Funny Google Earth Street View Locations

I am a former scholar of classics and mythology. I enjoy writing about the ancient world, popular science, and my hobbies.

There's so many strange things you can find...

There's so many strange things you can find...

Land Art and Map Accidents: Funny Locations on Google Maps

It's fun to explore the world through the eyes of Google Maps. It's amazing what weird and crazy things people have mowed into fields, painted on roofs, or added to roundabouts.

These glimpses from above are often temporary. Some of my favorite Google Maps landmarks have been demolished over the years. There was a huge question mark on a construction site in Bretagne, France, but buildings have now covered it over. There was a Batman signal on a swimming pool in Illinois that was painted over by homeowners with more taste (boo!), although there's another bat signal in Kadena AFB, Okinawa, Japan to make up for it (see picture below). Others sights change from year to year, like the creepy decaying rabbit in the hills of Italy, or a whimsical field maze by a working farm in Newton, Connecticut.

I'll take you a tour of some of these strange sights and dig up some information on famous Google Maps landmarks. Having updated this page several times over the years, I think I'm actually up to thirty oddities at this point.

25 Funny Places and More on Google Maps

  1. Galešnjak
  2. Shamrock Maze in Dublin
  3. Luecke Farm, Texas
  4. "Welcome to Cleveland"
  5. Giant Pac-Man Game
  6. 50-Foot White Guy
  7. Stealth Bomber Swimming Pool
  8. Cruise Ship Mall
  9. Parque Gulliver
  10. Henge and Crop Circle
  11. The Atacama Giant
  12. Parking Lot Burial Plot
  13. Fingerprint on Lens
  14. Katavi Park
  15. Farm Maze
  16. Weird Lines in China
  17. Australian Park Sculptures
  18. The Bulford Kiwi
  19. Misplaced Aircraft
  20. The Buran Space Shuttle
  21. Beitou Incinerator
  22. Friendly Oil Refinery
  23. World Map by Søren Poulsen
  24. Madurodam Park
  25. UFO Landing Pad

1. Galešnjak, aka Lover's Island

This tiny island lies in the Adriatic Sea between Italy and Croatia. Even though the island is an inhospitable barren blob, its owners, the Juresko family, have been trying to capitalize on their property's internet fame for years.

The island is about 32 square acres, and the last I checked it had no fresh water or structures, apart from the pier. Nevertheless, the Jureskos have been marketing it as "Lover's Island" since it was first featured by Google Earth in 2009.

Those two bulldozed scars you see are an attempt to replant the island with olive groves. I'm not sure how that figures into the owners' hopes to turn it into a dream wedding location, but good luck to them.

2. Shamrock Maze in Dublin

Here's a fun hedge maze south of the Dublin airport on the side of the freeway, er...what do they call major roads in Ireland? Oh, right. Motorway. I think.

I can't find any information about it, but exploring the area in Google Street View shows the road leading to it is barred by a big metal gate. The sign warns that it's private property guarded by attack dogs.

Maybe the leprechauns finally figured out that a rainbow isn't a very good security device. Bummer.

3. Luecke Farm, Texas

Deep in the Heart of Texas is a farmer who's very proud of his last name.

Luecke Farm is a ranch about an hour southeast of Austin. The farmer cleared away most of the trees for grazing his cattle but left some woodland standing as a habitat for wildlife.

Not only is this an environmentally responsible thing to do, but also, NASA uses this three-mile-long landmark to calibrate satellite and aerial photography instruments!

It's interesting enough to have attracted YouTube video flyovers. Yes, there are all kinds of Internet fame.

Scroll to Continue

4. "Welcome to Cleveland" Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Thanks to the quirky humor of one Mark Gubin, this rooftop has been visible on the final approach to the General Mitchell International Airport in Milwaukee, Wisconsin (off the map to the south) since 1978.

That's right: as your plane approaches Milwaukee, you can look out and see this sign.

I have to admit, this is one of my very favorites, although I imagine it's caused a few panic attacks among passengers.

funny-things-on-google-maps

5. RIP Giant Pac-Man Game on Breckenridge Road, Tewksbury, MA

I'd love to have my neighborhood turned into a giant Pac-Man game, but the crunching sound would probably keep me up at night.

