Heraldnet.com
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2009 9:18 am
ADVERTISEMENT

LocalNorthwestNation & WorldPoliticsSpecial ReportsPhotosColumnistsMultimedia 
Blog
The Buzz
That's Stud Muffin to you
Your town news
Julie Muhlstein
Columnist Julie Muhlstein's take on life in Snohomish County.
•Latest: Journalist John Hockenberry aims for good and bad
Kristi O'Harran
Columnist Kristi O'Harran writes about people in Snohomish County.
•Latest: Get up close and personal with Freedom the eagle
Latest gallery

Memorial for Timothy Brenton
November 6. 2009 (17 photos)
[More Herald photos]
 
WEEK IN REVIEW
Saturday
More snow expected at mountain passes
Suspect identified in Seattle police killing
Thousands honor slain Seattle police officer Ti...
Friday


Officer Timothy Brenton. Gone, but not forgotten
Person sought in officer's killing is shot in head
Thousands to pay respects to slain Seattle poli...
Thursday


Tale of 1916 Everett Massacre retold in style o...
Reservist survived Iraq but not his return to c...
Swine flu suspected in infant’s death
Wednesday


‘Everything but marriage' law close to vi...
Library levy winning by 51% to 49%
Incumbents looking strong in Snohomish County C...
Tuesday


Delayed financial aid forcing college students ...
Slaying of officer reminds police of dangers of...
Edmonds turns over firefighting duties to Fire ...
Monday


Question isn't 'if' but 'how bad' for floods
Slain Seattle Police officer lived in Marysville
Rubatino Refuse allows recycling of food scraps...
Sunday


Signs were clear Boeing isn't tied to location
Swine flu shots draw crowds in Snohomish County
The Boeing buzz in South Carolina
 

ADVERTISEMENT

Local News   Print This Article  Email This Page  Subscribe Now! facebook digg reddit del.icio.us fark stumble

 
ADVERTISEMENT

 
CONTACT THE HERALD
Robert Frank, City Editor
frank@heraldnet.com
 
Published: Sunday, May 3, 2009

Girls' note at last has a reader

Message in a bottle washes up 11 years later.

'Message in a Bottle" -- I never read it, but I know it's one of those page-turners dripping with romance.

In the Nicholas Sparks book, our heroine (a columnist for a fictional Boston newspaper) is vacationing on Cape Cod. She finds a tearjerker of a note in a bottle. It leads her to the mysterious Garret Blake, a man in deep grief for his lost wife.

In the romance, her bottle has a cork. The mystery man has a sailboat -- of course he does -- and in the inevitable movie version, is played by Kevin Costner.

Get real.

On April 4, no kidding, a couple of 24-year-old guys in the plumbing business were walking on a Tulalip area beach south of Kayak Point. They searched for rocks, not romance.

"We were looking for agates when we saw a pile of plastic," said Paul Isaak, a 2003 graduate of Arlington High School. Isaak and fellow plumber Tyler Bryant rent a beach house in the area. Bryant's brother was with them, visiting from Texas.

Among the flotsam, they found a bottle -- nothing fancy, just a plastic bottle used for water or a sports drink. It was so common, Isaak wasn't going to keep it.

Inside, though, rolled up like that fictional note, were pieces of weathered paper.

No need to skip ahead to some happily-ever-after ending. The joy in this story is simply that notes scrawled by kids in 1998, stuffed into a bottle that went goodness knows where, could possibly survive to find readers almost 11 years later.

Better yet, in this age of Facebook profiles, it wasn't hard to find one of the writers. The letters aren't completely readable, but you can make out names: Kayla Eland and Kate Ratliffe.

On July 7, 1998, Kayla wrote: "Dear Finder, Hi! My name is Kayla Eland. I'm 9 years old. ... I have a 7 year old brother and a dog named Hank." She included her family's Seattle address, and said she liked soccer, snowboarding and favorite singer "Natly Inbrulia" (Natalie Imbruglia, no doubt).

Kayla's note was better preserved than the one wrapped around it. That one was written by Kate, who turns out to be Kayla's older cousin.

They're grown now, ages 19 and 21. Both are in college: Eland in California and Ratliffe in Colorado. Those guys weren't making it all up like a Hollywood script. Eland clearly remembers putting notes in bottles when the cousins would stay with her grandparents on Whidbey Island.

