Strange Maps

May 20, 2008

275 - The Friendly Floatees’ World Tour

Filed under: Uncategorized — strangemaps @

In the Democratic primaries, Paul Tsongas leads the field of candidates. Bill Clinton (dubbed ‘Pander Bear’ by Tsongas) still has to earn the moniker ‘The Comeback Kid’ in the New Hampshire primary that saved his candidacy. Slovenia and Croatia break away from Yugoslavia, setting in motion events that will lead to all-out war on the Balkans. In the small Dutch town of Maastricht, European leaders sign the treaty that will transform the European Economic Community into a much more political European Union.

Another event from early 1992, still reverberating today: On January 10, a container holding almost 29,000 plastic bath toys spills off a cargo ship into the middle of the Pacific Ocean and breaks open. The unsinkable toys, which were en route from Hong Kong to Tacoma (Washington), include a lot of iconic yellow rubber ducks that have since been caught up in the world’s ocean currents and continue turning up on the most improbable shores. Curtis Ebbesmeyer, a retired oceanographer, saw from the beginning how valuable the rubber duckies could be in tracing ocean currents, and correctly predicted their trip through the Northwest Passage.

The toys, or ‘Friendly Floatees’, as they became known, made their first landfall in mid November of 1992, when the counter-clockwise Subpolar Gyre started dumping the yellow rubber ducks (and blue turtles, red beavers and green frogs) on Alaskan shores. It took the ducks about three years to drift full circle on the Gyre – scientists calculate they drift 50% faster than the water in the current itself.  They turned up all over the Pacific: Japan, Hawaii, North America and Australia.

As Ebbesmeyer predicted, some ducks escaped the Gyre to flow North through the Bering Strait into the Arctic. Between 1995 and 2000, they slowly drift eastward, frozen in the arctic ice, at a rate of 1 mile per day. In the new millennium, the ducks started reaching the North Atlantic, being sighted from the shores of Maine to Massachusetts.  In 2001, the ducks reached the site where the Titanic sank. In 2003, the plastic toys reached the shores of the Hebrides, off the coast of Scotland. This article in the Daily Mail predicted their arrival on the shores of southwestern England in 2007.

If you spot one of these plastic toys on a beach, its colors probably faded by now, with the imprint ‘The Early Years’, then you’ve found one member of the plastic armada that set sail over 15 years ago. At some point, the scientific team that tracked their progress offered $100 apiece for the ducks – provided you could tell them when and where you’d found them. The offer was valid only from July through to December 2003, and only for Friendly Floatees found in New England, Canada or Iceland. However, friendly Floatees have become so famous that they can fetch up to $1,000 at auction

Thanks to Marina (good name for it) for sending in this delightful story, and this map. Wikipedia provides this map of the Friendly Floatees’ journey:

 

 

 

 

 

 

35 Comments »

  1. [...] Read it. [...]

    Pingback by DYSPEPSIA GENERATION » Blog Archive » The Friendly Floatees’ World Tour — May 20, 2008 @

  2. What are the chances of a complete circumnavigation of the globe; 0 or higher?

    Comment by Gridlock — May 20, 2008 @

  3. Fascinating stuff!

    Comment by Miteque — May 20, 2008 @

  4. [...] refer to the Friendly Floatees. Here’s how their story is told at Strange Maps. On January 10, a container holding almost 29,000 plastic bath toys spills off a cargo ship into [...]

    Pingback by Duck Tour of the Oceans « Changing Way — May 20, 2008 @

  5. [...] Floatees By Doug Strange Maps has a map up about an ongoing story that, inexplicably, makes me happy: The Friendly Floatees. Wikipedia also [...]

    Pingback by Masson’s Blog - A Citizen’s Guide to Indiana » Friendly Floatees — May 20, 2008 @

  6. I might be a year late, but this makes me want to go down to the beach - Dorset, S England - and have a look *lol*

    Comment by Sophie — May 20, 2008 @

  7. I’m not entirely sure an addition to the plastic pollution problem in the world’s oceans qualifies as “delightful”, but quite interesting nevertheless.

    Comment by andy — May 20, 2008 @

  8. [pedant]Actually, the ducks weren’t “iconic.”
    I don’t know what they look like, but I read about them in an article in Harpers magazine. Ebbesmeyer was complaining that articles in the media always had pictures like the one you’re using above, but that the toys were completely different. He also said there were 3 or 4 different types, not just ducks.
    [/pedant]

    Comment by Michael Newton — May 20, 2008 @

  9. I’m not sure whether to be awed or frightened. After all, we’re talking about stuff that’s floated around for fifteen plus years.

    Awed over how long the stuff has floated.

    Frightened over the fact that this stuff hasn’t even begun to break down despite the fifteen years under harsh climates, in the ice, and under bright suns.

    Comment by godozo — May 20, 2008 @

  10. [...] 275 - The Friendly Floatees’ World Tour [image] In the Democratic primaries, Paul Tsongas leads the field of candidates. Bill Clinton (dubbed ‘Pander [...] [...]

    Pingback by Top Posts « WordPress.com — May 20, 2008 @

  11. Well it was an accident. I was afraid at first someone had released them all intentionally as an experiment. But it was a simple twist of fate, and it’s actually quite lucky that 1) they float, since otherwise they’d sink to the bottom and never be seen again, and 2) are cute and have a high selling price, actually encouraging people to pick them up when they find them. Plus it doesn’t hurt that they can help us understand a very large and unwieldy phenomenon such as world currents, even if only a little.