Alas, Tewksbury finally got around to repaving this development, so the Pac-Man and ghosts are gone. I took a screenshot of it in Google Maps years ago when I noticed the paint was starting to fade (in the photo, you can still see the fading ghost and Pac-Men munching down the street), so here it is for posterity.

Munich sets the record for world's largest jaywalker? Seventeen meters tall, he's been poised to cross Leopoldstraße since 1995.

Here are photos by the artist, Jonathan Borofsky, showing the construction of "Walking Man." To my surprise, he built it in California, then had it shipped in pieces.

"Walking Man" was commissioned by Munich Re, a reinsurance company. Their building is equally artsy, but more neoclassical than modern. You'll have to take my word for it, since Google dropped Street View from Germany after one too many privacy lawsuits.

7. Stealth Bomber Swimming Pool at Whiteman AFB

Google maps kept this swimming pool blurred for a while, but the secret is out: stealth bombers are amphibious! See that link for what this pool looked like in 2007, before it turned icky.

Sadly, this swimming pool and the grounds around it have seen better days. Sports fields and facilities appear to be falling into disrepair. They're located on the outskirts of Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri, home of the B-2 Stealth Bomber. My guess is that the swimming pool is part of a school that is now closed.

8. Cruise Ship Mall, Hong Kong

For many years, there was a strange sign near the harbor in San Diego that read, "Cruise ships use airport exit." Apparently this ship followed the sign, made a wrong turn, and got trapped in a forest of giant Twitter hashtags.

Actually, this is a ship-shaped shopping center in the middle of Whampoa Gardens, a colossal apartment complex in Hong Kong built on the site of former dockyards.

The Whampoa, 110 meters long and several stories high, includes shops, cinemas, restaurants, and a mini indoor theme park.

9. Parque Gulliver in Valencia, Spain

In Valencia, Spain, poor Gulliver of Gulliver's travels is still being tormented by the Lilleputians. In fact, you can join them.

There's all sorts of interesting things around Gulliver, so I've left this map zoomed out a bit. He's at upper left, the Gardens of Turia at lower right.

Here's more close-up photos of Parque Gulliver's awesomeness. He's been delighting children since he opened to the public (literally!) in 1990.

Here's another clever use of land: the Turia river used to flood the city of Valencia, sometimes fatally, so they diverted the river away from the city and turned its bed into green spaces and parks!

10. Henge and Crop Circle in Avebury, UK

One of my favorite places in the world is Avebury, a village inside a Neolithic stone circle. It's less well-known than Stonehenge, but to my mind it's a lot more fun walking around inside a henge than looking at it from outside, even if some of the stones here have been lost.

The slightly wobbly earthen circle is the henge surrounding the village. As of August 2011, there's a crop circle just NE of the village; circles like this appear frequently near Avebury and around Stonehenge thanks to an especially active group of crop circle artists in Wiltshire.

(Update: Looks like Google maps is preserving the 2011 crop circle for posterity. I'll grab a screenshot, just in case it goes away.)

11. The Atacama Giant, Chile

This giant is about 1000 years old and 280 feet long.

There are a ton of huge glyphs in the deserts of Chile and Peru created by the Inca and Tiwanaku civilizations from about 800 AD up until the Conquistadors stamped out the old civilizations in the region.

12. UFO Landing Pad Mat in Holland

The Dutch town of Houten has created an official landing pad for UFOs, complete with traffic advisory lights to help guide aliens down. (We'll just have to hope they can figure out the signals.) This art piece by Martin and Inge Riebeek is quite beautiful at night.

To my surprise, while researching it, I discovered that there is also a UFO landing pad in St. Paul, Canada and another in Ares, France which has actually been visited by aliens. And don't forget the countless air travelers through LAX who have dined at the '60s kitsch "Encounter" UFO-shaped restaurant overlooking the runway.

13. Parking Lot Burial Plot in Louisville, Kentucky

Unfortunately, the human race keeps on being fruitful and multiplying, which leads to a certain amount of urban sprawl around formerly rural cemeteries.

Here's the family plot of the 1800s Burks family farm (dark green square), now enclosed in a mall parking lot right next to a McDonald's and Home Depot. Ouch.

While this may look odd in America, in many parts of the world where available land is at a premium, the tug-of-war between old burials and modern buildings stretches back for centuries. In fact, the Paris catacombs were a drastic solution to the problem, where bodies exhumed from cemeteries within the city limits were moved to old limestone mining tunnels.

