Posts Tagged ‘ island treasures ’

Recent Favorite Geocaching Posts

Sunday, January 18th, 2009

Jekyll Island has placed several geocaches around the island. If you need to know what geocaching is, go to www.geocaching.com. Here are some recent posts from the folks who have found or not found them . . .

A Real Pirates Treasure

 January 10
Quick find on a bike ride across the island. We’ll be back for super. Took bug and left pirate coin.
 January 9
Found, looking forward to checking out the food. Beach is beautiful. L - gator T - bug TFTC
 January 2
Nice place for a cache! Left a TB. TFTC!!
 December 28, 2008
first find and it was really fun

Some are more baffling than others. I couldn’t find The Ruins today and I put it there but it was found just recently.

 January 17
Tried 3 caches put out by JI today and found none of them. Are the JI caches removed?
 January 9
Didn’t find it, which surprised me after the last guy found it. Oh well.
 January 8
We couldn’t find this cache. We did find a very large amount of “TICKS” howerver. Be warned.
B & D
 January 4
TFTC!
 December 31, 2008
where or where….could not find this one!!!!!
 December 31, 2008
Was caching with operationsoak, soccercoach, flamingoquilter and jaxbeachhandyman today. Did not find it, but the sun was getting low and we wanted to get to the south end of the island, will have to try again.
 December 31, 2008
I was with the family and didn’t find it either. I’m glad I didn’t find the spiders either! Have to try again next time!
 December 31, 2008
Out with the family, and none of us could find this one. Looked everywhere we could called it short to go to the other end of the island before sunset. I have to return to California, but hopefully the family will find this one on the next visit. But t was a great area, wished I could of had a history lesson….
 December 29, 2008
Sidekick and I used GPS readings not under the trees to zero-in on this one, Good hide TNLN SL TFTH
 December 26, 2008
We left a pink jewel in the cache when we found it. The find was the perfect level of “trickiness” for our group. Thanks!

Picnic Area is bit tricky…

Cache Logs
 January 9
beat the bushes and didn’t see it.
 January 6
[My family and I looked for a while with no luck...It would help if I had an idea of what kind of container I was looking for.]
[Update from the cache owner:]
The container is a small black waterproof (if people close it right) about 8 x 6 and about 2 inches tall

View of the Pier from the Beach
My Son near the Cache
 January 3
No luck here. Looked around for about 20 minutes and could not find it before the gnats decided to devour us. Great spot again on this beautiful island.
 January 1
The new coordinates are better than the old by about 50 ft. Once you find it you wonder why it was so hard. Our first find of 2009. Took nothing, left a nickel.
“Happy New Year”
 December 31, 2008
a great find on this wonderful island!!!! Left a flamingo key chain….

We’ll check on all the caches ASAP, so all you geocachers out there, make plans to come to Jekyll Island on January 31st for the Geocaching for Island Treasures event.  If you don’t know what Island Treasures are, go to www.jekyllisland.com/islandtreasures!

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • MySpace
  • Gmail
  • AOL Mail
  • Digg
  • LinkedIn
  • NewsVine
  • Webnews
  • Yahoo Mail
  • LiveJournal
  • Ask.com MyStuff
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Hotmail
  • Slashdot
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati Favorites
  • Windows Live Favorites
  • Yahoo Messenger
  • Plaxo Pulse
  • Windows Live Spaces
  • Yahoo Bookmarks
  • Yahoo Buzz
  • Shoutwire
  • Hugg
  • Delicious
  • Reddit
  • FriendFeed
  • AIM
  • Share/Save/Bookmark
 

First Island Treasures Float of 2009 Discovered

Friday, January 9th, 2009


it1.jpgThe first float finder of Jekyll Island’s 2009 Island Treasure promotion is Eric and Deborah Stevens from Ponte Vedra Beach, FL. Staying at the Jekyll Island Club Hotel, the couple read about Island Treasures in Jekyll Island’s Beachscape Newsletter.

