A Message in a Bottle is Found!
September 2003 Story by
Gary Olsen and Cathy Czipar-Hall
Irving Elementary students finally hear from someone who found one of the bottles they dropped in the Mississippi River more than a year-and-a-half ago. The first bottle wasn't found far away, but something magical happened to the people who found it.

id you ever put a message in a bottle and send it on its way down the Mississippi River or tossed it from a beach on the ocean, perhaps? Seven Irving Elementary did this very thing in their study of the Mississippi River. They even got the cooperation of the Department of Natural Resources and the Army Corps of Engineers, and the students worked several days on making the contents of their bottles special. There were drawings, a questionnaire ("Where did you find my bottle?"), some pencils with Irving School engraved on them, a lovely handwritten letter, and a dollar bill as a small token of appreciation for the effort of responding to the questionnaire.

Video Control Panel

The turtle downloads a complete movie, no streaming. This is best for telephone modems. After saving this file, you can play it with RealPlayer. The rabbit button is a streaming movie. If you have high-speed web access such as DSL, it will begin playing immediately. The rocket button is for high-speed networks (like our schools have), DSL, and cable modems. It's the largest size streaming movie file with full-stereo audio. Further instructions are below on how to play video and audio files that appear on our website.

Download the large movie file for your Archive (non-streaming RealMedia file). Save it to your hard drive and burn a CD.

The bottles were thrown into the Mississippi during a minor flood stage in April of 2002. The large sized plastic soft drink bottles bobbed up and down on the waves like a flotilla of brightly colored boats. They quickly sailed out of sight on the swift spring current.

Days went by.... weeks, and then months. No word. According to the Army Corps of Engineer's Lockmaster at Dubuque, all the flood gates were open down to Alton, Illinois, the last lock and dam on the river, so if the bottles stayed in the channel, they could be all the way the New Orleans and the Gulf of Mexico. The students studied maps of the Mississippi. Since the launch, the National Mississippi River Aquarium and Museum has opened, and exhibits there have refueled some of the students' wonder as to where the bottles finally ended their voyage. Were they hit by a barge or boat and sunk? Were they trapped in a backwater? Did a bottle get eaten by a giant catfish or a bayou alligator? Anything is possible. Then one day, an e-mail arrived.

The project leader, Cathy Czipar-Hall, at Irving almost lost her breath when she read the e-mail from a couple who were boating in the Dubuque area over Labor Day. Kerry and Tom Gregor were camping on an island in the Mississippi, went exploring in the island's interior, and found something. The couple didn't know what it was until they closely examined the contents of the well-capped soft drink bottle to reveal a dollar bill!

The couple was excited to say the least, and their letter to Cathy was filled with heartfelt emotion. When they read about the kids, their website (where they could actually see the children who sent the message in the bottle), they became caught up in the spirit of the project.

"When I read the messages, I became emotional," said Mrs. Gregor. "We couldn't wait to get home to share our treasure and respond to the questions. The experience made our weekend."

The movie we've produced on this page tells the whole story in the faces and the voices of the children, and it's extraordinary, even though the first of the seven bottles was found about a mile from where it was launched, it connected with someone in a very unique and personal way. It didn't matter if the bottle floated 50 miles or 50 feet.

Below is the original story and film that appeared in April 2002

Message in a Bottle

Irving Elementary students learn about the Mississippi River

April 30, 2002 Photos and Video Adventure by Gary Olsen

essages in bottles floated down the Mississippi River is an interesting way to learn about the river. The idea for the concept began as a Christmas party conversation at the home of Cathy Czipar-Hall. It quickly grew into a full-blown project for Cathy's class at Irving Elementary.

Our First Movie
These are RealMedia files requiring RealPlayer to be available in your browser. The program is free and available here to install so you can enjoy all of the multimedia content our website has to offer. Click here for instructions and a link to the software. The turtle is for slow connections, the rabbit for fast. Both of these movies have stream capabilities.

So her students created original drawings, a questionnaire (the most interesting part), a free Irving pencil, a letter of introduction, a

Web site link, and a one-dollar bill in plain view inside the 2-liter pop bottles. "Don't you think if someone sees a bottle floating by and there is a dollar inside, that they might want to pick it up?" asks Cathy of her students.

For a 10 minute documentary on the preparations for this interesting curriculum piece that combines geography, science, writing and art skills, click on the appropriate button above. If you need help in learning how to play video clips on your computer, read the column below.

Also, you can click on any of the photos on this page to download a larger, more printable version.

Instructions For Those Outside of Our School Network (The General Public)

We are now providing a choice of RealPlayer applications for you to download and install on your computer to enable you to view the video and audio files. One is RealPlayer8 and the other is RealOne Player, which is an excellent player with many new features. It's easy to install, so just follow the on-screen steps. You will be required to register with Real.com, but these are free software applications (there are versions you can pay for if you choose, but they are not necessary for basic viewing and listening).

Which Player is Best for Me?

Of the two types of free players available, RealPlayer 8 is the traditional player that is free and will work beautifully to access Web based multimedia files from our site. There is also a new player available, which is also free, called RealONE. Either player will probably work for your operating system. If your system is older (Windows 95, NT), however, you may want to use the RealPlayer 8 software. If you are running a newer, faster system like Windows 98, ME, XP, or 2000, go for the RealOne player.

Macintosh Owners:

You can get a RealPlayer for Macintosh, Visit Real.com to download their free player options. Remember, look for the FREE players. They are sometimes difficult to find on their Web site.

Oh, and one more thing... sometimes when you click on a sound or video file in our Web site with the RealPlayer installed, you get a little commercial window that pops up on your desktop. It's annoying, but a small price to pay for the privilege of having the free RealPlayer on your system. Just click it off, and it will disappear.

Instructions For Machines on our School Network (Teachers and Staff)
We are recommending (and IT is supporting) RealPlayer8. This is for ALL computers on our network (in all school and administration buildings throughout the District). This includes all Windows 2000 machines. Click here to get the free player from our network server. If you do not have administrative priveleges, please call your building media specialist to help you.

 

Click on any of the photos on this page for larger mor printable versions you can download and print at home.

Listening with anticipation as Mrs. Hall reads the letter from the Gregors who found the first bottle.
The kids wave at the camera during the opening of a gift from the couple who found the first bottle. At right, one of the bottles ready for launch a year-and-a-half ago.
Left, one of the students, whose bottle was found, opens the gifts from the people who found his bottle. Lower left, Mrs. Hall reads the heartfelt letter.
The photos below were taken during the preparation and launch stages of the bottle project.
 
 

© 2000-2003 Dubuque Community Schools All Rights Reserved. No portion of this Web site can be reproduced without expressed permission of the Dubuque Community School District. Contact Dubuque Community Schools, Office of Public Affairs, 2300 Chaney Road, Dubuque, IA 52001. View our Privacy Statement.

If you are an employee of the Dubuque Community School Distrct, The Hub is for you. You need your building name
and password to gain access. Ask your school secretary or media specialist for that information.