Odd News
Fishermen donate giant tuna catch to feed health care workers
Five men in Hawaii made an extraordinary gesture for health care workers battling the coronavirus.
During a fishing trip, the men caught two yellowfin tuna, weighing roughly 220 pounds combined. When they arrived back at the dock, they sent the fish to a seafood distributor.
The fish was cleaned, cut and processed. They then prepared 300 poke bowls to feed health care workers. The bowls were delivered to Straub Medical Center and The Queen’s Medical Center in Honolulu.
The fishermen said their act of kindness was inspired by a local Hawaiian Setsuo Todoraki, who recently died at the age of 104. Following his fishing trips, he would donate his catch to feed those in need.
abcnews4.com
Odd News
Message in bottle floats from Canada to Ireland in 13 years

A message in a bottle launched by visitors to Newfoundland’s Bell Island was found washed up on an Irish beach nearly 13 years later, after apparently crossing the Atlantic Ocean.
Kate Gay said she was walking a Dingle Peninsula beach this week when she spotted the wine bottle with a sheet of paper inside.
Gay showed the bottle to members of Creative Ireland NeartnaMacharaí during a meeting at her house that evening, and they broke the bottle open.
The note, written by a couple named Brad and Anita, was dated Sept. 12, 2012. The letter described the couple’s day trip to Bell Island.
There was a phone number on the letter, but there was no answer when group members tried to call.
The Maharees Heritage and Conservation group posted photos of the bottleto social media on Monday, and within an hour group members were messaging with Anita.
Group member Martha Farrell said Anita reported that she and Brad had married in 2016 and are still together to this day. -upi.com
Odd News
Woman earns world record for collection of 15,485 egg cups

A Spanish woman who has been collecting egg cups for over 50 years earned a Guinness World Record when her collection was tallied at 15,485 items.
María José Fuster recruited two witnesses to help her tally her collection at a community center in her hometown of Campo, Spain.
Fuster’s collection includes multiple patterns, colors, designs and even novelty cups bearing the images of characters including Superman, Betty Boop and Garfield.
Fuster maintains two blogs related to her hobby — one to catalog each piece, and one to list the names of the people who have donated egg cups to her collection.
Some of her most prized egg cups, about 1,143 of them, are currently on display at a local museum.
-upi.com