“Island Treasures on Jekyll Island” is a unique treasure hunting experience on Georgia’s most popular public beach. The treasures are hand-crafted glass floats, called Island Treasures. The glass floats have been sought after by Jekyll Island guests since 2002. Each is unique and stamped with the year to be a collector’s item for the lucky beachcomber who finds one.

Island Treasures mimic glass floats once used on the fishing nets of fishermen in the early 1900s. The floats would sometimes break loose and wash ashore for lucky beachcombers to find and keep. Collecting these glass floats became a hobby in the 1950’s, declined as commercial fishing moved to plastic and Styrofoam floats. Glass fishing floats became rarer and are highly sought after and very valuable today.

During January and February, the Jekyll Island Authority recreates this hunt-and-find experience is recreated. The glass float treasures are the works of commissioned artists from across the country. “Beach Buddies” hide them along the shore line every day for lucky visitors to find and keep. Treasure finders can register their Island Treasure at the Jekyll Island Visitor Information Center to receive a bio on the artist and a certificate of authenticity. The Jekyll Island Visitor Information Center has Island Treasure floats and an array of the other colorful glass creations for purchase in-store or online at www.jekyllisland.com/islandtreasures.

Since the promotion began six years ago, over 1,000 glass floats have been found by guests from across the U.S., Canada and England. Jekyll Island floats are collector’s items and can be occasionally found on auction sites like eBay.

Those who are unable to visit Jekyll Island can participate in a virtual treasure hunt on www.jekyllisland.com. Search the website for small, hidden Island Treasure pictures. The first person to click on one will win an actual Island Treasure that will be shipped to them.

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • MySpace
  • Gmail
  • AOL Mail
  • Digg
  • LinkedIn
  • NewsVine
  • Webnews
  • Yahoo Mail
  • LiveJournal
  • Ask.com MyStuff
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Hotmail
  • Slashdot
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati Favorites
  • Windows Live Favorites
  • Yahoo Messenger
  • Plaxo Pulse
  • Windows Live Spaces
  • Yahoo Bookmarks
  • Yahoo Buzz
  • Shoutwire
  • Hugg
  • Delicious
  • Reddit
  • FriendFeed
  • AIM
  • Share/Save/Bookmark
 

Hunting for Jekyll Island Treasures!

Friday, January 2nd, 2009

Jekyll Island has commissioned a group of highly skilled artisans from across the U.S. to create an array of stunning, hand-worked glass creations. This wonderful collection includes brilliant art glass floats, beautiful starfish, wondrous glass sand dollars and other extraordinary pieces.

Originally the hollow glass balls were woven into the rope line of large fishing nets, and proved to be buoyant as well as economical. Copying the Norwegian designs, many European countries soon began using glass floats for their commercial fishing nets. Although it wasn’t until around 1910 that far eastern countries, primarily Japan, began manufacturing and using glass floats, today these glass balls (which are highly prized by collectors) are popularly called Japanese Glass Floats.

To accommodate different fishing styles and nets, the Japanese experimented with making many different shapes of floats, from two-inches to 20 inches in diameter. They even made a float that looks like a miniature rolling pin, crimped on each end to make it easier to secure to the net. Most floats were made in shades of green or blue. Other brilliant jewel tones such as emerald green, cobalt blue, purple, yellow and orange were primarily made in the 1920’s and 30’s. Red and purple floats are highly prized by collectors and are thought to have originated from the Royal Fleet. Denmark, Czechoslovakia, and Scotland copied the idea of glass floats later in the 19th Century. By the 1940’s England, France, Germany, Russia and the US were all making and using glass fishing floats. Plastic, wood and cork were used for a while but glass was more durable, and inexpensive. After WWII, fishing accelerated, especially for the Japanese, and glass was again the float of choice, though the US continued to make some wooden floats until 1956.

Trademarks and embossing were used on the floats to identify the users and manufacturers, and are used today by collectors to identify their origin and authenticity. About 20% of floats have some type of trade mark. Unfortunately for net fisherman, glass floats often escaped their nets when the rope rotted or storms tore them away.

