As he worked on it, he introduced a Russian spy in the U.S. as a minor character. As the work progressed, the spy became the dominant character in the novel. After the novel was completed, the U.S. Immigration Service arrested a man who lived just one floor above Mailer in the same apartment building. He was Colonel Rudolf Abel, alleged to be the top Russian spy working in the U.S. at that time.

D-Day Invasion

Solutions to the popular crossword puzzle in the Daily Telegraph gave a nasty headache to security officers who were responsible for guarding the secrets of the planned invasion of Europe by the allies in June 1944. Members of MI5, Britain’s counter-espionage service who used to wile away their spare moments in this pastime, noticed that some of the clues appeared to give away vital code names invented to cloak the mightiest seaborne attack of all time. The answer to the clue ‘one of the U.S.’ turned out to be, for instance, UTAH, and another, OMAHA – beaches on which the American armies were to land. Another answer was MULBERRY, the floating harbors that would accommodate and supply ships. NEPTUNE was the naval support. Most suspicious of all, there was a clue about ’some big-wig’ which produced the answer OVERLORD, the codeword invented to describe the entire operation. MI5 was in a flap.

Was the Telegraph crossword being used to tip off the Germans? Two officers were sent to Leatherhead, in Surrey, to find out. There they interviewed the compiler of the puzzles, Leonard Dawe, a 54-year old teacher. Why, they demanded, had he chosen those five words for his solutions? Why not? replied Dawe, somewhat indignant. Was there any law against choosing whatever words he liked? Dawe’s patient honesty convinced MI5 that he had no knowledge of the coming D-Day invasion strategy. His crossword solutions were just another of life’s astonishing coincidences.

Louis XVI Bad Luck

When King Louis XVI of France was a child, he was warned by an astrologer to always be on his guard on the 21st day of each month. Louis ws so terrified by this that he never did business on this day. Unfortunately Louis was not always on his guard. On June 21st 1791, following the French revolution, Louis and his queen were arrested in Varennes, whist trying to escape France. On September 21st 1791, France abolished the institution of Royalty and proclaimed itself a republic. Finally on January 21st 1793, King Louis XVI was executed by guillotine.

Lincoln Booth Coincidence

In an interesting coincidence, Edwin Booth saved Abraham Lincoln’s son, Robert, from serious injury or even death. The incident occurred on a train platform in Jersey City, New Jersey. The exact date of the incident is uncertain, but it is believed to have taken place in late 1864 or early 1865, shortly before Edwin’s brother, John Wilkes Booth, assassinated President Lincoln. Robert Lincoln recalled the incident in a 1909 letter to Richard Watson Gilder, editor of The Century Magazine.

“The incident occurred while a group of passengers were late at night purchasing their sleeping car places from the conductor who stood on the station platform at the entrance of the car. The platform was about the height of the car floor, and there was of course a narrow space between the platform and the car body. There was some crowding, and I happened to be pressed by it against the car body while waiting my turn. In this situation the train began to move, and by the motion I was twisted off my feet, and had dropped somewhat, with feet downward, into the open space, and was personally helpless, when my coat collar was vigorously seized and I was quickly pulled up and out to a secure footing on the platform. Upon turning to thank my rescuer I saw it was Edwin Booth, whose face was of course well known to me, and I expressed my gratitude to him, and in doing so, called him by name.”

Booth did not know the identity of the man whose life he had saved until some months later, when he received a letter from a friend, Colonel Adam Badeau, who was an officer on the staff of General Ulysses S. Grant. Badeau had heard the story from Robert Lincoln, who had since joined the Union Army and was also serving on Grant’s staff. In the letter, Badeau gave his compliments to Booth for the heroic deed. The fact that he had saved the life of Abraham Lincoln’s son was said to have been of some comfort to Edwin Booth following his brother’s assassination of the president.

Titanic Coincidence

In 1898 Morgan Robertson released ‘Futility, or the Wreck of the Titan’. A floating palace sailed from Southampton, England in April, 1898 on a voyage across the Atlantic. She was the biggest and most luxurious liner ever built. The liner was meant to be unsinkable. She was destined for America. But the ship never reached her destination, her hull was ripped open by an iceberg and she sank causing a heavy loss of life as there wasn’t enough lifeboats for the passengers (24 lifeboats for 3000 passengers). The ship was called Titan.

