Unexplained shower of apples falls from sky over town

rockin'robin

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More than 100 apples mysteriously rained down upon a small British town on Monday night. The still-unexplained apple shower left 20 yards of city streets and car windshields covered in the cascading fruit just after the daily rush hour.

The news immediately brought up comparisons to biblical tales of raining frogs and whether such reported freaks of nature actually occurred. In this instance, no one has officially confirmed when, how or if the apple storm truly took place as described.

However, Jim Dale, senior meteorologist from the British Weather Services, told the London Telegraph: "The weather we have at the moment is very volatile and we probably have more to come. Essentially these events are caused when a vortex of air, kind of like a mini tornado, lifts things off the ground rising up into the atmosphere until the air around it causes them to fall to earth again."

Dr Lisa Jardine-Wright, a physicist at the Cavendish Laboratory, based at Cambridge University, told the BBC, "Cars and houses have been swept up by tornadoes, so apples are well within the realms of possibility. A tornado which has swept through an orchard will be strong enough to 'suck up' small objects like a vacuum [cleaner]. These small objects would then be deposited back to earth as 'rain' when the whirlwind loses its energy."


Nevertheless, witnesses report that the weather in Coundon in Coventry was reported to be stable and calm at the time of the alleged apple shower. Coventry residents have offered several competing explanations for the event, including a passing plane, roving teenage pranksters--and, yes, witches.

But regardless of the ultimate explanation, the apple storm is no stranger other confirmed, highly unusual forms of precipitation. The BBC offers a roster of pertinent examples:

Frog falls were recorded in Llanddewi, Powys, in 1996 and two years later in Croydon, south London. In 2000, hundreds of dead silver sprats fell out of the sky during a rainstorm in the seaside resort of Great Yarmouth.

There have also been maggot downpours--in Acapulco in 1967 and during a yachting event at the 1976 Olympic Games.

On the sliding scale of inconveniences, an apple storm seems more palatable than maggots. Though, depending on the state of the apples, it's possible that some areas could have experienced both brands of offbeat precipitation at once.

Unexplained shower of apples falls from sky over town | The Sideshow - Yahoo! News
 
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Sounds like a tornado sucked up apples on the farm ochards somewhere and dumped them from the sky or maybe a plane pooped them out.

In 1974, a F3 tornado ripped thru Portland metro area. It went across the river and later then rained fish out of the sky in Vancouver, WA.
 
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Newton's Universal Law of Gravitation.

It's how they got up there is the question.


Newton's theory of "Universal Gravitation"

The Moon orbits around the Earth. Since its size does not appear to change, its distance stays about the same, and hence its orbit must be close to a circle. To keep the Moon moving in that circle--rather than wandering off--the Earth must exert a pull on the Moon, and Newton named that pulling force gravity.

Was that the same force which pulled all falling objects downward?

Supposedly, the above question occured to Newton when he saw an apple falling from a tree. John Conduitt, Newton's assistant at the royal mint and husband of Newton's niece, had this to say about the event when he wrote about Newton's life:


In the year 1666 he retired again from Cambridge ... to his mother in Lincolnshire & while he was musing in a garden it came into his thought that the power of gravity (which brought an apple from a tree to the ground) was not limited to a certain distance from earth, but that this power must extend much further than was usually thought. Why not as high as the Moon thought he to himself & that if so, that must influence her motion & perhaps retain her in her orbit, whereupon he fell a-calculating what would be the effect of that superposition...
( Keesing, R.G., The History of Newton's apple tree, Contemporary Physics, 39, 377-91, 1998)

http://www-istp.gsfc.nasa.gov/stargaze/Sgravity.htm
 
I predict a large applesauce festival to follow shortly...
 
Maggots?

There have also been maggot downpours--in Acapulco in 1967 and during a yachting event at the 1976 Olympic Games


I would rather have an apple shower that that!
 
Wirelessly posted (sent from a smartphone. )

Sounds like a tornado sucked up apples on the farm ochards somewhere and dumped them from the sky or maybe a plane pooped them out.

In 1974, a F3 tornado ripped thru Portland metro area. It went across the river and later then rained fish out of the sky in Vancouver, WA.
Yeah, I've heard of that happening too.

Frogs, fishes, etc... :)
 
Maggots?

There have also been maggot downpours--in Acapulco in 1967 and during a yachting event at the 1976 Olympic Games


I would rather have an apple shower that that!

Me too! Slugs are as bad!
 
Am wondering...if one day when Spring comes back around....I'll be sitting outside by the river and enjoying the breeze....and a car comes flying from the sky and lands on my head.....:eek3:

Do apples and oranges apply here? :giggle:
 
pies....lots and lots of apple pies.....
from the maggot-less apples
 
Wirelessly posted (sent from a smartphone. )

Sounds like a tornado sucked up apples on the farm ochards somewhere and dumped them from the sky or maybe a plane pooped them out.

In 1974, a F3 tornado ripped thru Portland metro area. It went across the river and later then rained fish out of the sky in Vancouver, WA.

lol that's what I saw the story on Discovery. It was fancy explain.
 
Am wondering...if one day when Spring comes back around....I'll be sitting outside by the river and enjoying the breeze....and a car comes flying from the sky and lands on my head.....:eek3:

Do apples and oranges apply here? :giggle:

It's raining apples and oranges. :giggle: Oh what... where's the oranges?
 
For some reason...... The story.. "It's Raining Meatballs" come to mind. :lol:
 
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