A man, aided by a good samaritan, searched fruitlessly for his lost wedding ring on a snowy California highway. They gave up. The good samaritan returned later, however, and located it—only to realize he'd never got the owner's name or contact info. [AP]

  • Nash Rambler

    How many weddings could there have been with a “Lisa” on June 5th, 2010?  Start combing gift registries starting in CA – bet it wouldn’t take more than a few hours with the right Google search parameters.

  • annoyingmouse

    Doesn’t this story usually end with the good Samaritan finding Lisa and discovering her husband died in a car crash two years ago? That’s how they used to tell it when I was a lad

  • http://www.tavie.com Tavie

    Ugh now I’m obsessed… not enough information… I want it to be the “Lisa C” in Mill Valley, California who who wrote a review of this belly dancer… her wedding was on 6/5/10…

  • http://www.tavie.com Tavie

    Oh man, what about these guys?

    Yeah, it’s slow at work today…

  • kansas

    I have a wedding band I found in Halifax, NS. 

    Gold. Smallish. Inside it reads, “Mary Beth  All My Love  Joe  08-24-90″ The 90 is my best guess; it overlaps a maker’s mark.

  • Jonathan Roberts

    I once had an allotment and lost my wedding band while clearing weeds. After looking around for ages I still couldn’t find my ring, but I did find two other wedding rings and a watch belonging to the couple who had owned the allotment before me.