Millions of glass floats are still riding in the world’s ocean currents today. Many of these floats are thought to be traveling in one particular ocean current. The Koroshio Current (meaning the “black stream” and called so because of its dark color) sweeps in a figure 8 pattern from Japan across the Pacific to Alaska and then down the West Coast from the Aleutian Islands all the way past Mexico and then turns east again, past the Hawaiian Islands and back to Japan. It takes a minimum of four years for a float to cross the Pacific, and experts think that 40% of the floats lost by fisherman are still afloat and drifting today. When tide and weather conditions are just right, you can find glass floats that wash up on the beaches of Hawaii, California, Washington, Oregon and Alaska. Often, these floats roll safely onto shore tangled in seaweed or other flotsam. They also can be shattered if they land on a rocky coastline. During stormy periods they can be thrown hundreds of feet onshore and will remain there until some lucky beachcombing hunter should find it.

Collecting these glass floats became a hobby in the 1950’s but with the decline in commercial fishing and with the advent of plastics, glass fishing floats became more rare and are highly sought after and very valuable today. Collectors worldwide display their finds in their homes as well as museums, fairs and exhibits. Original glass floats with an identifiable trademark bring hundreds of dollars in swap meets and on Internet auctions today. These hollow glass spheres are also highly sought after by interior decorators who exhibit them in offices, homes and gardens throughout America.

On Jekyll Island, from January 1 - February 28, Island Treasure art pieces will placed above the high water line (not in the dunes) for lucky winter beachcombers to find. The virtual treasure hunt will begin January 1st. For more information visit www.jekyllisland.com/islandtreasures

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • MySpace
  • Gmail
  • AOL Mail
  • Digg
  • LinkedIn
  • NewsVine
  • Webnews
  • Yahoo Mail
  • LiveJournal
  • Ask.com MyStuff
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Hotmail
  • Slashdot
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati Favorites
  • Windows Live Favorites
  • Yahoo Messenger
  • Plaxo Pulse
  • Windows Live Spaces
  • Yahoo Bookmarks
  • Yahoo Buzz
  • Shoutwire
  • Hugg
  • Delicious
  • Reddit
  • FriendFeed
  • AIM
  • Share/Save/Bookmark
 

About the Island Treasures Artists

Friday, January 2nd, 2009

Pyromania
Pyromania, located in beautiful Newport, Oregon, is a family business. Husband and wife, Dennis & Patricia Schmitz, and their daughters, Jessica and Andrea, work together to create glass floats. Each colorful orb is individually crafted with the same techniques that have been used for 2000 years to create glass art pieces that celebrate the spirit of beachcombing. Each Pyromania float has the Studio’s name and the year engraved near the plug. These collectible floats are lively, bright, and multicolored pieces of art.

Mark Ellinger
Mark Ellinger is a professional glass artist and a native of the Puget Sound area of Washington State In 1998 Mark built and founded “Glass Quest” his own modern glass blowing studio in rural Stanwood, Washington. Mark’s unique designs are inspired by his love of the Art Nouveau period and the beautiful surroundings of Puget Sound.

Leaning Glass Studios
Together, husband and wife team — Jennifer and Paul Steinke — make up the glass blowing team of Leaning Glass Studios. For over 20 years, Paul has been creating unique glasswork. To date, Paul has produced over 3500 glass ornaments, multiple vases and dishes, and fused glass pieces. Paul’s wife Jennifer began working with glass in 2000. Under the study of Eddie and Barbara Streeter, she learned that everything in glass making is HOT! Jennifer works on producing unique bowls and vases.

Treasure’d Glass
Treasure Collupy was born and raised in Skamokawa, Washington. After attending two years of college, he yearned for a change. On a trip home from Seattle, he went into a local “hot shop” where, by twist of fate, he was asked to help. After a couple hours of assisting, he was addicted. Three months later, Treasure quit his job and moved back to Skamokawa to learn the art of glassblowing!

