Greek sea-captain’s message in a bottle makes its way to New Zealand shoreline

·

A message in a bottle from a Greek seafarer has reached the shores of Ninety Mile Beach, leaving a local New Zealander puzzled and bewildered.

Reported by Radio New Zealand, local fisherman Ken Fergusson found the washed up wine bottle on the shoreline and took it to his home to dispose of it properly, worried that someone may step on it.

“…Got home, went to throw it in the rubbish and I noticed there was a card in it,” Fergusson said.

He looked through the green glass and made out some phone numbers on a business card, only to reach a Greek woman who couldn’t understand any English. Unfortunately for Fergusson, he didn’t know any Greek.

The business card found in a bottle on Ninety Mile Beach. Photo / Peter Jackson

Fergusson tried sending an email and, a couple of days ago, a reply from Captain John Karavolos arrived.

“I thought it was pretty cool actually,” Fergusson said.

According to the Captain, the Greek pushed the card into the bottle, put the cork back on, and turfed it out to sea about a year ago, during a trip between Australia and China. NIWA oceanographer Dr Phil Sutton said the southern hemisphere is more likely than the northern.

“Anything that’s floating gets driven by the wind as well as the ocean currents. Actually, the hemispheres are fairly well separated.”

Captain Karavolos believes the date and location of the bottle’s send-off may be faintly written on the back of the business card. The Awanui School tamariki is expected to open the bottle in the coming days to find out.

Radio New Zealand also reports that treasures have been showing up on Te Tai Tokerau beaches for decades and many are cared for by Heritage New Zealand.

Advertisement

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Advertisement

Latest News

Nick Goumis’ All Smart Kitchens in Sydney at centre of $120,000 renovation dispute

A Sydney homeowner alleges months of delays, unfinished works and costly mistakes by All Smart Kitchens. Read more here.

Frankly Nick’s: Where friendship, family and pizza come full circle

On a quiet stretch of Floss Street in Hurlstone Park, two best mates from Frankly Nick's are keeping the pizza ovens burning for legacy.

Derrimut 24:7 founder Nikolaos Solomos places key company into administration

Derrimut 24:7 Gym founder Nikolaos Solomos has placed the largest company in his struggling fitness empire into administration.

Hellenic Writers’ Association of Australia announces Student Literary Competition winners

The Hellenic Writers’ Association of Australia (S.E.L.S.A.) has announced the winners of its 2025 Student Literary Competition.

Faith and community shine at St Dimitrios Feast Day and Salisbury’s Premier Greek Festival

The northern suburbs of Adelaide were filled with song and community spirit as hundreds gathered at St Dimitrios Greek Orthodox Church.

You May Also Like

Greece attracts record demand for first bond sale since regaining investment grade

Greece witnessed record demand for its first new bond on Tuesday after regaining investment grade, raising 4 billion euros.

Visiting Professor Anagnostou: Cultivate Greek identity and language learning will follow

Professor Yiorgos Anagnostou was invited to Australia by University of Melbourne’s Hellenic Senior Lecturer in Global Diasporas.

Kayla Itsines teams up with Sweat co-founder to buy back fitness empire

Kayla Itsines and Tobi Pearce have bought back their digital fitness empire after selling it for $200 million to US fitness behemoth iFIT.