For centuries, people have been fascinated by the idea of putting a message in a bottle and tossing it into the sea in the hopes that someone will find it. In 2020, students at Rye Junior High School in New Hampshire did something similar. Instead of a bottle, they filled a 1.5 meter (5 foot)-long sailboat with mementos and launched it into the ocean. The students hoped to use tracking technology to follow the boat’s journey across the sea and learn where it ended up.
The students built the small vessel, which they named the Rye Riptides, using a kit from a Maine-based organization called Educational Passages. The group helps students learn about wind and currents using “miniboats” designed to sail with moving ocean waters.
Sheila Adams, the students’ teacher, warned that the Rye Riptides might get lost at sea. As the boat sailed the high seas, it could encounter any number of problems, from rough weather to technological issues, that could end its voyage. So the class knew not to get their hopes up. “I really thought it would sink,” says Kiera Hagen, who was a student in Adams’s class during the project. But the boat’s journey surpassed expectations. It showed how the ocean connects everyone on the planet—and forged a surprising friendship with kids 13,400 kilometers (8,300 miles) away.
For centuries, the idea of putting a message in a bottle has fascinated people. They toss the bottle into the sea and hope someone will find it. In 2020, students at Rye Junior High School in New Hampshire did something similar. Instead of a bottle, they used a 1.5 meter (5 foot)-long sailboat. They filled it with trinkets and launched it into the ocean. The students would follow the boat’s journey across the sea with tracking technology. They hoped to learn where it ended up.
The students named the small boat Rye Riptides. They built it with a kit from a Maine-based organization called Educational Passages. The group helps students learn about wind and currents using “miniboats.” These are designed to sail with moving ocean waters.
Sheila Adams was the students’ teacher. She warned that the Rye Riptides might get lost at sea. As the boat sailed the ocean, it could run into problems. Anything from rough weather to technological issues could end its voyage. So the students knew not to get their hopes up. “I really thought it would sink,” says Kiera Hagen. She was a student in Adams’s class during the project. But the boat’s journey exceeded all hopes. It showed how the ocean connects everyone on the planet. And it started a friendship with kids 13,400 kilometers (8,300 miles) away.