Wednesday, July 9th, 2003
10-4 rubber duck
Wednesday, July 9th, 2003 05:47 pmLive in New England, East Coast Canada, or in Greenland? Live near the sea?
Why not take the opportunity over the next few days to go down the beach and see if you can find a rubber duck?
Any day now, five-centimetre-high plastic ducks may start washing ashore in New England, on the United States east coast, 11 years after a container filled with 29,000 bathtub toys toppled from a cargo ship's deck into the north Pacific.
Sounds fun, but there is a potentially more serious problem underlying this harmless little event.
Full story here, courtesy the Sydney Morning Herald
Marvellous.
Why not take the opportunity over the next few days to go down the beach and see if you can find a rubber duck?
Any day now, five-centimetre-high plastic ducks may start washing ashore in New England, on the United States east coast, 11 years after a container filled with 29,000 bathtub toys toppled from a cargo ship's deck into the north Pacific.
Sounds fun, but there is a potentially more serious problem underlying this harmless little event.
Full story here, courtesy the Sydney Morning Herald
Marvellous.
10-4 rubber duck
Wednesday, July 9th, 2003 05:47 pmLive in New England, East Coast Canada, or in Greenland? Live near the sea?
Why not take the opportunity over the next few days to go down the beach and see if you can find a rubber duck?
Any day now, five-centimetre-high plastic ducks may start washing ashore in New England, on the United States east coast, 11 years after a container filled with 29,000 bathtub toys toppled from a cargo ship's deck into the north Pacific.
Sounds fun, but there is a potentially more serious problem underlying this harmless little event.
Full story here, courtesy the Sydney Morning Herald
Marvellous.
Why not take the opportunity over the next few days to go down the beach and see if you can find a rubber duck?
Any day now, five-centimetre-high plastic ducks may start washing ashore in New England, on the United States east coast, 11 years after a container filled with 29,000 bathtub toys toppled from a cargo ship's deck into the north Pacific.
Sounds fun, but there is a potentially more serious problem underlying this harmless little event.
Full story here, courtesy the Sydney Morning Herald
Marvellous.