14. Fingerprint on Lens in Brighton, UK

Who knew that you could get a fingerprint on the lens of a satellite camera?

Chris Drury's "Fingermaze," commissioned by the city of Brighton, is a modern land-art piece like the more famous "Spiral Jetty" by Robert Smithson.

Here's a webpage on the "Fingermaze" with a teacher's information packet talking about other such mazes.

But really, I just like mazes. They're fun to walk around in, fun to look at from above. Here's another personal favorite, Longleat, which has sprouted sprouted two more mazes since my last visit.

15. Hungry Hungry Hippos: Katavi Park, Tanzania

Finding wild animal herds is one of the more challenging Google Maps hunts, since there's usually no landmarks or addresses anywhere near them. Finding herds of animals is like finding Easter eggs, but Google Maps enthusiasts have located a number of these eggs. In this image, the two greenish patches contain herds of hippos. To zoom in and see them, click the "+" on the Google window above.

Other African critters on Google Maps include:

  • Camels: 15°17'40.32" N 20°28'47.42" E
  • Buffaloes: 4°17'21.49" S 31°23'46.46" E
  • Elephants: 10°54'13.66" N 19°56'06.15" E
  • Flamingos: 21°50'36.15" S 35°27'00.60" E
  • Oryx: 24°57'18.60" S 15°51'30.61" E
  • Seals: 18°26'45.45" S 12°00'44.20" E

Just plug those coordinates into Google Maps and zoom in. A lot.

16. Alien Messages in Newtown, Connecticut

Castle Hill Farm's maze varies from year to year. In 2011, it was a big spiderweb; in 2012, it was a couple of cow heads sending a cryptic greeting to "Mom," and for 2013, they did something that looked like a cross between daisies and the Flying Spaghetti Monster. Notice they've incorporated "2013" as part of the design. Get with the program, Google: what did they do for 2014?

Three cheers for aerial photography champions who keep updating their desktops for passing planes. It's a lot harder to do with a tractor.

17. Weird Lines in China

There's a bunch of these in the remote parts of China, and they're enormous.

My theory is that they're some inane government or penal make-work project designed to keep people busy. "Let's make bizarre maze-grids in the desert and puzzle those Americans!" But no. As expected, they're military in purpose. Some are weapons-testing areas, while others are calibration targets for spy satellites.

I suppose they're more classy-looking than some dude's farm in Texas that says "Luecke."

Australia's Floating Man Dock

G'day, Nessie Mate!

18. Australian Park Sculptures

Washington Waters Park in Southport, Queensland appears to have a floating dock that flew in from Minecraft, which is impressive, given the dock is older than the video game.

Meanwhile—Oh, is that where Nessie went? She sure gets around. Apparently Nessie has moved Down Under to a children's playground in Bondi, New South Wales, next to a pleasant park for sunbathing and a public beach.

Pleasant, that is, if you're not worried about the giant crocodile to the southeast of Nessie.

19. The Bulford Kiwi

It's a bit stretched and skinny in the Google Maps version, and it's also rather more serious than most of the items on this page. The Bulford Kiwi was created by WWI New Zealand soldiers camped in Wiltshire, England, stuck waiting for a ship home. Nowadays it's also considered a memorial to the Anzacs (Australian and New Zealand Army Corps) killed in the infamous battle of Gallipoli.

Here's a tourist's photo gallery showing close-up images of the Kiwi and its commemorative plaque.

The tradition of carving figures into the chalks of Wiltshire goes back to Neolithic times. See the Uffington White Horse for a famous example.

20. Misplaced Aircraft in France

France joins the creative parking brigade with a fighter plane in the Paris West University Nanterre La Défense parking lot.

I can't find any information about it, apart from an unconfirmed comment that the university used to be connected to the aviation industry (which does at least make sense).

Alas, a lot of the weirdly-parked vehicles of Google Maps have wandered off. The giant VW Spider-Bug on the roof of a Reno, NV building has been removed, and the car on the side of a building is nearly impossible to see now.

21. The Buran Space Shuttle: This Makes Me Sad

Sadly, the Buran Space Shuttle never really got going: it had one unmanned test flight and that was all. Here's the old propaganda-laced website for it, and a more coherent account on Wikipedia.

