Plastic pump spray bottle.
Found on beach along Northwest side of Marrowstone Island
17 March 2012
I've been doing a lot of sand sampling lately and came across
this piece last night. It washed ashore after several days of strong,
March storms with winds out of the west and north.
The bottle is unusual in several ways.
First, it is coated with a dense layer of Bryozoan colony, algae, and several
gooseneck barnacles. This indicates a long sea voyage. I haven't seen
gooseneck barnacles on debris from local sources in a long time -- for example,
the many crab buoys I find.
The bottle has raised lettering, Chinese or Japanese. Will let you know
when I learn more.
Just wanted to post this in case anyone is intrested in learning more
about where possible Tsunami debris ends up.
I've placed it for now in a kind of shrine on my desk. It rests in a basket
I brought back from Morocco and tucked alongside a
WWI emblem from my Grandpa's time in the Canadian army,
many of my favorite shells, as well as an old 'opihi gathering tool,
a glass float from Kauai, and some parrotfish teeth.
A poem is fitting, but later on that.............imagine.........the parrotfish
dropped at my feet from high surf after I saw it bitten cleanly in two by
a huge ulua.....down at the General's Beach at Mokapu on Oahu in April of 2009.
Somehow,
all these pieces fit together and rest here so I can think about their connections.
The bottle, a distant War, and a hungry fish..........
I can imagine a young woman, holding this bottle in her hand an ocean away,
spritzing her hair one year ago........and then, it washed into the sea......
Just as I have wondered about the 'opihi tool..........I've always hoped it simply
slipped from the gatherer's hand out there near Anahola........
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