From a mysterious new moustache to suggestions that genies helped the coup plotters, here are some of the stranger stories emerging after Turkey's botched military putsch this month.
How to stop a tank
Civilians played a crucial role in defeating the coup, climbing on top of tanks and crowding round rebel soldiers in support of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Online searches for "How to stop a tank" skyrocketed on the night of the coup on July 15, according to Google Trends, especially in the cities of Konya, Kayseri, Istanbul and Ankara.
Istanbul restaurant owner Mehmet Sukru Kintas and chef Danyal Simsek found an unusual but effective method for halting the tanks: stuffing clothes into their exhaust pipes, according to media reports.
Soon after they heard about the coup attempt, the pair took their car and blocked tanks heading for the city's main international Ataturk airport.
Acting on a tip-off from a repairman there, they managed to stop about 10 tanks by blocking their exhaust pipes and filters, the Hurriyet newspaper reported.
Mayor shelters in shanty
Citizens later delivered to police some of the soldiers who were forced out of the tanks by the polluted air inside.
As the chaos broke out, Ankara Mayor Melih Gokcek said he hid in a "shanty house" near his home in the capital to speak by telephone to government officials and police.
"People in a leadership position and who are obliged to keep the people informed must definitely go to areas out of sight in order to manage the situation at such a time," he said in an interview with state-run Anadolu news agency.
Mayor shelters in shanty