Then again, since I first wrote this article, I watched our space shuttle program end, and I can now go visit Endeavour, grounded and decommissioned, whenever I like.

22. Beitou Incinerator, Taiwan

Oh, look, it's more art for aliens to admire.

Taiwan treats city waste disposal as a place for art. I like it!

This incinerator for Tapei generates electricity for the city, and its chimney sports a snazzy observation tower with an aerial restaurant. The official homepage includes a 360° pan from the top of the tower (scroll down to see).

If that weren't enough, the incinerator also boasts a swimming pool with free swimming lessons, since drowning is the leading cause of death for children in Taiwan.

23. Friendly Oil Refinery Norfolk, Virginia

Someone had fun decorating these oil tanks in Norfolk, Virginia.

These are obviously old, but it turns out that some companies are just now beginning to optimize their rooftop painting as free advertisements which, they hope, will look good in Google Maps. Company logos and signs are boring, however. I much prefer silly signs, friendly signs, annoyed complaints, Waldo, teenagers painting inappropriate body parts on their parents' roofs, and the occasional rooftop marriage proposal.

(Most of the above are no longer on Google maps, but they were there once.)

24. World Map by Søren Poulsen

The artist of this amazing work, Søren Poulsen, created this map between 1944 and 1967 by hand, dragging stones out onto the edge of the lake using a sled on the ice during the winter (clever!) and levering them into position during the thaw.

At about 50 by 100 yards across, it includes miniature lakes, rivers, and other marked features, plus mini boats for kids to sail the "Pacific Ocean" in the summer, an 18-hole mini golf course, a petting zoo, playground, and a picnic area.

25. Madurodam Park, The Hague

Madurodam: City within a city

The Madurodam is an entire miniaturized city, airport, canal, and railroad. All buildings are 1:25 scale, most are replicas of real places in the Netherlands, and they all help tell the history and legends of Holland.

On Google Maps, use the nearby parking lot and people-shadows to get a sense of scale.

Below is a great video showcasing most of the nooks and crannies of this fascinating landmark. Go to 3:30 for the world's largest ducks or the world's tiniest cows.

Even More Funny Things on Google Maps

  • The Amazing iOS 6 Maps
    Celebrating all the bugs, fails, and bizarre visuals of Apple iPad's new Maps App.
  • Bizarre Bridges in Google Earth
    Topographical mapping follows the contours of the land. Bridges do not. Oops.
  • GoogleSightseeing.com
    The motherlode of funny pictures and interesting things found on Google Maps, this site will keep you distracted for hours. Also includes a huge amount of odd sights snapped by the Google Street View Car, including insane scuba divers.
  • Strange Google Earth Places—Rodsbot.com
    A large collection of Google Maps oddities.
  • VirtualGlobetrotting.com
    The focus of this site is not just funny things, but satellite and street views of interesting things and local attractions around the world.

Earth From Above

A Note About Privacy

Although Google's Street View raises some privacy concerns, and some countries have banned or challenged its use, we can have some Big Brother fun while it's still available.

© 2011 Ellen Brundige

Guestbook—Seen anything odd on Google Maps? Mention it here!

Ellen Brundige (author) from California on January 05, 2015:

I'm jealous that you've been able to visit some of these, Sheila! Avebury is the only one I've gotten to explore in person, and it was magical.

Brian Dooling from Connecticut on January 04, 2015:

LOVED this! Great article, so funny!

Liz Elias from Oakley, CA on January 04, 2015:

Congrats on HOTD! Very funny and fun, indeed!

Love the practical jokers with the 'Welcome to Cleveland" sign. LOL The jaywalker and the bomber in the pool are also pretty funny.

And a cruise-ship-shaped mall?? Hilarious!

Voted up, interesting and funny.

Patty Inglish MS from USA and Asgardia, the First Space Nation on January 04, 2015:

This is wild! Congratulations on HOTD for this Hub. It seems that we've been making images on the ground large enough and odd enough for someone "out there" in the universe to see for thousands of years. Well done!

Peg Cole from North Dallas, Texas on January 04, 2015:

This was really quite entertaining. Loved the Pac Man scene and the Batman pool. You must spend quite a bit of time on Google maps. The only funny thing I saw out there was that they still had a photo of our old truck in our yard after we had long since sold it.