Fern Hill Glass
Claude Kurtz was born in Portland, Oregon, and raised in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Claude uses dichroic glass and lots of bright, pure and often reactive colors. He enjoys experimenting with colors to create different and often unexpected results.

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • MySpace
  • Gmail
  • AOL Mail
  • Digg
  • LinkedIn
  • NewsVine
  • Webnews
  • Yahoo Mail
  • LiveJournal
  • Ask.com MyStuff
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Hotmail
  • Slashdot
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati Favorites
  • Windows Live Favorites
  • Yahoo Messenger
  • Plaxo Pulse
  • Windows Live Spaces
  • Yahoo Bookmarks
  • Yahoo Buzz
  • Shoutwire
  • Hugg
  • Delicious
  • Reddit
  • FriendFeed
  • AIM
  • Share/Save/Bookmark
 

Go Treasure Hunting on Jekyll Island During Island Treasures

Wednesday, December 31st, 2008


it02_resized.jpg

Beginning New Year’s Day and continuing through the months of January and February, the Jekyll Island Authority hosts “Island Treasures on Jekyll Island”, a unique treasure hunting experience on Georgia’s most popular public beach. The treasures are hand-crafted glass floats, called Island Treasures. The glass floats have been sought after by Jekyll Island guests since 2002. Each is unique and stamped with the year to be a collector’s item for the lucky beachcomber who finds one.

Island Treasures mimic glass floats once used on the fishing nets of fishermen in the early 1900s. The floats would sometimes break loose and wash ashore for lucky beachcombers to find and keep. Collecting these glass floats became a hobby in the 1950’s, declined as commercial fishing moved to plastic and Styrofoam floats. Glass fishing floats became more rare and are highly sought after and very valuable today.

During these first two winter months, the Jekyll Island Authority recreates this hunt-and-find experience is recreated. The glass float treasures are the works of commissioned artists from across the country. “Beach Buddies” hide them along the shore line every day for lucky visitors to find and keep. Treasure finders can register their Island Treasure at the Jekyll Island Visitor Information Center to receive a bio on the artist and a certificate of authenticity. The Jekyll Island Visitor Information Center has Island Treasure floats and an array of the other colorful glass creations for purchase in-store or online at www.jekyllisland.com/islandtreasures.

“Jekyll Island is a popular winter escape for guests from northern states and Canada,” explained Beth Burnsed, Event Marketing Coordinator. “The natural beauty of our beach has its own special rewards to beachcombers, but to find a beautiful Island Treasure is really exciting!”

Since the promotion began six years ago, over 1,000 glass floats have been found by guests from across the U.S., Canada and England. Jekyll Island floats are collector’s items and can be occasionally found on auction sites like eBay.

Those who are unable to visit Jekyll Island can participate in a virtual treasure hunt on www.jekyllisland.com. Search the website for small, hidden Island Treasure pictures. The first person to click on one will win an actual Island Treasure that will be shipped to them.

Participating hotels have special programs and packages to celebrate Island Treasures on Jekyll Island. Jekyll Island has seven hotels open and operating, including the boutique Beachview Club. Other hotels include the Oceanside Inn & Suites, Quality Inn, Jekyll Oceanfront Clarion Resort, Villas By The Sea, Jekyll Island Club Hotel and the Days Inn & Suites. For more information on Island Treasures and other events on Jekyll Island, visit www.jekyllisland.com or call 1-877-4JEKYLL.

