A glass bottle, cast into the Gulf Stream off New England one year ago as a farewell gesture to a departed sailor, turned up last week on a beach in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland after an improbable, 3,000-mile transatlantic voyage.
DON CUDDY, The (New Bedford, Mass.) Standard-Times
UNDATED — A glass bottle, cast into the Gulf Stream off New England one year ago as a farewell gesture to a departed sailor, turned up last week on a beach in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland after an improbable, 3,000-mile transatlantic voyage.
Bound with rigging tape and sealed with wax, the rum bottle carried handwritten tributes to Mattapoisett resident Ken MacKenzie, a lifelong sailor who died of cancer in May of last year at the age of 69.
The bottle was launched from the deck of the 76-foot sailboat Lilla last June when the yacht, owned by Simon and Nancy DePietro of Mattapoisett, entered the axis of the stream while competing in the 2010 Newport to Bermuda race.
Coincidentally, Lilla sailed into Bermuda last month, taking first place in this year's Marion to Bermuda race and setting a course record in the process.
"Simon and Nancy live right next door to me, and Ken and I go way back with the boat," said Mary Lou Manley, MacKenzie's life partner who conceived the idea of the tribute at his memorial service.
"Ken found two messages in bottles in his lifetime, so we decided to make two messages in his honor," she said.
MacKenzie spent his life on the water, Manley said. For many years he owned and sailed the famed Ticonderoga, a 72-foot wooden ketch built in 1936 and widely regarded as the finest work ever to come from the board of the legendary boat designer L. Francis Herreshoff. When Herreshoff died it was MacKenzie who scattered his ashes from Ticonderoga, Manley said.
The rum bottle washed up on the western side of the Hebrides on South Uist, one of the islands in the rugged chain known as "Scotland's breakwater."
It was discovered by Christine and Kevin Brook, a vacationing couple from the Winchester area of England, as they walked on Drimsdale Beach.
"The first thing they saw through the glass was the Rudyard Kipling poem, 'If,' that we put in there," Manley said.
Her contact information was included in the contents, and when she checked her voice mail last Tuesday, the highland burr of a man named Ian McGuinness briefly informed her the bottle had made landfall. That was followed by an email from the Brooks, providing more details.
"Their email asked me if this was a live address," Manley said. "It said, 'If so, do we have a story for you!'"
Drimsdale Beach does not get a lot of foot traffic, according to local resident Jean Newman who works for Am Paipear, the south Uist community newspaper that has custody of the bottle and its contents and plans to run a story on the find in its next issue.
"I walk that beach often, and you feel slightly offended if you see anyone there because everyone wants the beach to themselves. There are plenty of beaches to choose from here," she said in a telephone interview.
"It was a good place for the bottle to arrive because there are a lot of rocky spots. It's rather unique that it survived intact."
It seems unlikely that the bottle may have been on the beach for a long time, she said. "It's a tidal beach, so it's lucky that it landed far enough up that it didn't go back out on the tide."
The second bottle may still be out there, Manley said. She joined Lilla in Bermuda for the return trip to Mattapoisett after last year's race and launched the second bottle herself, 10 days after the first.
"The second one might show up,' she said. "But I just think that it's really cool that this one made it somewhere and someone actually found it. Here he is Scottish and he ends up in Scotland."