Marcy Goodfleisch from Planet Earth on January 04, 2015:

This is fun information! I am in Austin, and I've heard of the farm you mentioned near here, but I hadn't heard it was used as a landmark for mapping! Congrats on the HOTD!

Dolores Monet from East Coast, United States on January 04, 2015:

I love to search the Google maps and see the odd, the weird, and the beautiful. These pix are great - what an interesting world we live in!

luisj305 from Florida on January 04, 2015:

This is awesome! Really enjoyed the article, my favorite had to be the coordinates for the various animals.

SheilaMilne from Kent, UK on January 04, 2015:

I did enjoy this! It was especially interesting to see a few places I know such as Avebury, Bulford and Madurodam, but of course I saw these places at ground level. I didn't know about the Fingermaze in Brighton even though I live not far away.

mySuccess8 on January 04, 2015:

It's amazing to know that Google Maps offer a lot of helpful features, other than double-checking directions, which we might not have realized. As an example, this is an interesting compilation of some funny and unusual landmarks and images as seen from Google Maps. I am particularly amazed by the amount of work required to produce the beautiful World Map in Denmark. Congrats on Hub of the Day!

Ellen Brundige (author) from California on October 13, 2014:

Oh, hey, thanks for the tip!

Mads Horn on September 28, 2014:

In Denmark there has been a world map in a lake for more than 50 years. Try searching for "Søren Poulsens Vej Klejtrup" and zoom in on the the part of the lake nearest to the road Søren Poulsens Vej.

Søren Poulsen hauled the stones used to build the map on a sledge in the vinter, sometimes over the frozen lake.

Niktravelfit on July 19, 2014:

Amazing lens - thanks a lot for sharing!

Ellen Brundige (author) from California on May 03, 2014:

@Guy E Wood: Sorry, I hadn't checked this page for a while and Squidoo decided to strip out all our code/HTML and turn it into raw text. You weren't supposed to see that! *wipes egg off face, repairs all the links*

Ellen Brundige (author) from California on May 03, 2014:

@jmchaconne: There's an old Squidoo module called Google Maps or something like that. I've found it doesn't work very well any longer, so I just deleted all of them on this site and changed them to links.

All they are is HTML links: I find the right location on Google Maps in a spare window, copy the URL, and then place them here in a text module. I just dinked around with CSS to add backgrounds, rounded corners, etc to create buttons.

jmchaconne on March 08, 2014:

And a fascinating journey it was! I just wrote a lens called Wildwood Farm, where I purchased two gorgeous trees, a Japanese Maple called 'Fireglow' and a weeping blossoming cherry called 'Snow Fountain," to landscape a waterfall I'd recently constructed. I'd love to embed both the location of the Wildwood Farm, and my waterfall, where the new trees are planted. How did you do that!

anonymous on February 21, 2014:

Funny Bugs!

TerriCarr on February 16, 2014:

So much Fun! Thanks for putting this together.

joinyobsn on January 20, 2014:

LOL brilliant lens! love it and thank you for all your hard work in it.

Carolan Ross from St. Louis, MO on November 08, 2013:

Very entertaining visit to funny things on Google Maps!

Guy E Wood from USA on October 08, 2013:

Fun lens, but I was a little annoyed at the super-long URLs listed for most of the photos. Have you tried using a URL shortening service, such as bitly? That would make your fun lens even more fun!

Thank you for sharing.

Onward!

RomanceHoneymoonDestinations on September 04, 2013:

Funny, and amazing about Google maps.

girlfriendfactory on August 09, 2013:

These are hysterical! My son and I had quite the laugh! We loved the giant bunny, Sponge Bob, and the huge jay walker! :-)

AntonioM23 on August 02, 2013:

I use Google Earth almost every day,but I never saw something odd.

k4shmir on July 14, 2013:

interesting. thanks for sharing

anonymous on July 12, 2013:

34.435403,-84.449737 just south of Pickens Co Airport north of Atalnata Ga. A vicious crop cat.

GupteComputer on June 29, 2013:

Interesting and great lens. It must have taken you a lot of time to find this! I use Google Earth a lot, and there is a lot more to see!

