Las Vegas Review-Journal

A trash can from Myrtle Beach, S.C., washes ashore on Ireland’s seacoast

- By Claire Fahy and Derrick Bryson Taylor

Keith Mcgreal was walking along Mulranny Beach in County Mayo, Ireland, on Sunday when he spotted a blue plastic barrel that had washed ashore like a message in a bottle.

Instead of a tightly wrapped letter inside, a clue to the barrel’s origins was found on the stickers plastered to its dirty sides: “City of Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.”

The trash can had wandered 3,500 miles from home.

“The first reaction was, ‘Wow,’” Mcgreal, 44, said Tuesday. “I said, ‘This is not from Ireland.’”

Mcgreal, a safety and environmen­tal officer, had been spending time with his family that afternoon when he and his children spotted a blue object in the distance and decided to race toward it.

When they reached it, Mcgreal noticed the barrel had writing in English and Spanish, signaling it probably wasn’t from his own locality.

“It was covered in goose barnacles as well,” he said. “I explained to the kids that if something is in the ocean a while like that, those shells have to grow on the outside of it. It was obviously in the water for a long time, making its way across the sea.”

“It reminded me straight away of maybe like a message in a bottle type scenario, where you know who the sender is and you can maybe return a message back to them,” he added.

So that night he wrote to the city of Myrtle Beach, alerting them to the location of their wayward tub.

“Amazing to think it traveled all the way across the Atlantic,” Mcgreal wrote in an email, which was shared online this week by Mark Kruea, a public informatio­n officer for Myrtle Beach.

“I looked at the pictures very carefully to see if it looked like our trash can,” Kruea said on Monday. “And then I sent the photos to our parks people who take care of those on the beach, and they quickly confirmed that, yes, that’s our trash can.”

Kruea surmised that either wind during a storm or “human interventi­on” led to the trash can ending up in the ocean off South Carolina.

From there, Chris Paternostr­o, an oceanograp­her at the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion, estimated the bin got picked up by the Gulf Stream, which carried it up the Eastern Seaboard and then across to the western coast of Ireland.

Kruea said, “That’s in the top 10 things on the oddities list that I’ve been keeping these last twoplus decades.”

A post sharing Mcgreal’s discovery on the Myrtle Beach City Government Facebook page on Monday elicited responses from both sides of the Atlantic, including one from Karen Golding Vaughan, a Myrtle Beach resident who commented regretfull­y, “I just got back from Mayo 3 weeks ago, if I had known, I’d have hitched a ride!”

This is not the first time foreign marine debris has made waves. In 1990, 61,280 Nike sneakers spilled off a freighter during a storm and landed in the Pacific Ocean, eventually washing up as late as 2019 in Europe, Bermuda, the Bahamas and elsewhere. In 1992, a cargo ship inadverten­tly dumped 28,000 rubber ducks into the Pacific — ducks that eventually made their way all the way to Maine. For more than three decades, residents of a coastal community in France were baffled by the regular appearance of Garfield phones on their shores until their source, a lost shipping container, was finally identified in 2019.

Paternostr­o said such events could sometimes turn into oceanograp­hic experiment­s because scientists know when these objects fell into the water and where they went, so they can use them to study currents and tides. But one lowly Myrtle Beach trash can might not be able to contribute to the study of oceanograp­hy in the same way.

“One trash can with an unknown time in the water and only a known origin is a little bit harder to give us a physical oceanograp­hy understand­ing,” he said.

Nancy Wallace, director of the Marine Debris Program at the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion, said the trash can barely scratched the surface of notable debris she’s come across, which includes discarded furniture, mannequins and lost toothbrush­es.

“You find the most bizarre things in the ocean,” she said.

And while Wallace pointed out that the trash can was a good example of how debris that winds up in the ocean can have far-reaching impact, Mcgreal recycled the bin by cleaning it up and leaving it for people to use on Mulranny Beach.

“They’re using it for its intended purpose in Ireland,” Kruea said. “Which is pretty cool.”

 ?? KEITH MCGREAL VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A photo provided by Keith Mcgreal shows the trash can that floated to County Mayo in Ireland from Myrtle Beach, S.C. It is once again being used to collect trash, now at Mulranny Beach, Ireland, an ocean away from its intended perch.
KEITH MCGREAL VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES A photo provided by Keith Mcgreal shows the trash can that floated to County Mayo in Ireland from Myrtle Beach, S.C. It is once again being used to collect trash, now at Mulranny Beach, Ireland, an ocean away from its intended perch.

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