The Weirdest Things To Wash Up On The Beach

Most beach-goers expect a couple of things to wash up on the beach. Seaweed, shells, maybe some fish. But sometimes a lovely stroll on the beach gets interrupted by--perhaps, a giant metal die? How did that get there? From animals to Legos to mystery items, the weirdest things wash ashore and interrupt your tropical vacation.They are certainly not what any swimmer or authority was expecting. See if you can predict what odd things have washed up on the beach in the past thirty years.

Giant Metal Dice

giant metal dice
Reddit / u/rickrage
Reddit / u/rickrage

This giant die washed up on the shore of Coeur d'Alene, Idaho in 2017. Reddit user rickrage snapped a picture and posted it to r/mildlyinteresting to show the world. Except users found it more than just mildly interesting.

The "die" was actually a plain box that washed up on Driftwood Point in 2008. The Gridley family painted big circles on the tank to make it look like die. It remained near the Gridley's seaside shop until it drifted 36 miles away to Driftwood.

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Mystery Space Craft Parts

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Facebook / Lowcountry Marine Mammal Network
Facebook / Lowcountry Marine Mammal Network
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Since late 2018, experts have been scratching their heads over this mystery object that landed on the shores of Charleston, South Carolina. The Lowcountry Marine Mammal Network posted the object to Facebook in late 2018.

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From the picture, the object looks like metal. But it is actually foam, reports say, and even floated on the seawater. Many believe it looks like a piece of an aircraft or a space ship, but the Marine Mammal Network asserts that it must be a flotation device. Still, no one knows.

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Garfield Phones

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Youtube / Vida Loca
Youtube / Vida Loca
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Since the 1980s, plastic Garfield phones would creep onto the shores of Brittany, France. At first, people thought these phones could have rolled from the deep sea. But after sending divers and submarines to look for the source of the phones, none popped up.

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Eventually, a local farmer guided the president of the environmental group Ar Viltansou to a beach cave. He claimed that a storm in the '80s threw a shipment of these Garfield phones into the shoreline cave. The lasagna-loving cat toy housed quite a few starfish and crabs in the meantime.

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New Zealand Giant Squid

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Reddit / u/beast-freak
Reddit / u/beast-freak
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The Aplin brothers were scouring the coast of Wellington, New Zealand for a diving location when they ran into a 14 ft long giant squid. The brothers then contacted the National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, who later removed the squid.

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The largest giant squid recorded was 40 feet long, so this was small in comparison. Because giant squids are deep sea creatures, no one is sure how one washed up on the beach. It sure beats any marine animal the Aplin brothers were diving to see, though.

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Millions Of Lego Pieces

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Jörg Carstensen / Getty Images
Jörg Carstensen / Getty Images
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Back in 1997, a container of Lego pieces fell into the sea, and are still being spotted on beaches today. Nearly five million Lego pieces were being shipped from Tokyo Japan to New York City when the ship was hit by a massive wave, toppling the Lego box overboard.

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The Legos spilled into the sea near Cornwall, UK, and continue to appear on British shores. No one knows how many more Lego pieces will threaten beach-goer's feet in the years to come.

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A Giant Lego Man

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Twitter / @egoleonard
Twitter / @egoleonard
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It seems that Japan has many beach Legos to offer. In 2014, a surfer filmed an 8 ft tall Lego man sunbathing on the shore at Yuigahama Beach. The Lego man was created by Dutch artist Ego Leonard as a representation of "the virtual world."

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Surprisingly, this wasn't the first giant Lego man to float onto a beach. In 2012, a Lego man glided onto a California beach. And a year before that, Florida's beaches were greeted by another giant Lego man.

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A "Buoy" That Turned Out To Be A Bomb

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Twitter / @CBSNews
Twitter / @CBSNews
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Buoys often wash up on beaches. So when the Gravell family found what they thought was a barnacle-covered buoy in Burry Port, Wales, they let their six-year-old and four-year-old kids play with it. Five days after the parents posted their buoy photos on Facebook, Pembrey Country Park officials announced that they would close the beach "due to military mine found washed up."