TipsForMoms on June 22, 2013:

Very fun lens! I loved the miniature city. I use Google Maps all the time and have found my share of strange sights.

Ellen Brundige (author) from California on June 21, 2013:

@kerbev: Er... yay? :)

Steve Dizmon from Nashville, TN on June 17, 2013:

This was fun. Thanks for the time to put it together.

tok2gman on June 04, 2013:

Very cool lens! Thank you.

jemacb on May 29, 2013:

This is really neat stuff. How did you find this? Haha. Very interesting.

Kerri Bee from Upstate, NY on May 16, 2013:

I spotted a dog pooping on google street view!

Nathalie Roy from France (Canadian expat) on May 08, 2013:

I had no idea Google map could be so fun. I usually use it only for 2 things: check out where we are going to spend the next holiday or , more often, when i am homesick I use it to ''visit'' my favorite spots in Canada (I know it sounds stupid but it makes me feel better)

Avery Miller from USA on May 07, 2013:

Great lens!

Ellen Brundige (author) from California on May 03, 2013:

@anonymous: Eek! It does look like it, doesn't it?

ConvenientCalendar on May 02, 2013:

Very creative!

anonymous on April 27, 2013:

haha Very interesting lens, I really enjoy it while reading.

juanhuerta on April 25, 2013:

Love your love for maps! (I am kind of a map freak) :)

anonymous on April 25, 2013:

There is a man dragging a dead body into a lake at: 52.376552, 5.198303

Elis173 on April 24, 2013:

I like this lens,thanks

smbe2100 on April 23, 2013:

Wow, I love the "Psychedelic" one. Been to Miniature City in The Hague. It's amazing!

Underrated on April 21, 2013:

Very interesting lens

PiccadillyPunkin on April 16, 2013:

This has to be one of my favorite lenses I've ever seen! AWESOME!

Cynthia Haltom from Diamondhead on April 16, 2013:

I enjoyed your google maps a very clever idea for a lens. I have always been intrigued with how these map look and the way they pinpoint a day in time.

anonymous on April 15, 2013:

52.376552,5.198303 zoom in on the dock. it looks like someone dragged a bloody body all the way down the dock. they are still standing there. can't find a street view that faces their direction.

anonymous on April 15, 2013:

Here are two other vehicles in odd places (Leipzig, Germany): 51.329184, 12.326607 and 51.309732, 12.392793.

denetraharris on April 12, 2013:

Very interesting!

FB-Explorer on April 11, 2013:

I love this lens! I'm going to have to spend some more time to really come up with a favorite. I WILL be back - many times, I'm sure. I bookmarked this one. Also, I had considered using a Google map view in the Air Force Museum virtual tour lens, but didn't know how to do it. Thanks for letting me know it can be done.

bannerbuzzuk on April 09, 2013:

OMG! how did you collect all these things?

geosum on April 08, 2013:

Great collection. Lots of fun looking it over.

criysto lm on April 08, 2013:

Entertaining lens! Thanks for the entertainment.

anonymous on April 07, 2013:

this is very nice one, did you have your own satellite when you created this lens ? very great collections ,congrats

rkhadija96 on April 02, 2013:

Great lens! Thanx for sharing .

lady-in-red on March 29, 2013:

two thumbs up! i'm really having fun zooming the google maps! I have seen all of them from start to finish.. i wonder if there's like this in Philippines? ^_^

@aquavel: yeah.. i do like that cruise ship in hash tags too!

Paladins on March 26, 2013:

Thanks for the entertaining lens and "agricola est in agro" which is about all I can remember from the two years of Latin my mother made me take in 5th and 6th grades (and I am thankful that she did).

Latin helps with understanding a lot about the world in which we live and the languages that we encounter.

Aquavel on March 22, 2013:

Fun lens! This provided just the diversion I needed this morning. Loved zooming in on those google maps! Too bad those polls aren't working today! My favorite: The ship caught in the hash tags!

Obrien123 on March 17, 2013:

Remarkable and fun lens! Thanks for putting it together and organizing it so well! I was unaware of most of these

chrispierce33 on March 15, 2013:

HAHAHAHA I loved the heart shaped island and the stealth bomber XD

anonymous on March 11, 2013:

Wildlife area created by owner with name carved into the ground

48.0642,-95.613842

Ellen Brundige (author) from California on March 06, 2013:

@anonymous: Ooh, good catch! Thanks!

anonymous on March 05, 2013:

51.658888,4.056028

old fighter plane in the fields

Netherlands, province of Zeeland

spencerharry80 lm on March 05, 2013:

The lens is really nice, attractive and informative... nice piece of work.

spencerharry80 lm on March 04, 2013:

Really nice lens... well prepared and informative... Thanks dear.

