A ‘biblical’ plague of toads, frogs and tadpoles wreaked havoc in a Honduras city, even causing a multi-car pile-up.
The amphibians took over the streets and homes of Choloma after heavy rain fell in the area, causing drains to overflow and puddles to form. The outbreak started on December 3 and, according to locals, continued for at least three days.
At one point, a pick-up truck lost control on the slime left behind and caused a pile-up involving at least five vehicles, including a tanker, two lorries and a motorbike that was left burnt to a crisp.
There were no fatalities, but the road was blocked for some time, causing a long tailback, said residents. Some of the people caught up in the crash had to be taken to hospital in the nearby city of San Pedro Sula.
Several people filmed the creatures swarming the area, including one man who said: ‘This scares me. It looks more like the plagues of Egypt.’ According to the Book of Exodus, the second plague of Egypt was a plague of frogs.
The account says Moses, at the command of God, brought forth a multitude of the amphibians from the Nile and they then covered Egypt for three days. Earlier this month, another ‘biblical’ plague, this time of locusts, hit Yucatán in Mexico.
Miles-long clouds of the bugs blanketed the skies, flying through shopping plazas, smacking into the windows of apartment complexes and gobbling up anything green in local parks.