Disaster 'It's overwhelming': Plastic from 1960s Canada washes up on Orkney beach - HOLY FUCK!

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PLASTICS LAST FOREVER!

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c2k8g4p44l0o (https://archive.ph/7Cbwt)

Plastic bottles and debris that appear to have originated in Canada and date back to the 1960s and 70s have washed up on an Orkney beach.
Litter pickers say they are "overwhelmed" by the amount of plastic they have found on the shoreline at Howar Sands in Sanday over the last few weeks.
David Warner, who organises beach cleans, said he gathered 42 plastic bottles from the shore last year - yet already this year he has found hundreds.
Experts blame "fairly extraordinary weather", with strong south-easterly winds, for the increase in "retro rubbish".
Warner, 35, said some of the plastic bottles he has discovered on Sanday appear to have originated in Newfoundland and Labrador in Canada.
He worries that even more detritus will wash up on the beach in the future.
"We haven't hit rubbish from the nineties and noughties, so that's going to be extortionate amounts," he said.
Based on the amount of polystyrene particles in one square metre, David estimated that there were over 300,000 pieces lying across 70 square metres.
Warner told BBC Radio Orkney that the sheer volume of rubbish on the beach was "quite overwhelming".
"It's the first time since cleaning the beaches I've been overwhelmed by it," he said.
"Usually I clean the beaches with a group of volunteers and we'll make a good go at it and it'll seem clean after it.
"Then we'll go three months later and the rubbish is back and we're like 'OK, that's fine, it is what happens at least we'll get it out the sea'.
"But this time, the sheer amount, and the fact that there were so many polystyrene pieces that were so tiny meant that it was impossible to pick them up."
As the beach is a site of special scientific interest for nesting birds, the litter can also prove a hazard for wildlife.
The Marine Conservation Society said historic litter often washes up at this time of year due to the seasonal storms - and that eroding coastal landfill sites are releasing a lot of "retro" rubbish too.
Spokesperson Catherine Gemmell said: "Litter, especially plastic litter, never disappears and can last a very long time in the marine environment and also travel across oceans."
Meanwhile John Berry, of the Scottish Islands Federation and Greener Orkney, said he was not surprised by the increase in litter on Sanday.
"We've got the really clean beaches [in Orkney] but we've got some really dirty beaches as well," he added.
"I'm really not surprised to see that, with a slightly different weather pattern, we're getting a lot of the old legacy material."
He added: "But we will clean it up in spring. And next year, it will be back. So we will do the exercise again."
While the situation is disheartening, Warner is looking to spearhead a positive outcome.
The sustainability coordinator hopes to form an official beach cleaning group where people can share interesting finds.
Rubbish washes up on the island from many faraway places, with a decapitated doll from Japan once rearing its plastic head.
As a member of the Sanday Community Craft Club, he is also considering using the plastic to create an artistic sculpture to make a statement about the problem.
Warner said: "We can't escape plastic. I use plastic, it's inescapable. I just want people to be aware when they do buy plastic, think where it's going to end up.
"Even if this rubbish isn't our rubbish per se, it's somebody's rubbish, and then where is our rubbish going? It's just more about awareness, and trying to buy less if you don't have to."
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And now for the pic you Canuckis have been waiting for, since Tor eats inline news article pix for lunch:

1771507205518.png


TBQH the bottles shown look like a mix of mid 60s and early 70s. What do you oldtimer Canucks say?
 
It is in the Canadian government's best interest to clean this up abroad ASAP. It might remind Canadians of a time when their government didn't hate them quite as much.
 
I sure wouldn't have guessed those were from the 60's. The design and fading doesn't seem like it. However, I know nothing about Canada or their lost glory, so whatever.
 
That 3p OFF graphic doesn't sound like something a Canadian product would have on it.

My guess? These bottles were made in Canada and imported into the UK where they were later thrown in the ocean.
 
The Friendly Floatees spill were bleached by the sun and seawater after just 15 years. Those yellow bottles are not going to stay yellow if they've been exposed to the elements for 50 years.
 
Stuff doesn't stay at sea for decades without getting covered in marine life or degraded by the sun, so what's with a sudden inundation of old trash in good condition? This looks like someone dumped an old trash hoard and it washed up quickly. Any abandoned properties recently "cleaned up?"
 
1771519115736.png
6d off on this, 3p off on another. Canada has used dollars and cents since 1858. This is BRITISH trash.
Moreover, by 1969 the official languages act was pushed through parliament and most if not all packaging had to have both English and French labels. Now, they could be pre-1969, but I did notice the pounds and pence pricing on most of the bottles, so I think it might be a mix of Canadian and Brit garbage.
 
Stuff doesn't stay at sea for decades without getting covered in marine life or degraded by the sun, so what's with a sudden inundation of old trash in good condition? This looks like someone dumped an old trash hoard and it washed up quickly. Any abandoned properties recently "cleaned up?"
There was a mystery once of a bunch of old garfield-themed telephones washing up on a specific beach periodically, and they were also in relatively good condition for having been out at sea for decades so everyone was perplexed. Eventually someone found an abandoned shipping container full of them (on an island I want to say?) that had a hole in it, and the phones only washed out when the tide was especially high and the waves especially rough. Maybe something similar happened here.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-47732553 <<<garfield phone story
 
The plot thickens-that green one on the left is actually from the Polish brand Ludwik. According to their website it was retailed in this bottle between 1971 and 1992

Screenshot_20260219-165629~2.jpg
 
There was a mystery once of a bunch of old garfield-themed telephones washing up on a specific beach periodically, and they were also in relatively good condition for having been out at sea for decades so everyone was perplexed. Eventually someone found an abandoned shipping container full of them (on an island I want to say?) that had a hole in it, and the phones only washed out when the tide was especially high and the waves especially rough. Maybe something similar happened here.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-47732553 <<<garfield phone story
Yeah, I've heard of that story. It would be odd to fill a container that would hold onto it for 50 years with kitchen trash to be dumped, seems like a lot of effort. I'd expect it was found on land, put in the back of a truck and just dumped into the ocean somewhere nearby.
 
Stuff doesn't stay at sea for decades without getting covered in marine life or degraded by the sun, so what's with a sudden inundation of old trash in good condition? This looks like someone dumped an old trash hoard and it washed up quickly. Any abandoned properties recently "cleaned up?"
It's almost definitely the remnants of a hoarders stash, there's no signs of submerged in water long term. It's likely that someone's grandparent died, and the family got stuck with cleaning an unfathomable amount of stuff up.
Disposing of old chemicals (even just the household stuff) the "proper" way is usually unfeasable. You're not supposed to put them in the regular trash, and you have to take it to a special disposal site. A lot of places you can only dispose of two 5 gallon buckets worth of paint/chemicals/etc per day at the disposal site.
Since the UK is a fascist State and they actually dig through the trash cans and will definitely fine you for that sort of pointless shit, I can definitely see someone loading up a whole bunch of trash bags of chemicals in their vehicle and hucking it over a cliff.

Or could be gypsies.
 
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