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • MySpace
  • Gmail
  • AOL Mail
  • Digg
  • LinkedIn
  • NewsVine
  • Webnews
  • Yahoo Mail
  • LiveJournal
  • Ask.com MyStuff
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Hotmail
  • Slashdot
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati Favorites
  • Windows Live Favorites
  • Yahoo Messenger
  • Plaxo Pulse
  • Windows Live Spaces
  • Yahoo Bookmarks
  • Yahoo Buzz
  • Shoutwire
  • Hugg
  • Delicious
  • Reddit
  • FriendFeed
  • AIM
  • Share/Save/Bookmark
 

Celebrate Mother’s Day on Jekyll Island with an Island Treasures Hunt

Friday, May 2nd, 2008

dscn1193.JPGBring mom to the beautiful beaches of Jekyll Island next Sunday, May 11, for a special Mother’s Day Island Treasures Hunt. Island Treasures are the unique and colorful glass globes, hand-crafted especially for Jekyll Island by artisans across the country. Volunteer “Beach Buddies” hide the celebrated glass globes on Jekyll Island’s beaches in January and February, for beachcombers to discover throughout the spring and summer. This year, in celebration and recognition of Mother’s Day, Beach Buddies will hide an additional 20 Island Treasures on Jekyll Island’s beaches for a special Mother’s Day Island Treasures Hunt. Twenty lucky moms will find and keep their own special Mother’s Day gift while beachcombing with their families on Jekyll Island.

To complete your Mother’s Day weekend, Jekyll Island offers a variety of affordable accommodations and activities sure to please mom. If mom isn’t among the 20 lucky finders, she can always purchase her own Island Treasure from the large assortment for sale at the Jekyll Island Visitor Information Center or online at http://www.jekyllisland.com/islandtreasures. The gift shop at the Jekyll Island Visitor Information Center also offers hand-crafted pottery, jewelry, purses, home decor and unique gifts for mom. For more information on Jekyll Island and the Mother’s Day Island Treasures Hunt, contact the Jekyll Island Visitor Information Center at 1-877-4-Jekyll or visit our website at http://www.jekyllisland.com.

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • MySpace
  • Gmail
  • AOL Mail
  • Digg
  • LinkedIn
  • NewsVine
  • Webnews
  • Yahoo Mail
  • LiveJournal
  • Ask.com MyStuff
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Hotmail
  • Slashdot
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati Favorites
  • Windows Live Favorites
  • Yahoo Messenger
  • Plaxo Pulse
  • Windows Live Spaces
  • Yahoo Bookmarks
  • Yahoo Buzz
  • Shoutwire
  • Hugg
  • Delicious
  • Reddit
  • FriendFeed
  • AIM
  • Share/Save/Bookmark
 

January 2008 Beachscape - Discover Island Treasures

Friday, December 28th, 2007

Discover Jekyll Island Treasures
For generations, beachcombers have delighted in finding glass fishing floats that separated from European and Asian fish nets. The colorful floats could drift for years, driven by winds and currents, tossed and polished by the surf and sand until they eventually washed up on beaches around the world. Today, finding one of the original glass floats is rare; the fragile glass spheres face the are often broken or lost among crashing waves, rocky shorelines, and tangling seaweed. Every year, Jekyll Island celebrates the tradition of finding glass fishing floats by placing colorful blown glass floats along the beaches. Beginning on January 1, a special group of “Beach Buddies” hide the hand-crafted floats above the high water line on Jekyll Island’s beaches. From January 1 through February the floats hide among the shores, waiting for a special Jekyll visitor to discover it. After a beach comber finds a float, he or she takes the treasure to the Jekyll Island Visitor Information Center on Downing Musgrove Causeway. There, the finder can register the float, receive a certificate of authenticity, and have his or her picture taken to post on the Island Treasures website. For more information on how you can discover an Island Treasure, visit www.jekyllisland.com/islandtreasures

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • MySpace
  • Gmail
  • AOL Mail
  • Digg
  • LinkedIn
  • NewsVine
  • Webnews
  • Yahoo Mail
  • LiveJournal
  • Ask.com MyStuff
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Hotmail
  • Slashdot
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati Favorites
  • Windows Live Favorites
  • Yahoo Messenger
  • Plaxo Pulse
  • Windows Live Spaces
  • Yahoo Bookmarks
  • Yahoo Buzz
  • Shoutwire
  • Hugg
  • Delicious
  • Reddit
  • FriendFeed
  • AIM
  • Share/Save/Bookmark