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'One in a billion' spherical egg goes under the hammer. Here’s how much it fetched

A "one-in-a-billion" spherical egg has been sold for £200 ( ₹21,500 approximately) at a charity auction in the UK.

Published on: Dec 17, 2024 03:05 PM IST
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A "one-in-a-billion" spherical egg has been sold for £200 ( 21,500 approximately) at a charity auction in the UK.

A spherical egg has fetched over  ₹20,000 at a charity auction in the UK (Thomson Roddick Callan)
A spherical egg has fetched over ₹20,000 at a charity auction in the UK (Thomson Roddick Callan)

The perfectly round egg was first discovered by a woman in Scotland. According to BBC, the unnamed woman found the rarity in a box from her local Asda supermarket in the seaside town of Ayr.

The woman reportedly sold the egg to Ed Pownall earlier this year. Pownall, from Lambourn in Berkshire, bought the egg on a whim, apparently after downing a few pints. He paid £150 for it and later donated it to the Iuventas Foundation, a youth mentoring charity. The Berkshire man described it as “money well spent.”

Spherical egg goes on auction

The Iuventas Foundation first thought the donation from Pownall was a joke. However, it eventually put the egg up for auction to raise funds.

“We're delighted and thrilled the egg sold as it means we can continue to do what we are doing,” said Roz Rapp, a coach and mentor with the Foundation. Rapp said that the spherical egg was one of many items on sale at the auction, which raised a total of £5,000 for charity.

The egg was previously sold at Thomson Roddick Callan auction house, which said that round eggs are thought to be a 'one in a billion' occurrence.

(Also read: Rare ceramic goat made by King Charles 55 years ago fetches 9 lakh at auction)

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Sanya Jain

Sanya Jain is an Assistant Editor with Hindustan Times Digital. She has nearly a decade of experience in covering offbeat stories that speak to the everyday experience - from viral videos to human interest copies that spark conversation. Her interests stretch across business, pop culture, social media trends, entertainment and global affairs. Before joining Hindustan Times, Sanya spent two years with Moneycontrol and five years with NDTV. She holds an undergraduate degree in English literature from St Stephen’s College, Delhi, and a master’s in journalism from the Xavier Institute of Communications, Mumbai. Sanya has a sharp eye for spotting emerging trends and looking for newsworthy angles to elevate viral posts into meaningful narratives. She was the first one, for example, to cover Narayana Murthy’s remark on 70-hour work weeks that sparked a national conversation. She is equally at ease writing about business leaders as about the common man, about issues of national importance and memes that amuse social media. Sanya enjoys speaking with content creators, newsmakers and entrepreneurs to transform everyday moments into engaging, slice-of-life stories that resonate with readers. When she is not working, Sanya can be found curled up with a good book. Born and raised in Lucknow, she has spent the last several years in Delhi. She is deeply interested in animal welfare and now spends a lot of her time running after her destructive orange cat.

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