Posted on 12/31/2011 11:08:39 AM PST by nickcarraway
A real 24 carrot story!
This tale deserves a garden ping! Before I even finished reading it I thought of the kitchen compostables. I guess I watch too many mystery stories on TV! LOL
Rather ugly of the newspaper to mention that!
Thanks Red_Devil232 and afraidfortherepublic!
Don't ever give a reporter information unless you want it reported. There must be an old proverb along those lines. :)
The odd part about this story is, the ring was lost in Canada.
(the ring-inscription is said to be written in the Black Speech, a language devised by Sauron and used in his land of Mordor. It is written in tengwar.)
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The Tengwar[1] are an artificial script created by J. R. R. Tolkien. In his fictional universe of Middle-earth, the tengwar were invented by the Elf Fëanor, and used first to write the Elven tongues: Quenya, Telerin, and also Valarin. Later a great number of languages of Middle-earth were written using the tengwar, including Sindarin. Tolkien used tengwar to write English: most of Tolkien's tengwar samples are actually in English.
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Ash nazg durbatulûk, ash nazg gimbatul,
Ash nazg thrakatulûk agh burzum-ishi krimpatul.
Translated, the words mean:
One ring to rule them all, one ring to find them,
One ring to bring them all and in the darkness bind them.
Er, never mind.
Thanks for the happy story.LOL
Hhrumph. My guess is that she didn’t like the ring, was angry one night, and tossed it in the yard. She couldn’t find it later when she’d cooled down.
Or she put it in a specific place and decided all these years later to “find” the ring again and put it around a carrot.
Before you flame me, note that I base these theories on experiencing over 30 years of marriage... and watching many “I Love Lucy” reruns.
“HOAX”
I agree. Very easy to fake this one.
Very interesting, if true. The placement of the ring leads me to think this is a fake story. People will do anything these days to make the paper, i.e. “15 minutes of fame”.
We used to be in the medicinal wild root business. Several hundred pounds of wild roots would come into our shop every year. Each had to be inspected, weighed and sorted as to grade.
I have seen roots that grew through old glass cork-type bottle tops, washers, nuts, circled around old square nails and even through small stones.
Here’s a true ‘lost ring’ story. In the 40’s, my grandmother lost her wedding ring while shopping in downtown Omaha, NB. She took an ad out in the ‘Lost & Found’ section of the Herald and it was returned by someone who found it laying on the sidewalk. A few years later she lost it again, took an ad in the paper and believe it or not it was found and returned a second time. The newspaper did a story on the strange event, making note of how honest people were. Things have sure changed. Today this 18K gold with large diamond ring would have been in a Pawn shop before it hit the ground.
lol
You’re welcome, ma’am.
Bah. My Swedish grandmother always told me Norwegians are stolt.
Now that I’ve looked it up, it doesn’t sound like much of an insult. I think she meant it as “stuck-up.”
My thoughts exactly! Geez! Where did the time go?
Since I am Swiss/German with an Irish paternal grandmother, I cannot speak authoritatively on Scandinavians. All I know is that my Swedish buddy was quite jovial and sporting about the differences/similarities of Swedes and Norwegians. The cherry on top is that they BOTH apparently consider themselves superior to Fins. ;o)
How many karats was it?.........
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