New York Post

Weird BUT true

- Natalie O’Neill, with Wires

Finally, hair of the dog for the dog.

Colorado-based company Apollo Peak has uncorked what may be the world’s first “wine for canines.”

CharDOGNay and ZinfanTAIL are non-alcoholic brews with beets and chamomile that will relax Rover, according to the company.

The hair-raising beverages come in wine-shaped bottles and cost $17.95. They contain no grapes, which can be bad for dogs.

A young boy pulled a fast one when he stole a bus — and none of the passengers even noticed the lad was behind the wheel.

The 11-year-old troublemak­er said he found a key to the privately owned bus and decided to take it for a joyride in Ingolstadt, Germany.

No one was injured and the boy was released to his mom.

That’s one way to get a rise out your boss.

A worker slipped his manager Viagra in a prank.

Benjamin Chope, 24, was arrested and is accused of spiking his boss’ drink at a home-improvemen­t shop in Newton Abbot, England, according to police.

A flasher on roller skates is on the loose in Denmark, where he has shocked at least three women in parks.

The roller creep usually hides behind bushes in Tjæreborg before exposing himself — and then zips away on the goofy getaway wheels, police said.

Cops are hunting for the perv, who is in his 20s and has dark hair.

A cash-machine-style terminal in New Zealand asks people to deposit info about their mood to test the city’s “emotional condition.”

The Moodbank project in Whangarei features a touch screen on which passers-by can select from more than 1,000 feelings.

Users “deposit” a descriptio­n of their current state of mind into the machine, which doesn’t dispense cash.

Its creators say the goal is to prove that a city’s well-being is as important as its economic status.

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