Auriel on February 28, 2013:

great lens

Ryan81 on February 27, 2013:

Where would we be without Google ha ha!! Great Lens, keep up the great work.:)

Ellen Brundige (author) from California on February 24, 2013:

@CristianStan: O.o I wouldn't be laughing at that! Yikes!

internetsuc6 on February 24, 2013:

this is really great

anonymous on February 24, 2013:

Very interesting... Thanks for sharing

CristianStan on February 23, 2013:

These always make me laugh, I remember seeing one with a guy pointing a gun at another guy

Celticep from North Wales, UK on February 21, 2013:

Fantastic idea! Never thought of using google in this way before, great fun!

pauly99 lm on February 20, 2013:

I thought about writing something not so kind on my roof after a large tree limb fell on the roof and the insurance company only paid about 20% of what it would cost to fix the roof.

CatJGB on February 18, 2013:

I saw one the other day that purportedly showed a ghost standing on the edge of house site. Hmmmmm....

Carpenter76 on February 17, 2013:

Hahaha that was great. Didn't know that. When I'm bored I will search Google Maps to find something like that

happymonkeyz on February 14, 2013:

interesting and great findings.

Gardener Don on February 10, 2013:

Another classic example of why I love Squidoo. Surfed in for a 2 minute "eyeballing", surfed out 30 minutes later. Great lens...

entertainmentev on February 05, 2013:

This is so clever! I had no idea these things were on Google map.

Great lens :)

rdcbizz on January 30, 2013:

nice lens

May Matthew on January 26, 2013:

Amazing! You have put together so much interesting information. Thank you for sharing.

mrknowitall54321 on January 25, 2013:

Haha, great idea for a lens, I Love it.

Allison Whitehead on January 25, 2013:

Superb lens - I'd seen a few things on Google Maps but missed most of these. Fascinating.

niels010 on January 24, 2013:

Squidlike your lens! The picture of the farmer in Texas is really funny .. strange that are some rare things on GoogleEarth love to see it

AdamzPg on January 23, 2013:

Google maps is the business. I would have been lost in so many cities without it!

anonymous on January 18, 2013:

I think you can also add this one now! 42.365259, 10.921524

norma-holt on January 01, 2013:

A new blessing on this lovely lens and may you have a wonderful, successful and happy 2013. Hugs

Wendy Leanne from Texas on December 30, 2012:

How funny. What a great idea for a lens. I really enjoyed looking through all of the Google maps images here.

imagelist lm on December 29, 2012:

cool lens...i likes it...

JeffGilbert on December 24, 2012:

I rarely go on Google maps, I'm amazed at the level of detail you can get on the land.

Tom Fattes from Naperville, IL on December 23, 2012:

For years, I've wanted to put a message on the roof of my house. Maybe something like, Starbucks with an arrow.

C A Chancellor from US/TN on December 18, 2012:

Amazing what you can find on Google. :-)

Michael Shepherd from Ennis, Co. Clare, Ireland on December 17, 2012:

Yes, fun. In Ireland as in the U.K. limited access highways are called Motorways.

Cheers,

John_I on December 14, 2012:

Fascinating!

mistaben on December 11, 2012:

Really funny lens =)

snickersthebest1 on December 06, 2012:

LOL

shelleymax on November 29, 2012:

Loved the animal (crop Circles) well done..

CraftyandClever from everywhere but mostly Cali on November 28, 2012:

I need to spend more time on Google maps. It is cooler than I thought!

Markwell1 on November 21, 2012:

Lol!

pinkrenegade lm on November 16, 2012:

Very funny indeed! Those things were simply amazing! Thanks for sharing this wonderful lens!

laptop89 on November 15, 2012:

Great lens, good idea !

ninjadude on November 13, 2012:

googs or google!

johnsonlasteas.blogspot.com

Source: https://turbofuture.com/internet/funny-things-on-google-maps

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