    Comment by Eric — May 21, 2008 @

  12. floatees? silly word

    Comment by dadge — May 21, 2008 @

  13. So, what happened? Were they washed up in the UK? Where are they headed for now?

    Comment by bingley — May 21, 2008 @

  14. @ dadge: From the wikipedia article, it would seem that “Friendly Floatees” was their brandname.

    Comment by Eric — May 21, 2008 @

  15. Duckies invade the British Isles and Where is… duckie invasion

    In the comments I have links to Ebbesmeyer’s site and to more references. The sub-Arctic gyre is the one which is invading Europe via the Bering Sea and the Arctic Melt-rush.

    Yes, the real duckies, turtles, and hippos (?) look very different and in different colors which fade over time.

    Comment by mpb — May 21, 2008 @

  16. Thank you for good information~~*

    Please comeback to visit my blog too : http://about-plasticcontainers.blogspot.com/

    I’m sorry , If you think this is spam. but may i thank you again.

    Bye

    Comment by Mint — May 21, 2008 @

  17. ?
    Raf
    http://uzar.wordpress.com/

    Comment by Raf Uzar — May 21, 2008 @

  18. [...] If you like rubber ducks, ocean currents, or maps, click here. Interesting! Stumble [...]

    Pingback by Yarn Zombie » Blog Archive » File this one under the category of ‘Yeah, I don’t know.’ — May 21, 2008 @

  19. [...] From the excellent virtual pages of Strange Maps comes this ducky item. [...]

    Pingback by limeduck » Rubber duckie floatilla gradually storming the world’s beaches — May 22, 2008 @

  20. [...] (it’s not as hard or time consuming as it sounds with Google Reader on my protopage!).  This post there a few days ago really caught my attention and [...]

    Pingback by Duck, Duck Loose « Midnight Musings — May 22, 2008 @

  21. [...] During a storm in the North Pacific in 1992, twelve 40-foot containers were washed off of a Chinese cargo ship.  One of them was filled with 29,000 plastic bath toys, or “Friendly Floatees”, which were released into the Pacific Ocean.  Two oceanographers tracked the toys and accurately predicted where and when they would begin washing ashore. [...]

    Pingback by delgrosso dot com » Rubber ducky, you’re the one (of 29,000) — May 22, 2008 @

  22. [...] Aye maties, a container holding almost 29,000 plastic bath toys spills off a cargo ship into the middle of the Pacific Ocean and broke open - circa 1992. The unsinkable toys, which were en route from Hong Kong to Tacoma (Washington), include a lot of iconic yellow rubber ducks that have since been caught up in the world’s ocean cu…. [...]

    Pingback by The Friendly Floatees’ World Tour | — May 22, 2008 @

  23. [...] May 22, 2008 · No Comments Awesome. [...]

    Pingback by Rubber duckies adrift « This Be The Blog — May 23, 2008 @

  24. “scientists calculate they drift 50% faster than the water in the current itself.”
    how? do they have little motors?
    )

    Comment by pez — May 24, 2008 @

  25. Has anyone found some of them in the bellies of large fish that have been caught.

    Comment by joe keeton — May 30, 2008 @

  26. [...] Ducks around the world [...]

    Pingback by Ducks around the world ‹ 3th.be — June 2, 2008 @

  27. [...] Ebbesmeyer is on the case. He’s an expert in marine debris, most famous for his work with the wandering rubber duckies. But Dr. Ebbesmeyer also knows how bodies come apart! Is the mild mannered scientist really just a [...]

    Pingback by Oceanographers fight crime! « The Oyster’s Garter — June 3, 2008 @

  28. Pretty cool!

    Comment by James M. — June 22, 2008 @

  29. This is a photo of the ducks (and the other three kinds of toys):

    http://img.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2007/06_02/EbbesSWNS2706_468×368.jpg

    Comment by Bob — June 22, 2008 @

  30. [...] This story showed up on my googlereader today and it was kind of cute and kind of weird, so I figured it belonged in the Word-Vomit archives. Rubber Duckies are traveling the oceans! [...]

    Pingback by Random News 101 | Word Vomit — June 26, 2008 @

  31. [...] … provided at a cost, referred to as interest on the debt. A borrower may be subject to certain restrictions known as loan covenants under the terms of loan Loan… [...]

    Pingback by » Blog Archive » construction loans 60469 — July 4, 2008 @

  32. [...] … provided at a cost, referred to as interest on the debt. A borrower may be subject to certain restrictions known as loan covenants under the terms of loan Loan… [...]

    Pingback by Loan webblog! » Blog Archive » loan 28708 — July 4, 2008 @

  33. [...] 275 - The Friendly Floatees’ World Tour Filed under: Uncategorized — strangemaps @ [...]

    Pingback by Austhorpe’s Blog » Strange Maps and the case of the floating ducks — July 23, 2008 @

  34. are those ducks friendly to the environment?

    Comment by samuel — August 6, 2008 @

  35. [...] View Original This entry was posted on Sunday, August 24th, 2008 at 23:01 and is filed under RePost. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed. [...]

    Pingback by FiftyFour » Blog Archive » 275 - The Friendly Floatees’ World Tour — August 25, 2008 @

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

Blog at WordPress.com.