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Can it really rain frogs?

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Can it really rain frogs?

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Only if a bomber plane was loaded with swarms of frogs and they are periodically dropped inside the center of the storm. They are not allowed to use cats or dogs because the SPCA won’t allow for mass unexplained adoptions. PETA might stop the whole thing from happening in the first place if they happen to catch wind of this illegal operation so if you plan on doing this, I suggest you be very careful and if you’re on the ground to own a Kevlar umbrella or run for shelter. There could be an outbreak in disease due to all the rotting frog corpses after the storm has ended.

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I believe that has happened.There is a Scientific explanation. Weird rain is one of the more bizarre – and still largely unexplained – phenomena that is periodically (yet continually) reported from all corners of the globe. There have been accounts of frog rain, fish rain, squid rain, worm rain, even alligator rain. The logical explanation for the odd occurrences is that a tornado or strong whirlwind picked up the animals from a shallow body of water and carried them – sometimes for hundreds of miles – before dropping them on a bewildered populace. This explanation has yet to be proved, and it can’t quite account for all of the documented incidents, as you’ll see below Posting Comment…

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Yes! It doesn’t happen very often, but there are several known instances where frogs have been sucked up by tornadoes or violent winds associated with thunderstorms, and dropped down out of the sky miles from their ponds. Check out the Froggy Page’s Scientific Amphibian section for some links to articles on this subject.

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When frogs blanketed Egypt in the book of Exodus, it was a sign of deep, deep trouble. And that was only plague No. 2 out of 10. If you’ve ever woken up to a few inches of frog carpet outside your door, you know it’s not a pretty picture. Amphibian Image Gallery Of course, you probably haven’t woken up to such a grisly scene. You probably haven’t been driving around in a storm and had your car pelted with what you thought was hail but turned out to be frozen frogs. But other people have. While it’s not the most common weather phenomenon in the world, it’s not as rare as you might think. It happens all over the world, at least since the first century A.D. — when the Roman naturalist known as Pliny the Elder described the event

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