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Five odd stories you missed this week as husband's romantic gesture goes crispy

Five odd stories you missed this week as husband's romantic gesture goes crispy

Yahoo16-05-2025

A man whose romantic getaway gesture for his wife turned a bit salty is one of our five feelgood Friday local news stories.
Lancashire Live reported that Rachel Norman's husband Johnnie wanted to celebrate her birthday in style but hotel staff in Blackpool mistakenly ended up covering their bed with crisps, although thankfully they saw the funny side.
Elsewhere, a couple have bought a "village" in France for just £67,000 and a family in Cornwall found their hen has laid a one in a billion round egg.
You can read the full version of each of our selected articles through the links under each story – or read more top headlines from around the UK's regions on the Yahoo UK local news page.
A husband tried to surprise his wife with a romantic gesture only to discover their hotel bed covered in crisps - after a miscommunication with staff.
Rachel Norman, 36, and her husband Johnnie, 35, went out in Blackpool to celebrate her birthday and he secretly asked hotel staff to put 30 assorted bags of crisps on the bed while they were out to surprise his crisp-loving wife.
But staff misunderstood, opened the bags, and sprinkled the crisps on the sheets like salty confetti.
Read the full story from Lancashire Live
A British couple quit the rat race and bought a French 'village' for just €80,000 (£67,000) - so they can retire and have a "peaceful life".
Ben Pearson, 39, and his husband, Nathan, 31, had always dreamed of moving to France and stumbled across the abandoned farmhouse in Sainte Segros.
Read the full story from Wales Online
A Cornwall family have been stunned after one of their hens laid a completely round egg. The extremely rare egg is thought to be a one-in-a-billion lay.
Josh Elkington said the egg was laid by one of his brown Brahma chickens called Julie. Josh runs a small holding near Bugle, near St Austell.
He said: "It was so unexpected and we laughed for hours over how small this egg was."
Read the full story from Cornwall Live
A patch of sand on a North Wales beach is up for sale with a six figure price tag.
The small piece of land is on Abersoch's Porth Mawr beach and offers are invited for over £100,000, the price of a flat or even a small house in parts of North Wales.
It is nestled between beach huts and the location had previously housed a wooden shack too. But this was damaged in storms and pulled down by the owner.
Read the full story from North Wales News
Shoppers can soon expect to see a 'Tardis-style' police box in Watford High Street as part of an 18-month trial.
A planning application for the temporary structure which was submitted to Watford Borough Council in March gained approval yesterday (13 May).
The Herts Police project will be installed between Metro Bank and the entrance to atria Watford on the corner of Queen's Road.
Read the full story from the Watford Observer

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Monk's Cellar, Jackrabbit Brewing Co. win State Fair craft beer competition
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Lockerbie: Remembering the victims of Flight 103
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Almost 40 years on, it seems surprising there are still new stories to tell about the Lockerbie disaster. The destruction of Pan Am 103 in the skies above the small Dumfries and Galloway town on 21 December 1988 is one of the most chronicled events in recent British history. A bomb exploded in the plane's cargo hold, causing the Boeing 747 to break up at 31,000ft as it flew from Heathrow to New York. All 259 passengers and crew on board were killed, along with 11 people in Lockerbie who died when the plane fell on their homes. It remains the biggest terror attack to have taken place on British soil. Coverage tends to focus on anniversaries, but the past six months have brought two big-budget television dramas and later this year a play about the town's response to the disaster will debut at Glasgow's Citizens Theatre. Now, a BBC Scotland documentary aims to tell some of the less well-known stories about those who died on the flight, and about those they left behind. 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She had bought a last-minute ticket on Pan Am 103 and was planning on enjoying some shopping in New York in the run up to Christmas. "She was just yapping. She said 'I'm going to America tomorrow. Going to buy stuff'. She loved shopping," her sister Donna says. Donna describes Olive as "very bubbly, very full on. You just would not forget her if you knew her". Olive was one of nine siblings. "I have always asked 'why her? why my sister?'" her brother Colyn says. "And it's something that you sort of battle with. And I'm still battling with it, a little bit. Well, not a little bit, a lot." Her family believe she would have been in business now, something involving hair and beauty. "She would probably be an influencer right now," Donna says. William MacAllister, known as Billy, was a 26-year-old professional golfer from Mull. He was heading to the USA for a romantic break with his girlfriend Terri. Her friends say Terri was hoping Billy was about to propose. 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Pupils from the secondary school can apply for a scholarship to spend a year at Syracuse University, in memory of 35 students from there who died in the bombing. There is a memorial garden on the edge of the town, as well as plaques in Sherwood Crescent and Park Place, the two sites where most of the plane came down. Nearby Tundergarth Church, which overlooks the field where the nose cone was found, is also a site of remembrance. But more than anything, the Lockerbie bombing victims are remembered by those they left behind. Every year in Tobermory, members at the golf club play for the cup which carries Billy MacAllister's name. And his friend Stewart has a special reason to remember him. "He had a big impact on my life really because, had Billy not enticed me to go and work over at Richmond, I would probably have not got to know my then girlfriend, who became my wife. My life would have been a very different one from what it became," he says. 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