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Larry,
What a wonderful idea!. I shall do exactly that though I have never done it before. Thanks for the details which you have obviously spent time thinking about. It is so much better not having to reinvent the wheel. I shall start collecting bottles today. I presume that when you say polycarbonate you mean such as plastic fizz or Coca-Cola bottles? It is one of my pleasures to receive emails and letters from people I have never met but who have met me through newsletters I write. I started writing them of our travels to my daughter and a few friends and work colleagues. They passed them on to friends and the result is that they are sent all over the world. I often get emails from places that amaze me. One Chinese friend from IBM in Sydney sends them to her brother in Shandong University, China who is a professor of English and who uses them for his students to study colloquial English. To avoid being iunnundated with a couple of thousand emails, they collate the questions and forward as a couple of single emails. It is an incredible way to meet people. The newsletters are not great literature, are a bit nutty and focus more on the people and history (my passion). They are only my view of where we have travelled but it seems that people like travel stories. We have met up with several of them as we have travelled, following up their invitations to visit. Actually people like stories regardless of their level of sophistication and age. Actually your idea appeals to the romantic in me in that you never know where your message could end up as well as to find one would be an exciting experience for someone. I suppose that you have heard of the many Jin (Gene) stories from the middle east whereby somebody found a bottle on the sea shore. Why I liked the movie of the same name is not because of the bottle, It is because I like romantic movies of that nature sometimes - same vein as "Sleepless in Seattle". I attended an IT conference in Boston in 1996 and made a weekend stopover in New York on the way back, mainly to see the ship Peking at South Street Seaport. I posted about 30 postcards to various women from the Empire State Building - with the message that I had waited for them, was dissappointed that they hadn't shown and signed off with "Sleepless in Seattle" - not my name. The women loved it, many probably still wondering who sent it. Thanks again Larry. cheers Peter On Mon, 16 Apr 2007 05:33:32 +0000, Larry wrote: Peter Hendra wrote in : Message in a Bottle Ever dropped one over the side, Peter? I have a picture from an Irish public school class, who found one of my bottled messages on a beach on the Irish Coast, washed up by the Gulf Stream. I've also had emails from Iceland, Spain and the Azores! Put a nice message and picture of you and your boat in a delabeled polycarbonate soda or water bottle with a good screw cap. I like the 40 oz sizes to get a better picture into. Make sure you have your email address, phone number, Skype name, home port so they can contact you. Ask for an exchange of pictures/penpal emails. It's great fun when bored at sea offshore. Sometimes you hear from a bottle you dumped overboard YEARS AGO! Those polycarbonate bottles are really tough! Oh, also wrap your contents in an external layer of paper so the sun doesn't bleach the message/picture off them. Drop some brand new coins in the bottle, too. The kids abroad love that...or some stamps from home for the stamp collectors. PAINT THE ENDS OF THE BOTTLE INTERNATIONAL ORANGE WITH GLOW PAINT also improves their visibility on a beach. I just paint them by spraying the INSIDE of the bottle through the hole, which also helps protect the contents from the sun. I used to do this from Navy ships crossing the Atlantic, many years ago. Everyone thought I was crazy until they saw some of the neat stuff finders of the bottles sent me.....(c; Larry |