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"So the buoy my kids were jumping on all weekend turns out to be a WWII bomb. Oops!!" Gareth Gravell tweeted. The next day, the family watched as the Royal Navy detonated the 30-year-old U.S. bomb safely.

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80 Million Year Old Dinosaur Bones

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Burke Museum / burkemuseum.org
Burke Museum / burkemuseum.org
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These 80 million year old bones were found on the beach among sea creature fossils. In 2012, Burke Museum research associates spotted the bones while exploring Sucia Island State Park. The fossil belongs to the same dinosaur family as the velociraptor and tyrannosaurus rex, although the actual species has not been identified.

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Because the bones were so well preserved, scientists believe that the dinosaur lived in shallow water. The giant bones washed up on Sucia Island beach and lay buried under sand and rocks. At 17 in long and 9 in wide, it's a big find!

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A Floating Piano

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Youtube / Anothersemolina
Youtube / Anothersemolina
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In 2014, New Yorkers flocked to take pictures with a piano floating in the East River under Brooklyn Bridge. The piano remained half-submerged until it finally washed up onto the shore. Surprisingly, it remained in good condition, but it makes no sound.

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No one really knows where the piano came from. Some suspect that it may have fallen off a truck, or was abandoned by a former owner. Either way, it has captured the imaginations of many New York photographers.

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A 200 ft Long Barge

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Twitter / @jorjaroman
Twitter / @jorjaroman
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In 2018, a 40-ton barge drifted onto Florida's St. Pete Beach. Measuring at 200 ft long, 40 ft wide and 8 ft tall, that barge shouldn't have moved. Only a week before, a recent storm created 7 ft waves that pushed the barge almost 30 miles.

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Luhr Bros Inc., who owned the barge, claimed that it was used for a beach restoration project in Pinellas County. Coastal resource managers had to wait for the storm to pass to finally move it.

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Love Letters From WWII

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Pinterest / kayleeds
Pinterest / kayleeds
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A letter in a bottle may be cry for help, but these letters cried for a safe return. Found on Atlantic Highlands beach trail by a 14-year-old boy, these 57 love letters dated back to World War II. Somehow, they remained legible until they were found in 2012.

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The letters were written by a young woman in New Jersey to her boyfriend in Vermont. They dated 1942-1948, up to the week they got married. The family who found the letters later tracked down the author. She was still alive, though her husband passed away in 1991.

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Forty-Year-Old Doritos

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Pinterest / HistoryInOrbit
Pinterest / HistoryInOrbit
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A fisherman in North Carolina had to call a local shop owner to report, "I got two stripers and 35 bags of Doritos." That's because, in 2006, a trailer-sized box filled with thousands of Doritos tipped overboard near the beaches of Hatteras Island.

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Hundreds of these red and blue bags lay scattered all over the beaches. Clean-up volunteers ended up filling trucks with mostly undamaged bags. The bags washed up included Spicy Nacho, Cool Ranch and Nacho Cheese Doritos, in case anyone wants to take a bite.

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Millions of Dollars Worth Of Cocaine

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Youtube / triggatt
Youtube / triggatt
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A Japanese resident of Yokosuka discovered four backpacks of cocaine in 2013. The 20 bricks of coke came out to $48 million. Each brick weighed 2.2 pounds and remained securely wrapped in plastic.

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According to the Fuji Network News, this find is the biggest drug haul in Japanese history. The bags were apparently tied together and set afloat with buoys. Why? No one knows. But it's fair to assume that someone messed up big time.

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$180,000 Worth Of Whale Excrement

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MIGUEL MEDINA / AFP / Getty Images
MIGUEL MEDINA / AFP / Getty Images
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When Ken Wilman discovered a foul-smelling chunky blob on the beach, he initially had no interest in it. But he later looked it up online and found that it was worth $180,000. Naturally, he went back and picked it up. Wilman had found a 6-pound pile of ambergris, or "whale vomit."

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Despite its name, ambergris is actually excrement produced in a whale's intestines to guard its insides against sharp squid beaks. But why is it worth so much? Well, ambergris is used in perfumes to make the scent stay on the skin much longer.

