News Culture

Message in a Bottle: The Unusual Social Network

Harold Hackett has been sending messages all over the world, but unlike most of us he hasn’t been using a phone or a computer.

Christopher Kevin Au
October 07, 2011

Overview

Harold Hackett has been sending messages all over the world, but unlike most of us he hasn't been using a phone or a computer. Instead, he's taken old-school to a whole new level by writing dated letters on coloured paper, putting them in numbered juice bottles and throwing them in the Atlantic Ocean. Harold has been doing this from Prince Edward Island in Canada since May 1996. Of the 4,800 messages he's sent, he's received 3,100 letters back from places including Africa, Europe and America. That's an amazing success rate. Maybe I should start using this method to ask girls on dates.

Hackett has seemingly perfected his art, and checks wind patterns before tossing his bottles into the water. One message took 13 years to be replied to after it was found in France. Still, it might be worth the wait as Harold now receives Christmas gifts and souvenirs from the unexpected recipients of his missives. While it's certainly not time-efficient, it makes you think that some means of communication have gained more significance because of how rare they have become. Harold purposely doesn't leave his phone number on the letters so that he can only get a letter in return. He promises to keep sending letters for as long as he can.

With Harold's story gaining considerable media attention, could this mark the return of older forms of communication? At least he knows that if he gets lost in the depths of the African jungle, he might have one friend he can turn to.


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