In 1912, a large luxury liner that was built to be unsinkable sailed from Southampton, England to America. She was on her maiden voyage across the Atlantic. The ship struck an iceberg which ripped apart the hull, and the ship sank. There were only 24 lifeboats for the entire ship (about 2200 people), and many people died. This ship was called the Titanic.

Wild, Wacky And Weird

‘Marguerita’ pizza

Marguerita pizza

Chefs spread out cheese over a 2.20m diameter ‘Marguerita’ pizza, as part of Pizza Day celebrations, at the traditional Italian neighbourhood of Mooca, in eastern Sao Paulo, Brazil.

‘Mooning of the trains’ event

Mooning of the trains

Residents of Laguna Niguel expose their buttocks during the 30th annual ‘Mooning of the trains’ event along a stretch of railroad track in Orange County, south of Los Angeles. Local legend has it the tradition began in 1979 when customer K.T. Smith offered to buy a drink for anyone who would run outside and moon the next train. Since then, on the second Saturday of each July, people have lowered their inhibitions and their underwear and pressed their naked buttocks up against a wire fence as the trains go by

Boryeong Mud Festival

Boryeong Mud Festival

Participants enjoy the mud during the 12th Annual Boryeong Mud Festival at Daecheon Beach on July 11 in South Korea. The annual mud festival features mud wrestling, mud sliding and a mud king contest.

Bathing beauties

Bathing beauties

German Misses pose in Palma de Mallorca, Spain. The misses will be attending the ‘Wetten dass…?’ summer edition.

Is this dog real?

stuffed dog

A stuffed dog is pushed around the site on the second day of the annual Glastonbury festival near Glastonbury, Somerset.

Jason Jackson

Jason Jackson,michael jackson

Jason Jackson, a Michael Jackson tribute artist poses outside his Sydney home. Business is booming for the 35-year-old, who has turned his Sydney home into a mini- Neverland Ranch. Jackson’s ‘Michael Jackson Dance Spectacular’ has played thousands of venues, including many of Sydney’s major arenas, and he believes the show will now be more popular than ever.

Christmas in July

Fans dressed up as Christmas fathers cheer on riders in the 196 km third stage of the 2009 Tour de France cycling race run between Marseille and La Grande-Motte.

Public seating

Public seating

A woman lies on a new public seating installation by artist Peter Newman in London on July 6. The sculpture entitled ‘Skystation’ sits outside the Haywood gallery on London’s South Bank

Nathan’s Famous Fourth of July hot dog eating contest

hot dog eating contest

Chairman of Major League Eating George Shea (C-back) speaks as Takeru Kobayashi (R) of Nagano, Japan and Joey Chestnut (2nd-L) of San Jose, California compete in the Nathan’s Famous Fourth of July hot dog eating contest on July 4, 2009 in Coney Island.

Yokohama-port Opening Festival

Yokohama-port Opening Festival

A Huge locust-shaped attraction is seen during the Yokohama-port Opening Festival on July 4 in Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan. Port opened in 1959, as the result of the signing of Treaty of Amity and Commerce between the United States and Japan in 1958.

Sack race

Sack race

Dame Kelly Holmes takes part in a sack race to help launch a summer holiday campaign ‘Every Day Is Sports Day’ at Hop Farm Family Park on July 3, 2009 in Paddock Wood, England.

Ozzie Guillen congratulates A.J. Pierzynski

Ozzie Guillen,A.J. Pierzynski

Manager Ozzie Guillen congratulates A.J. Pierzynski of the Chicago White Sox in an unconventional manner by giving him a kick in the pants after the game.

Bruno!

Bruno,Sacha Baron Cohen

“Bruno,” the alter-ego of British satirist Sacha Baron Cohen poses for photographers after arriving in shining armor for the Australian premiere of his self-titled movie in Sydney on June 29, 2009. Bruno declared that Australia’s Prime Minister Kevin Rudd is “uber-cute” and even hotter than President Barack Obama.

‘Gundam’

Gundam

The hero robot of the popular animation series ‘Gundam’ is being built on June 29 as the 30th anniversary of TV broadcasting and to support Tokyo’s Olympic bid in 2016.

