Mint’s new glow-in-the-dark coin features Canada’s most famous flying saucer
HALIFAX — The Royal Canadian Mint has issued a glow-in-the-dark coin that captures the eerie scene more than 50 years ago when awestruck witnesses reporting seeing what was officially documented as a UFO crash off southwestern Nova Scotia.
The colourful image on the rectangular-shaped coin shows three fishermen aboard a boat, staring and gesturing as the ghostly image of a flying saucer appears to plunge into the dark waters near Shag Harbour.
But something special happens when the included black-light flashlight is used to illuminate the coin in the dark: the spaceship disappears, but four orange lights remain in the sky, as described by those who reported seeing something that moonless night on Oct. 4, 1967.
“Our coins always aim to tell the whole spectrum of the Canadian experience, from serious topics — like our veterans in remembrance, our technical achievements and amazing landmarks — to the stories that really surprise you,” said mint spokesman Alex Reeves.