In the time of stone, people search for anything to ignite the great leisure time that occurred to their lives. British. John Braichau is no different from the tens of thousands of British quarantined, but when he set out to take care of his backyard garden, as a way to fill time, he did not expect the surprise that was awaiting him underground.
The man found an old Ford Public car from the 1950s buried underground, according to the BBC.
"It is not a normal thing that you find every day ... It is a car right in my garden," said Braichaux, who lives in West Yorkshire. "It is strange how it is buried there." Pracho asked anyone with information about how the car got there to contact him.
He said that the car, which was gray in color, was still in overall safe condition, as it still kept the engine and the license plate. He continued, "I would like to be able to get the car out, but I don't think I can do this by hand."
The reason why burying a car there remains a puzzle, but one theory holds that in the 1950s steel prices fell so dramatically that people who wanted to get rid of scrap had to pay to move them out of the house.
Little information was available about the car itself, but another suggestion was that the car might have been a military vehicle.