Fun Facts

Recent Content

How Monopoly Games Helped POWs Escape Nazi Camps

How Monopoly Games Helped POWs Escape Nazi Camps

British intelligence hid maps, compasses, and real money inside WWII Monopoly games sent to POW camps. Hundreds escaped—Germans never discovered it.

Read more
The Space Pen Myth (And What Really Happened)

The Space Pen Myth (And What Really Happened)

The space pen myth is backwards. Fisher spent his own $1M, sold pens to NASA for $6 each. Russia bought them too—pencils were too dangerous in space.

Read more
The Truth About Red Fire Trucks

The Truth About Red Fire Trucks

Fire trucks are red from 1800s tradition, but studies show lime-yellow trucks have 3x fewer accidents. Most departments chose tradition over proven safety.

Read more
The Manufactured American Lawn Obsession

The Manufactured American Lawn Obsession

American lawn obsession was manufactured by pesticide companies after WWII. The "perfect lawn" is an aristocratic status symbol sold as the American Dream.

Read more
Why Treadmills Were Originally Punishment Devices

Why Treadmills Were Originally Punishment Devices

Treadmills were invented in 1818 as prison torture devices. Inmates climbed for hours daily grinding grain or nothing. We now pay gyms to use them voluntarily.

Read more
See All Content
logo
  • Sports

  • History

  • Language

  • Food

  • Tech

  • Animals

  • Sports
  • History
  • Language
  • Food
  • Tech
  • Animals
  • ​
    ​

The Island Where Money Literally Grows on Trees

The Island Where Money Literally Grows on Trees

On a remote Pacific island,you can actually harvest money from trees- and it's completely legal tender that locals use for everyday purchases.

The Micronesian island of Yaphas one of the world's most unusual monetary systems.Alongside their famous giant stone coins,islanders use currency made from tree barkthat can bepeeled, processed, and spentjust like paper money.

The "money trees" are a species of mulberrywhoseinner bark has the perfect fibrous texturefor creating durable, flexible currency.Local families have harvesting rightsto specific trees thathave been passed down through generationslike valuable property.

The process is sophisticated.The bark is stripped in long sheets,soaked in saltwater for weeks, thenpounded flat and driedinto paper-like sheets.Each sheet gets official government stampsthatvalidate its worthfor transactions.

Different trees produce different denominations.Older, larger trees yield bark that's worth more per sheetthan younger trees.Some ancient specimensare so valuable thatfamilies guard them jealouslyandharvest them only during financial emergencies.

Local businesses accept the tree moneyfor everything fromgroceries to taxi rides.Tourists are often shockedto see shopkeeperscarefully examining bark currencyalongside regular cash and credit cards.

The system works because the bark is incredibly difficult to counterfeit.Each tree produces bark with unique fiber patternsthat locals canidentify immediately.Fake bark is obvious to anyone familiar with the authentic texture and appearance.

Climate change threatens this ancient system.Rising sea levels and changing weather patternsarekilling some of the money trees, makingcertain denominations increasingly rareand valuable.

This Pacific island proves thatmoney really can grow on trees- if you knowwhich trees to plant.

Related Content

Terms and ConditionsDo Not Sell or Share My Personal InformationPrivacy PolicyPrivacy NoticeAccessibility NoticeUnsubscribe
Copyright © 2026 Fun Fact Feed