Related: How to Drink in Other Countries
Germany: Bicycling While Drunk

Apparently, drunken cycling is a big problem in Germany. To combat the scourge of two-wheeled intoxication, the country has — according to European news site The Local — passed a law that allows German authorities to seize the driver’s license of those caught cycling under the influence and allows authorities to order a medical and psychological evaluation known as an MPA.
Related: From Boneshakers to the Wright Brothers: 25 Fun Facts About Bicycles
Massachusetts: Happy Hour

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Maharashtra, India: You Need a Permit to Drink

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The U.K.: Illegal to Be Drunk in a Pub

The U.K.’s Licensing Act 1872 is a treasure trove of bizarre and outdated liquor laws, including a real law that threatens anyone found drunk in any public place — including pubs — with a fine. According to the law, “Every person found drunk in any highway or other public place, whether a building or not, or on any licensed premises, shall be liable to a penalty.” (Alaska reportedly has a similar law.)
Related: 15 Drinking Pilgrimages You Need to Make
Colorado: Drunken Horseback Riding

In 2013, a Colorado man was arrested in Boulder while riding a horse drunk. According to a University of Colorado police spokesman cited in a Reuters report, “It’s probably the first time in department history that we have pulled someone over for driving under the influence while on a horse.” According to a local DUI attorney, the infraction is not a DUI but “a charge of animal rider on highway under the influence of alcohol/controlled substance.”
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France: Driver Breathalyzer Kits

From 2013 until it was abolished in late 2019, France had in place a controversial law that required all motorists to keep at least one of their own breathalyzer kits in their car at all times. The law was confusing to motorists: A planned fine was scrapped shortly after it was implemented, while the law was kept in place, meaning all police could do was warn people the law existed.
Related: Don’t Believe These 19 Myths About Alcohol
North Carolina: Booze and Bingo

Latin America: Alcohol Sales on Election Day

Related: What Other Countries Are Doing to Make Voting Accurate and Accessible
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The U.K.: Tending to Livestock Drunk

Another odd relic of the U.K.’s Licensing Act 1872 mandates that every person “who is drunk while in charge on any highway or other public place of any carriage, horse, cattle, or steam engine” shall be liable to a fine not exceeding 40 shillings or a prison term not exceeding one month.
Related: 41 Weird Laws From Around the World
Alberta, Canada: Infusing Spirits

A number of outdated Canadian alcohol laws have been coming off the books in recent years, among them a much-mocked rule outlawing the infusion of spirits. The law was finally changed in 2018 as part of Alberta’s recent push to reestablish itself as one of North America’s premier spirits destinations.
Related: 17 Refreshing Cocktails From Around the World
Sydney: Shots After Midnight

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Sweden: Only the Government Can Sell Certain Alcohols

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England: Drinking ‘Within View of the Pitch’

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Chicago: Giving a Dog Whiskey

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Ohio: Getting a Fish Drunk

Related: The Surprising Reasons Fishing Is Good for Your Health
Lefors, Texas: Sipping Beer While Standing

It is supposedly illegal to take more than three sips of a beer while standing in the town of Lefors, Texas (population 488), according to the San-Antonio Express-News. “The background of this law is obscure, but likely has something to do with standing while intoxicated,” a Houston attorney says.
El Salvador: Punishment for Drunken Driving

Related: 16 Ways Driving Has Changed in the Past 50 Years
Australia: Crushing a Beer Can Between Breasts

An Australian bartender made international headlines in 2007 when she was fined $1,000 for reportedly crushing a beer can between her exposed breasts at a hotel bar south of Perth. According to the Sydney Morning Herald, the bartender was found to be in violation of the Liquor Control Act in the state of Western Australia.
La Paz, Bolivia: Married Women at Bars and Restaurants

The Daily Meal and other sites including Second Bottle claim that a law in La Paz, Bolivia — sometimes reported as applying to the country overall — prohibits married women from drinking more than one glass of wine in bars and restaurants in an effort to discourage extramarital affairs. If true, the sexist law has no equal when it comes to married men.
Scotland: Wearing Underwear Beneath a Kilt

Though not an actual law, an oft-cited traditional Scots law (from a hybrid common law/civil law system) supposedly says that a Scotsman can be fined two cans of beer if he’s caught wearing underwear beneath his kilt. According to some, a “True Scotsman” would never wear underwear beneath their kilts, a tradition that is thought to have its roots in Scottish military traditions. As Celtic Life International notes, enforcement of such a provision would in reality prove questionable at best.