Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome back to the Strange History Podcast, where we dig
up the weird, the wild, and the downright unbelievable stories
from the past. I'm your host, Amy, and today I
want you to grab an umbrella, but maybe also a helmet,
a net, and possibly some frog repellent, because we're about
to dive into some of the strangest weather events ever
(00:21):
recorded in history. We've all dealt with a thunderstorm or two,
maybe shoveled a little snow, cursed at the wind when
it flips your umbrella inside out. But the stories I'm
about to share, they go way beyond that. This is
weather so bizarre that it left people staring at the
sky in shock, wondering if they'd angered the gods or
stumbled into a biblical plague. So let's step back in
(00:45):
time and explore twelve unbelievable weather events that prove Mother
Nature has a wicked sense of humor.
Speaker 2 (00:52):
The Kentucky Meat Shower eighteen seventy six.
Speaker 1 (00:56):
Picture it Olympia Springs, Kentucky. It's March third, eighteen seventy six,
and the skies open up, not with rain, not with hail,
but with meat, yes, meat, chunks of raw flesh some
the size of delicate snowflakes, Others big enough to fry
up for dinner, start falling from the sky. Missus Crouch,
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the poor woman who first witnessed this nightmare, ran outside
and thought, quite reasonably that the apocalypse had arrived. She
and her husband described strips of what looked like beef, pork,
even mutton, dropping across their yard. Theories flew faster than
the meat itself. Was it a cosmic prank a scientific anomaly?
(01:44):
Eventually naturalists suggested it might have been a flock of
vultures vomiting up their last meal mid flight. Romantic, isn't it.
But here's the kicker. Brave locals actually tasted the meat.
One said it was venison, another claimed it tasted like lamb.
No word on whether anyone came down with vulture food
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poisoning afterward.
Speaker 2 (02:06):
Fish rain in Honduras.
Speaker 1 (02:08):
Move over, Kentucky. Honduras has you beat with a tradition
known as luvia de Pescees the rain of fish. Since
the eighteen hundreds, people in the town of Yorro claimed
that at least once a year after a heavy storm,
fish literally pour from the sky and flop around in
the streets. The townspeople don't find this terrifying. They find
(02:30):
it miraculous. They scoop up the fish, cook them, and
celebrate with a festival every year. Scientists have tried to
explain it. Maybe water spouts suck up the fish from
rivers and drop them inland, but no one's ever fully
cracked the code. To this day, kids in euro grow
up not fearing storms, but running outside with buckets ready
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to catch dinner.
Speaker 2 (02:53):
The London beer flood of eighteen fourteen.
Speaker 1 (02:57):
Okay, so this wasn't technically weather, but it sure felt
like a storm. In October eighteen fourteen, at a London brewery,
a massive vat holding over three hundred thousand gallons of
beer burst open, sending a tsunami of ale rushing through
the streets. The wave was so strong it demolished walls
and flooded basements, trapping entire families. At least eight people
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drowned in beer. One survivor later recalled climbing onto a
piece of floating timber to avoid being swept away, while
others described crowds gathering with mugs and buckets to scoop
up free beer sloshing down the cobblestones. A disaster, absolutely,
but also the kind of event that makes you wonder
(03:42):
did some Londoners secretly brag for years about surviving the
Great Beer Storm?
Speaker 2 (03:49):
The Great Molasses Flood of nineteen nineteen Boston's Sticky Storm.
Speaker 1 (03:55):
Five years after World War One ended, Boston was hit
by something even stranger than the flu pandemic, a tidal
wave of molasses. A storage tank holding over two million
gallons of the sticky syrup suddenly ruptured, releasing a brown
wave twenty five feet high that raced through the streets
at thirty five miles per hour. Horses were swallowed, wagons overturned,
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and buildings flattened. One eyewitness recalled hearing a sound like
machine gun fire, the rivets popping off the tank, before
being nearly suffocated in molasses. Twenty one people died in
what became known as the Boston Molasses Disaster. To this day,
locals swear that on hot summer afternoons, the smell of
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molasses still lingers in the North End.
Speaker 2 (04:45):
Black Rain of Hiroshima nineteen forty five.
Speaker 1 (04:49):
After the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima in August
nineteen forty five, survivors described another horror, black rain. This
wasn't rain at all, but geoactive soot and debris mixed
with water from the atmosphere. It fell like oily tar,
staining clothes and burning skin. Survivors remembered holding out their
(05:10):
hands catching thick black drops, not realizing it was radioactive fallout.
The black rain spread contamination across miles, marking one of
the most chilling examples of weather forever changed by human history.
Speaker 2 (05:25):
Hail the size of grapefruit, South Dakota, eighteen eighty eight.
Speaker 1 (05:31):
Let's talk about hailstorms. Most of us have seen hail,
tiny annoying ice pellets that ping off your car. But
in June eighteen eighty eight, the town of Moorhead, South Dakota,
was pummeled by hailstones the size of grapefruits. Eyewitnesses described
them as cannonballs from the sky. Roofs collapsed, livestock were killed,
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and farmers ran for their lives. One farmer recalled grabbing
a wagon to shield his children, only for the hail
to smash through the wood like it was paper. Some
of those hailstones were measured at nearly two pounds each.
Imagine Mother Nature pelting you with frozen baseballs.
Speaker 2 (06:09):
The dust Bowl black blizzards nineteen thirties US.
