MAN HAS COLLECTION OF 1200
MESSAGES IN BOTTLES
WASHED UP ON
BEACHES
G'day folks,
Ever found a message in a bottle on a beach? Well, here is a man who collects them. Dutch
beachcomber Wim Kruiswijk has amassed a collection of 1200 messages-in-bottles
over the course of 34 years and has responded to almost all of them.
68-year-old
Kruiswijk says that his unusual hobby began in 1983 when he found three bottles
on his local beach, each containing letters and return addresses. He wrote to
all three addresses and was surprised to receive responses from each one. It
was this experience which sparked his interest in hunting and collecting messages
in bottles, and he hasn’t stopped looking for them since.
“I find my messages in bottles on the beach of
Zandvoort, where I live, and on the Dutch Islands,” Kruiswijk recently told Great Big Story. “Messages in bottles is slow
mail. It takes you days, or weeks, or months to find a bottle.”
In the early
years, Kruiswijk would find as many as 50 bottles a year, but since 2000 that
has slowed to around 20-30 finds, mainly due to beach cleaning efforts. He
believes that the rise of the internet has also played a role in the
diminishing number of messages in bottles, telling Dutch news site PZC, “I used to get a response at half the bottle
messages that I answered. Now that’s less; many people want ‘instant
satisfaction.”’
Kruiswijk is a
retired bookkeeper, and it shows in his approach to minding his collection. The
bottled messages, all 1,200 of them, are kept neatly sealed and filed in
plastic folders. He only holds onto the unique bottles or packaging that wash
up, such as lovely ornamental bottles or test tubes.
Throwing a message in a bottle out into the
seas a longstanding human tradition dating back to the time of the Greek
philosopher Theophrastus, circa 310 B.C., who used the bottles to study water
currents. Scientists still apply the method to this day, as a means to help researchers
develop ocean circulation maps, and to crowdsource scientific studies of ocean
currents.
In the past
bottles have also been used to send distress messages from stranded sailors.
They also have been used for memorial tributes, or to send loved ones’ ashes on
a final journey.
One of the more common uses though is just to send invitations
out to prospective pen pals, a quaint notion in these modern times, but, as
Kruiswijk so clearly demonstrates, an effective one.
Clancy's comment: People collect all sorts of things, so why not messages in bottles? I was hoping to be in South East Asia for a few months, leaving at the end of April, so check your local beaches for a message from me.
"I'm ... On a desert island. Heeeeelp ..."
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