It's not unusual to see all sorts of things washed up on beaches around the world. There are the natural things such as seaweed/kelp, sea shells, and all things native to the oceans such as dead sea animals of various sorts ranging from small creatures to the occasional large whale.
But things washed up on the beaches also includes strange and surprising items not normally associated with beaches. Most of this marine debris is trash such as plastic bags, bottles, and cans from land-based sources. Some of it, however, is due to weather events like hurricanes and tsunamis. While other sources include vessels in storm-tossed seas. We have seen several very large and strange things washed up on the shores of western U.S. and Canada that arrived from Japan courtesy of the 2011 tsunami.
Here is a list I came across of unusual beach findings that didn't belong there.
In January
2012, huge shipping containers from a distressed cargo vessel washed up on one
of New Zealand's most popular beaches. Up to 300 containers were reportedly
tossed overboard when 6 meter (approximately 19.5 foot) waves struck the ship.
People were warned against looting, but both locals and tourists flocked to the
beaches to take photos of the giant containers.
A recurring
washed-up-on-the-beach sensation appeared at Zandvoort, Netherlands, in 2007, at
Brighton Beach in England in 2008, and at Siesta Key Beach in Florida in 2011.
And what was this surprise visitor to these shores? It was a giant (8 feet
tall) Lego man that weighed about 100 pounds and featured a bright green torso
showing the message "No Real Than You Are." The number 8 appeared on
its back along with the words "Ego Leonard." The mystery was finally
resolved when it was revealed that "Ego Leonard" was the alter ego of
a Dutch artist. The Sarasota County Sheriff's Office in Florida joined in the
fun and issued a press release saying it had taken the giant Lego man
"into protective custody." In response, numerous "Free Lego
Man" Facebook pages and campaigns popped up on the Internet.
In September
2005, hundreds of giant squid washed up in Newport Beach. California. The
creatures, believed to be Humboldt squid, normally reside in deep water. It was
rare for locals to encounter them on land or sea. Authorities said the squid
might have been pursuing bait fish and gotten too close to shore. Other
factors, such as warm ocean temperatures or record rainfall, were also
suspected.
In May 2012,
dozens of fly swatters emblazoned with logos of collegiate and professional
sports teams washed up on the beaches of Kodiak, Alaska. The fly swatters were
originally believed to be debris from the 2011 Japanese tsunami, but were
eventually proven to have come from a shipping container that got loose from a
ship carrying products from China. The container went overboard in dangerous
weather in the Gulf of Alaska. Other sports-related items, such as Nerf balls
and water bottles were also found on Kodiak's beaches.
In August 2010, hundreds of tea packets washed ashore in Rajbandar in the Raigad district, Maharashtra, India. Nine containers from the cargo ship MSC Chitra spilled into the sea after the cargo ship suffered a collision with another ship.
In 2007,
residents of the Dutch North Sea island of Terschelling, 70 miles north of
Amsterdam, discovered thousands of bananas washed ashore after at least six
containers of the fruit fell off a cargo ship in a storm and at least one of
the containers broke open. Bunches of the still green bananas from Cuba also
washed up on neighboring Amerland Island. It's not known exactly what happened
to the beached bananas, but at the time residents suggested sending most of the
fruit to local zoos.
In February
2006, also on the Netherlands' Terschelling Island, thousand of sneakers washed
up on the beach when containers from the P&O Nedlloyd ship Mondriaan fell overboard in a storm.
Residents of the island rushed to get the sneakers, searching for shoes in
their size. Other items that washed up on the beach from those containers
included children's toys and briefcases.
Perhaps one of
the most famous container spills in history occurred in January 1992 when
28,000 rubber duck toys fell into the sea.
The incident inspired a book titled Moby-Duck:
The True Story of 28,800 Bath Toys Lost at Sea and of the Beachcombers,
Oceanographers, Environmentalists and Fools, Including the Author, Who Went in
Search of Them by Donovan Hohn. The great rubber ducky spill occurred when
a shipping crate on a cargo ship headed to the U.S. from China fell overboard
onto the Pacific Ocean during a stormy night. Some of the rubber ducks
(nicknamed Friendly Floatees) have
since washed up on the shores of Alaska, Hawaii, South America, Australia and
the Pacific Northwest. Some have traveled 17,000 miles, floating over the site
where the Titanic sank or spending years frozen in an Arctic ice pack. Some
2,000 of the rubber ducks are still circulating in the ocean and helping
researchers chart ocean currents.
On January 26, 2011, a grand piano was found on a sandbar in Miami's Biscayne Bay, mysteriously charred from being burned. Speculation about its origins included the idea that it was part of a music video production. It was later discovered that the piano was a junk art installation, the brainchild of a 16-year-old hoping to use the piece for a college application.









2 comments:
So enjoy your creative and entertaining blog posts. Love that the ducks are still out there.
Gini: Me, too, on the little yellow rubber duckies. After all these years they are still surfing the ocean currents and at the same time providing valuable information to scientists.
Thanks for your comment.
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