Sand castle with a message

Sand castle

As the eastern state of Orissa swelters under heat wave conditions, international sand artist Sudersan Pattnaik created a sand sculpture of Lord Jagannath, (R) his brother Balabhadra (L) and sister Devi Subhadra and the three chariots with an appeal against global warming on the eve of the Ratha Yatra Festival, on Golden Sea beach at Puri. During the Rath Yatra festival, wooden images or idols of Lord Jagannath, – known as the Lord of the Universe, one of the most revered and ancient of the deities of the Hindu pantheon – his brother Balabhadra and sister Subhadra are mounted on ceremonial chariots and taken out in a procession.

Ugliest dog winner

Ugliest dog winner

Pabst, a boxer mix, shows off his underbite during the 21st Annual World’s Ugliest Dog Contest on June 26 in Petaluma, California. Pabst won the competition.

Glastonbury Festival

Glastonbury Festival

A festival-goer shows of his unusual way of carrying his beer supplies on the first ‘official’ day of the annual Glastonbury festival near Glastonbury, Somerset on June 26, 2009. Tributes were paid Friday to Michael Jackson at the world-famous Glastonbury Festival, where the shock news of his death filtered through the sprawling music fest campsite overnight. Nearly 140,000 people are descending on the festival site in southwest England for five days of music headlined by veteran rockers and Bruce Springsteenthis weekend.

Michael Llodra

Michael Llodra

France’s Michael Llodra collides with a ball girl during play against Germany’s Tommy Haas during their second round match in the 2009 Wimbledon tennis championships.

Fantastic plastic

plastinated human body,von Hagens,Body Worlds exhibitions

A plastinated human body is pictured during the public dissection at the ‘Body Worlds’ exhibition. Controversial German anatomist von Hagens explains in this public dissection how to process bodies for his ‘Body Worlds’ exhibitions, which have drawn crowds of protesters and millions of visitors worldwide.

Baby foxes

Baby foxes

Baby Fennecs are seen at Sunshine International Aquarium on June 24 in Tokyo, Japan. The small nocturnal fox babies were born at the aquarium on May 17.

Summer Solstice

Summer Solstice

Revelers celebrate the Summer Solstice at Stonehenge on June 21 near Amesbury, England.

Mermaid parade

Mermaid parade

Mermaids ride the subway after marching in the 2009 Mermaid Parade at Coney Island on June 20 in New York City.

King Henry VIII

King Henry VIII

A man dressed as King Henry VIII processes to the River Thames with Queen Catherine Parr at The Tower of London on June 20 in England. A weekend of events are being held to mark the 500th anniversary of the coronation of King Henry the VIII in 1509.

Cirque du Soleil performers

Cirque du Soleil

Cirque du Soleil performers wait outside the Bellagio for a Guinness World Record stilt walking attempt to mark Cirque’s 25th anniversary in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Sacha Baron Cohen as Bruno

Sacha Baron Cohen,Bruno,Publicis Champs Elysees

Actor Sacha Baron Cohen attends the premiere of the Larry Charles’s film ‘Bruno’ at Publicis Champs Elysees in Paris, France.

Elvis wedding

Elvis wedding

Professional Elvis tribute artist Steve Caprice (center right) is joined by his best man and Elvis tribute wedding guests as he marries his ‘fiancee’ Barbara Caprice in a recreation of the wedding scene from Blue Hawaii.

Naked cyclists

Naked cyclists

Naked cyclists take part in a peaceful protest against oil dependency and car culture ride from Hyde Park around Central London in London, England.

Hot Air Balloon Festival

Hot Air Balloon Festival

A hot air balloon rises during the Third Haikou Hot Air Balloon Festival on June 12. A total of 25 teams took part in the event.

Balloons

Balloons

Balloons hold up a house at the premiere of Disney Pixar’s ‘Up’ at the El Capitan Theatre in Hollywood.

Sotheby’s Exhibit Sculptures at Chatsworth House

Sotheby's Exhibit Sculptures

The Duke and Duchess of Devonshire view a giant sculpture of a seven-month-old baby by artist Marc Quinn entitled ‘Planet’ in the gardens of their home Chatsworth House on in Chatsworth, England. The bronze sculpture painted white is part of the Beyond Limits exhibition of modern and contemporary sculpture displayed in the gardens of Chatsworth by Sotherby’s. In past years, acclaimed artists Damien Hirst, Antony Gormley, Salvador Dali and Henry Moore have had work exhibited.