Speaker 1 (06:14):
For nearly a decade, America's Great Plains endured some of
the strangest scariest weather ever black blizzards. Thanks to drought
and poor farming practices, massive clouds of dust rolled across
the country, turning day into night. Survivors said you couldn't
see your own hand in front of your face. Families
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stuffed wet rags under their doors and still woke up
to find their beds covered in dirt. One survivor remembered
watching a dust storm roll in like a giant black wall.
Another recalled burying plates upside down so food wouldn't be
ruined by grit before you could eat it. The dust
bowl was weather mixed with human folly, and it nearly
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choked the life out of an entire region.
Speaker 2 (07:00):
Snow in the Sahara nineteen seventy nine.
Speaker 1 (07:04):
Snow in the Desert Yep On February eighteenth, nineteen seventy nine,
residents of Ain Sephra, Algeria woke up to find the
orange sand dunes covered in a blanket of white snow.
Children ran outside to make snowballs in a place where
temperatures often top one hundred degrees. For a few hours,
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the desert looked like a surreal painting orange and white colliding.
Though the snow melted quickly, locals still talk about it
like a dream, proof that even the driest place on
Earth isn't safe from a snow day.
Speaker 2 (07:41):
Blood rain of Kerala, India, two thousand and one.
Speaker 1 (07:46):
Between July and September two thousand and one, residents of Kerala,
India reported red rain sheets of crimson, water stained clothing, buildings,
and even the leaves of trees. At first, first, people panicked,
fearing it was an omen or something straight out of Exodus.
Scientists eventually traced the cause to airborne spores from a
(08:09):
type of algae. Still, eyewitnesses described the terrifying beauty of
the event, rain drops that looked like blood falling from
the heavens. Some insisted it wasn't algae at all, but
dust from a meteor, and honestly, between us meteor blood
sounds way cooler.
Speaker 2 (08:29):
Catfish falling from the sky Singapore, eighteen sixty one.
Speaker 1 (08:35):
On February twenty second, eighteen sixty one, Singapore residents were
shocked when catfish began falling from the clouds during a
heavy rainstorm. A missionary recorded that hundreds of the wriggling
fish landed in fields and streets. The locals collected them
and declared it a gift from the gods. Modern scientists
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believe water spouts lifted the fish from rivers and dropped
them inland. But still, imagine standing in the rain only
to be smacked on the head by a catfish.
Speaker 2 (09:06):
The ice storm of nineteen ninety eight North America.
Speaker 1 (09:10):
This one's closer to our own time. In January nineteen
ninety eight, a massive ice storm hit parts of the
US and Canada, coating everything, trees, cars, houses in several
inches of ice. Power lines snapped like twigs. Entire forests
collapsed under the weight. Millions were left without electricity for
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weeks in the dead of winter. Survivors remembered walking outside
to a world that looked like glass, every twig encased
in shimmering crystal, beautiful and deadly at the same time.
One Canadian farmer described the sound of trees cracking in
the cold as gunfire in the distance, over and over
all night long.
Speaker 2 (09:52):
The Perfect Storm nineteen ninety one.
Speaker 1 (09:56):
Finally, let's talk about the storm that inspired books and movies.
The nineteen ninety one Halloween Northeaster, better known as the
Perfect Storm, It was a freak convergence of three weather
systems that created one hundred foot waves in the Atlantic.
The crew of the Andrea Gale, a fishing vessel out
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of Gloucester, Massachusetts, tragically disappeared. Their story later immortalized in film.
Eyewitnesses on the coast recalled waves slamming into the shore
with such force that houses shook. Sailors described the ocean
as looking like mountains rising and collapsing. It was weather
at its most terrifying, proof of how small we are
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compared to the sea. I personally remember this storm. Leaves
were still on the trees. There was a chill in
the air that told you it was autumn and winter
was on its way. Once the snow started to fall,
you knew you were in trouble. The heaviness of the snow,
combined with the leaves still on the trees made for
an absolute disaster. Power went out everywhere, and before they
(11:02):
could even start to fix the power lines, they had
to clear the streets of fallen snow, toppled trees, and
heavy snow laden branches. We were without power here in
Connecticut for close to a month, and I lived on
the same grid as a city hospital. Normally, when power
went out, we were the first to get it back.
We cooked on a grill, drove to the only gas
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station open in a large city that miraculously had power
to get meager supplies, and finally found in all you
can eat Chinese buffet that was open on the other
side of town, and ate there every night till we
could fill the fridge again. Our local power company, to
their credit, issued checks to every citizen for grocery restock.
When it was all over, it was certainly a disaster
(11:46):
to remember. We still frequent that all you can eat
buffet on occasion, and listen to the weather with trepidation
in the fall, and if snow is on the way,
you're gassing up the generators and buying non perishable food
and dusting off your chopstick. So there you have it.
Twelve of the strangest, scariest, and stickiest weather events in history.
(12:08):
From raining meat to beard tsunamis, from bloody rain to
black blizzards, these stories remind us that the sky is
full of surprises. This has been the strange history podcast.
I'm Amy, and I'll be back next time with more
tales that are equal parts bizarre and true. Please like, subscribe,
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and tell your local weatherman about this podcast. Until then,
keep your umbrellas handy and maybe a frying pan. You
never know what's going to fall from the sky.