Nebraska residents find beer fridge washed up in field after flooding subsides
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
Two men in Nebraska stumbled upon a “gift sent from the heavens” amid the tragedy and destruction caused by recent flooding in the Midwest.
Gayland Stouffer and Kyle Simpson were surveying the damage to Simpson’s property near Schuyler on Sunday, when Stouffer spotted a mini-fridge full of beer in the field that had recently been covered in floodwater.
ANHEUSER-BUSCH SENDING CANNED WATER TO VICTIMS OF NEBRASKA FLOODS
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
“Hey, is that a refrigerator?” Stouffer said, according to Simpson, before marching over and confirming that it was full of beer.
“Yeah, right,” Simpson shot back, according to the Omaha World-Herald.
And not only was Stouffer telling the truth, as the mini-fridge was stocked with Bud Light and Busch Light, but it was also “ice cold,” seeing as there was still ice in its freezer.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
SEE IT: BUDWEISER UPDATES OLD ADS TO SHOW WOMEN IN 'MORE BALANCED AND EMPOWERED ROLES'
The pair later posed with a photo of their find – and cracked open a few cold ones – before sending the photos off to a friend who posted them to Facebook.
“There’s a silver lining to every storm,” one commenter wrote.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
“Magic fridge!” another exclaimed.
Yet another remarked that it was a “gift sent from the heavens,” according to the Lincoln Journal-Star.
Posting the find to Facebook gave rise to get another “silver lining”: The refrigerator was soon traced back to a home belonging to the father of Brian Healy, cited the fridge’s fire damage – the appliance once survived a house fire too, reportedly – and the ratio of Busch to Bud as evidence that it was the same as the one kept in the men’s cabin upstream.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
“It’s nice that somebody can smile about this story,” Simpson said, adding that he planned to reunite the fridge with Healy in the coming days.
“I couldn’t hardly believe they found it all intact,” added Healy, whose father and uncle’s house is a few miles upstream from Simpson’s, according to the World-Herald. “The pictures really made me laugh.”
FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK FOR MORE FOX LIFESTYLE NEWS
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
The flooding in Nebraska and other parts of the Midwest, originally caused by heavy rainfall spawned by last week's "bomb cyclone" as well as snowmelt, has reportedly been blamed for the death at least three, as well as widespread property damage.