This is seriously silly, but intrepid traveller, David Ellis seeks the strange and whacky things that make up our world . . . he found hundreds of
people with obviously little better to do, descend on the English village of Willaston
in Cheshire
every July for the World Worm Charming Championships.
The idea is
to lure as many worms as possible out of a designated area of farm turf in half
an hour, with contestants using a wondrous array of devices to 'vibrate' the
soil, which makes the inquisitive worms come up for a look.
It’s an
ancient art often used by anglers seeking bait, and in 1980 after a Willaston
farmer’s son, Tom Shufflebotham lured over 500 worms out of the ground in
a half hour, the International Federation of Charming Worms and Allied Pastimes
was formed to conduct the annual Willaston Championships.
Today it
attracts worm charmers from around the world, some contestants simply thumping
the ground with their open palms, others driving wooden stakes in and rubbing
them with steel rods, while some choose the most popular method -
driving a garden fork into the ground and 'twanging' it like
a guitar.
And in more
recent years, some have bent the rules a little, sprinkling the turf on which
the Championships are held with cold tea and beer to encourage the
ever-thirsty worms to pop up for a drink.
The current
record of 567 worms charmed out of the ground in thirty minutes was set by
locals Miss S. and Mr M. Smith in 2009.

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