"Wow! That is amazing," 19-year-old Kayla Eland wrote in a recent message to my Facebook in-box after I found her on the social networking Web site. I had sent her a note about the bottle.

A 2008 graduate of The Bush School in Seattle, Eland is a freshman at Pitzer College, one of the Claremont Colleges east of Los Angeles. Her cousin, she said, is a student at the University of Colorado in Boulder, but this term is in Prague, in the Czech Republic.

Eland said she e-mailed her cousin that their note had been found. "She was shocked," she said.

Raised in Seattle, Eland said she still visits Whidbey. "We have a family home up there. Our whole family, cousins and grandparents, are up there for the summer. It's right on the water, near Langley," she said.

"I guess my cousin wrote it, she was older," said Eland, recalling that the girls sent several messages adrift. They've never before had a response. She didn't remember specifics of bottle launching. "I'm sure we made it as dramatic as possible," she said.

Google searches show Eland has been a cross-country runner in high school and college. She's in a pre-med program, while her cousin is studying journalism.

Eland isn't eager for any contact with the bottle finders, and that seems sensible. This isn't fiction, remember. And she knows better now than to do what they did in their note -- send a home address out to strangers while away on vacation.

Isaak and Bryant didn't expect to contact the young women. They just wanted to tell their tale. "It's sort of funny, kids are always throwing messages in bottles," Bryant said.

In her girlish note, Kayla offered this physical description: "I have olive skin and dark brown hair and eyes. I have red, white and blue braces."

"Not much has changed," Eland said the other day. "I don't have red, white and blue braces, but everything else is pretty much the same."

Not everything is the same. Scientists could ponder what that bottle says about currents or tides. This journalist is intrigued by what it says about communication. It took 10 years for a bottled note to be read, but just 10 seconds online to find its writer today.

New media beats old? Nah, but it is faster.



Julie Muhlstein: 425-339-3460, muhlstein@heraldnet.com.

READER COMMENTS
Be the first to comment.
You must be a registered user and verify your e-mail address to post comments to blogs or articles on HeraldNet.

To register, click here. To read other terms and conditions, click hereLog out

1. Shot ends search for man sought in killing of Seattle police officer
2. Thousands honor slain Seattle police officer Timothy Brenton
3. No charge will be filed in death of Everett pedestrian
4. Rain, thunderstorms forecast for lowlands
5. Bothell steamrolls Stanwood
6. PREP FOOTBALL/SWIMMING ROUNDUP: Halfback pass for touchdown sparks Sultan win
7. More jibba-jabba
8. Obama OK's homebuyer tax credit
9. Suspect identified in Seattle police killing
10. Dana nibbles into Somers’ lead
Enterprise Newspaper Snohomish County Business Journal
Gough on track to keep job
Jazz vocalist headlines NPAC
Mountlake Terrace makes football history
Tax revenue sagging, city budgets lagging
‘Touch of Magic' show opens at Gallery North
Jackson repeats as South champs
Holiday Bazaars Calendar
Meadowdale storms back to grab title
Edmonds moves to Fire District 1
The Enterprise Online Newspaper


$5 OFF
Lunch or Dinner

All you can Eat Buffets
Angel of the Winds

15% Off Your
First Time Purchase

$1 off French Dip
$4.99 Burger Basket

Lube, Oil & Filter
Buy 1 - Get 1 FREE

Free Dessert!
Click here!

FREE Appetizer w/
purchase of 2 entrees

Family Night Free Sundae
$9.99 Prime Rib

Island Flavors with
Finest NW Ingredients

Come and Relax
Monthly Specials

Great Food
24 Hours a Day

QuadraFire Save $250
Free Smart-Stat

Free Garlic Bread/Free Soda
Click here for details!

20% off Click Here*
Buy 1 Offer Click Here*

Pacific Northwest
Fresh Cuisine

$2 OFF
at Box Office

$5 Off
Stylecut

Buffet Dining
Tulalip Resort

Oil - Snohomish County
Low Prices - Fill Now!

50% off 2nd Pizza
Special Click Here!

20% Off Dinner
Up to $75 Value!

25% off Bath & Groom
New Customers

FREE Appetizer with any
purchase daily 2-6pm

Pacific Northwest
Fresh Cuisine
BlackFish Restaurant
TODAY'S TOP JOBS
 View All Top Jobs 
Top Cars
Top Homes

ADVERTISEMENT