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Perfectly Round Snowballs

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Youtube / Storyful News
Youtube / Storyful News
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A shoreline in western Siberia was absolutely flooded with snowballs in November of 2016. Each snowball was around the size of a tennis ball and covered 11 miles of coastline. Oddly enough, the water did not freeze over as the balls did.

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BBC reports stated that the icy orbs formed through natural phenomena. According to them, the snowballs "result from a rare environmental process where small pieces of ice form, are rolled by wind and water, and end up as giant snowballs." Beach snow day anyone?

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A Two-Headed Dolphin

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Looking for a Southern California eco-tour? 2 different ways to see dolphins, whales and other ocean creatures
Mark Rightmire / Digital First Media / Getty Images
Mark Rightmire / Digital First Media / Getty Images
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A gym teacher in Turkey stumbled upon an odd site during his beach vacation. In 2014, Tugrul Metin reported finding a two-headed dolphin, with two sets of eyes, and one blowhole. Though the dolphin was buried the next day, it was later dug back up for further study.

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Scientists diagnosed the dolphin with polycephaly, where an animal develops two heads. This condition makes survival a struggle for the animal. Studies find that the mutation is likely caused by marine pollution.

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A Life-Sized E.T. Replica

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Amblin Entertainment
Amblin Entertainment
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When a beach-goer called the police to report a body floating in the water, police rushed to the scene--only to find a beloved extraterrestrial. A life-sized E.T. model tumbled onto the shore of Old Portsmouth in the UK in April 2019.

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The doll belonged to Margaret Wells, whose daughter crafted it for her. E.T. had been stolen in September, but Wells luckily got the doll back. He was a bit roughed up and lost a finger, but still intact.

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A Prosthetic Leg

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FRED TANNEAU / AFP / Getty Images
FRED TANNEAU / AFP / Getty Images
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In 2014, Hannah Listle walked along the beach of Kingston, Washington and ran into a startling sight. It may not have been a leg, but it looked like one at first--it was a beautifully decorated prosthetic leg.

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Listle posted her findings on Facebook and found the original owner only four days later. The owner, Megan Smith, was jumping off rocks into the water with her husband. On the third or fourth try, she realized her leg was gone. Luckily it didn't take long to get it back since Smith could not afford another one.

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Human Feet in Shoes

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Lake Annecy Reaches A Low Level Due To Summer Heat
Richard Bord/Getty Images
Richard Bord/Getty Images
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Since 2007, feet started washing up onto shores along the Salish Sea from Washington state to British Columbia, Canada. As of April 2019, 21 feet have been spotted by beach-goers. Some wear New Balance, others Nike, but all are disconnected from the rest of the body.

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No one knows why these feet keep showing but in 2017, Canadian coroner's office ruled out foul play. They suspect that the feet detached naturally from decomposition, and remained preserved within the shoe. None of the feet's owners have yet been identified.

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A Softball-Sized Eyeball

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Youtube / Geobeats
Youtube / Geobeats
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Gino Covacci discovered an unusual blue beauty while strolling along Pompano Beach in Florida. It wasn't a seashell--it was an enormous eyeball. Instead of panicking, Covacci took it home to his fridge. Later, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission grabbed it to study.

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Originally, Covacci expected the eye to be from a squid. But experts discovered that the eyeball belonged to a 6 ft long swordfish. Based on the clean cuts around the eye, experts determined that the eye was cut out by a fisherman and then tossed back into the sea.

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A Giraffe, Escaping The Circus

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PAUL ZINKEN/AFP / Getty Images
PAUL ZINKEN/AFP / Getty Images
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In this unfortunate case, a giraffe washed up on the beach in 1981. According to the New York Times, the giraffe fell into the harbor at Brooklyn Dock. Later, the giraffe was discovered by The Army Corps of Engineers off the coast of New York City.

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Not much is known about this strange story, but we do know that the poor giraffe sadly didn't make it. New York magazine claimed that the giraffe escaped from a circus ship, though this has never been confirmed.