World Beard & Moustache Competitors

Beard,Moustache

(L-R) The Australian Bushrangers, Nathaniel Beard, John Beardman, Facey Mc Stubblington and Johann Beardraven pose during a media call ahead of the World Beard and Moustache Championships at Bonython Park in Adelaide, Australia. The World Beard and Moustache Championships will be held at Anchorage, Alaska. The competition features a variety of categories from the Dali moustache to the full beard freestyle.

Web underwear

Web underwear

A model displays underwear designed by contestants during Triumph Inspiration Award 2009 Japan at Bunka Fashion College in Tokyo, Japan.

Anti-whaling protester

Anti-whaling protester

Anti-whaling protesters demonstrate outside the Icelandic embassy in west London

Maori dance troupe

Maori dance troupe

Members of a Maori dance troupe perform in St. Mark’s Square prior to the 2009 Venice Biennale on June 3.

10 Strangest Manias

Cartacoethes: uncontrollable compulsion to see maps everywhere

The human brain is wired to recognize faces everywhere, but it turns out that there’s also a strange mania called cartocacoethes: the uncontrollable compulsion to see maps everywhere, even in food, like this Argentinean Milanesa.

Gamomania: obsession with issuing marriage proposals

Gamomania can be described as a bizarre obsession with asking people to marry or issuing outrageous proposals to different people at the same time, which in many cases results in polygamy.

Onomatomania: irresistible desire to repeat certain words

It’s an obsession with certain words and the repeated intrusion of them into the mind.

Clinomania: excessive desire to stay in bed

There is nothing wrong with wanting to have a long lie, particularly on cold, wet wintry days. For the Clinomaniac though, the desire to stay in bed is overwhelming and irresistible and could persist for days on end, particularly when it is raining or snowing. Clinomania comes from Greek meaning the obsession of sleeping. In other words it is love to bed, pillows and blankets.

Demonomania: believing to be inhabited by an evil spirit

There are so many horror films and books that describe and show us vividly what happens with people when they are possessed. And watching too many of such films it is naturally that people start to be afraid of such people. And sometimes people become so afraid that the certain manias start to reflect. And in case with demons it is demonomania, a psychiatric term for the belief that one is possessed by the devil. And when a person thinks he/she is possessed, he/she really starts to behave as he/she was obsessed.

Enosimania: constantly believing one has sinned

Defined as compulsion to think one has committed an unpardonable sin or criticism, it is known by a number of names – Enissophobia, Enosiophobia, Fear of Having Committed an Unpardonable Sin, and Fear of Criticism being the most common. Symptoms typically include shortness of breath, rapid breathing, irregular heartbeat, sweating, nausea, and overall feelings of dread.

Trichotillomania: craving for pulling out own hair

Trichotillomania, or “trich” as it is commonly known, is an impulse control disorder or form of self-injury characterized by the repeated urge to pull out scalp hair, eyelashes, facial hair, nose hair, pubic hair, eyebrows or other body hair, sometimes resulting in noticeable bald patches.

Ablutomania: mania for washing oneself

Have you noticed that one of your friends washes his hands too often? Well, there is nothing bad if he washes them after going outside or toilet but if he washes it even just after a few seconds sitting in the room or after touching something, it is the sign to worry because it may be ablutomania and your friend may be ablutomaniac.

Ablutomania is the obsessive hands washing connected with the fixed ideas of infection or getting dirty. Usually this disease accompanies other serious mental disorders and is rarely manifested alone. Unfortunately this disease is characteristic for children especially child’s schizophrenia. The same holds true for adult schizophrenia although it is reflected rarely.

Aboulomania: pathological indecisiveness

We have all experienced situations where it was difficult to make up our minds about something, but imagine not being able to make even the simplest of decisions, life would surely become unbearable. Aboulomania can be defined as pathological indecisiveness or an inability to make up one’s mind about anything.

Doromania: the obsession for gifts

There are a lot of people that like to give presents to others. And the majority of people will be glad to have such obsession. After all gifts giving is the great deed because people get pleasure from giving presents to others while the majority of people like to receive presents. But sometimes gifts giving turns into obsession. Doromania is the abnormal urge or preoccupation with gifts giving. People are obsessed by choosing and giving the presents but it happens not with the good aim and because a person is so kind. The reasons are much more complicated.

Doromania consists in giving the presents even without the real financial possibilities to do that. And in such way people starts to suffer from a great number of problems taking credits and debts as well as loosing their own property. And now such obsession doesn’t seem so sweet, does it?