Lost for 16 Years, Woman Finds Engagement Ring Growing on Carrot

A woman, who had lost her wedding ring 16 years prior, found it on a carrot!

Lost Wedding Ring Found Growing on Garden Carrot 16 Years Later

4k viewsPosted 10 years agoUpdated 1 hour ago

Sometimes the most precious things in life have a way of finding us when we least expect it—even if that means waiting sixteen years and getting a little help from a vegetable.

In 1995, Swedish woman Lena Paahlsson was doing what many of us do during the holidays: baking in her kitchen. At some point during the flurry of mixing and preparing, she realized her wedding ring was missing. She and her family searched everywhere—the kitchen, the floors, every nook and cranny they could think of. But the ring had simply vanished.

Sixteen Years in the Dirt

Fast forward to 2011. Lena was pulling carrots from her garden when she noticed something unusual: a carrot wearing jewelry. There, wrapped snugly around an orange carrot she'd just harvested, was her long-lost wedding ring.

The mystery of how it got there? Compost. When Lena lost the ring back in 1995, it likely fell into the vegetable peelings she was tossing while cooking. Those scraps eventually made their way to the compost heap, which was later spread across the garden. A carrot seed landed in just the right spot, and as it grew over the years, it pushed through the ring—essentially "wearing" it as it developed underground.

Not a One-Time Wonder

Before you dismiss this as a one-in-a-billion fluke, consider Mary Grams from Alberta, Canada. In 2004, she lost her engagement ring while weeding her garden. Thirteen years later in 2017, her daughter-in-law found it—you guessed it—wrapped around a carrot during harvest.

The similarity between these cases isn't just coincidence. It reveals something about how we lose small objects and how gardens work:

  • Rings slip off easily when hands are wet, cold, or covered in flour and food
  • Compost moves everything around—including tiny metal objects that don't decompose
  • Carrots grow straight down and can push through small openings as they expand
  • Garden soil gets turned and mixed year after year, redistributing whatever's in it

The Math of Lost Things

What makes these stories remarkable isn't that the rings survived—gold doesn't decay—but that they were found at all. Consider how many vegetables get harvested, composted, or simply left in the ground. The odds of pulling up the exact carrot that happened to grow through your ring, during the narrow window when it's ready to harvest, are astronomical.

Both women had essentially given up hope years before the discoveries. The rings had already been replaced. The loss had been accepted and mourned. Finding them again was never the plan—just a bonus that came with growing your own food.

A Ring's Journey Home

There's something deeply satisfying about these reunions. Not just because lost treasures were found, but because of how they were found—through patience, though unintentional, and the simple act of tending a garden. The same soil that swallowed these symbols of love eventually returned them, dressed up on a carrot like a gift.

Lena Paahlsson's ring spent sixteen years underground before its vegetable-assisted comeback. That's longer than some marriages last. But it waited, preserved perfectly in the earth, until the day a carrot decided to model it for her.

So next time you lose something valuable, maybe don't give up entirely. Plant a garden. You never know what might grow back to you.

Frequently Asked Questions

How did a woman find her lost wedding ring on a carrot?
A woman discovered her wedding ring, which she had lost 16 years earlier, growing on a carrot she had pulled from her garden. The ring had been lost years ago, likely buried in the soil, and gradually became attached to the carrot as it grew.
Can a wedding ring grow on vegetables?
A wedding ring itself doesn't grow, but if lost in soil, a growing vegetable like a carrot can wrap around it as the plant expands around the object, eventually encasing the ring as part of the vegetable.
How long did it take to find the wedding ring?
The woman found her lost wedding ring after 16 years, discovering it on a carrot she was harvesting from her garden, making it a remarkable recovery after more than a decade.
Is it possible to lose a wedding ring in a garden and find it again?
Yes, it's possible to recover lost jewelry from gardens, especially if vegetables are grown in the area where the ring was lost, as plants can gradually encompass buried objects as they grow.
What happened to the wedding ring after it was found?
While the specific outcome isn't detailed in this story, recovering a ring from a carrot would require careful cleaning, though the ring itself would remain intact since metal doesn't degrade in soil or on vegetables.

Related Topics

More from Places & Culture