Daniil Korotkikh, 13, saw a bright beer bottle on a beach in the Russian region of Kaliningrad, and inside she found a letter from Frank Uesbeck German, five years old. "If you find this letter, please write me back, and I will answer," the letter said. When Daniel contacted Frank, now 29, began chatting.
The German gave the guy who answered the letter an address to write to him and promised to return the message upon receipt of your letter. "You will receive another letter from me, I assure you," said Frank. "It's a wonderful story and, who knows, maybe we know each other in person some day!".
"Hidden under the sand" Daniil found the bottle while walking near the village of Morskoy, on a sandy beach about 100 kilometers shared between Russia and Lithuania. "I saw this bottle and I found it interesting," he said. "It looked like a German beer bottle with a ceramic cap, and had a message inside." His father, who learned German at school, translated the letter, carefully wrapped in cellophane and sealed with a medical bandage.
The post date of 1987 and includes an address in the German town of Coesfeld, where Frank's parents still live. "At first I thought," said Frank, about when he had the answer of Daniil. In fact, almost did not remember the trip where the bottle was thrown from a boat to Denmark. It was actually his father who wrote the letter.
Daniil said he did not believe the bottle had happened in 24 years at sea, because "it would not have survived in the water all the time." Cree would have been buried under the sand, where found.
The German gave the guy who answered the letter an address to write to him and promised to return the message upon receipt of your letter. "You will receive another letter from me, I assure you," said Frank. "It's a wonderful story and, who knows, maybe we know each other in person some day!".
"Hidden under the sand" Daniil found the bottle while walking near the village of Morskoy, on a sandy beach about 100 kilometers shared between Russia and Lithuania. "I saw this bottle and I found it interesting," he said. "It looked like a German beer bottle with a ceramic cap, and had a message inside." His father, who learned German at school, translated the letter, carefully wrapped in cellophane and sealed with a medical bandage.
The post date of 1987 and includes an address in the German town of Coesfeld, where Frank's parents still live. "At first I thought," said Frank, about when he had the answer of Daniil. In fact, almost did not remember the trip where the bottle was thrown from a boat to Denmark. It was actually his father who wrote the letter.
Daniil said he did not believe the bottle had happened in 24 years at sea, because "it would not have survived in the water all the time." Cree would have been buried under the sand, where found.
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