Cooler lovers, listen up. There’s a huge sale on Yetis happening right now in various parts of Alaska that we simply have to share. All models are 100 percent off—yes, that’s right. Free! All you have to do is pitch your body into the icy chop of the North Pacific to get one.
All along the Gulf of Alaska, denizens of the Last Frontier are living out what we can only assume are the wet dreams of old, sunburned beachcombers everywhere. Dozens of expensive Yeti coolers are on shore after a cargo ship 109 containers of them near Washington’s Olympic Peninsula last year. And what do you know—they’re in great shape! (The possibility of Yeti’s marketing team , and perhaps even driving the tanker, now tops our list of most suspicious outdoor conspiracy theories.)
By all accounts, they’re going fast. One greedy collector has reportedly nabbed 20 of them. (Why this Alaska man needs the kind of cooler space that could keep 1,140 beers cold simultaneously eludes us, but it sounds like a great time.) Before the rush is over, we wanted to share some photos of folks gleefully unearthing their new $400 hunks of plastic from the sand.
As accidents like this continue to fill the oceans with trash, a few free coolers are more or less a cold comfort. Still, these people seem to be having a grand old time of it. So, without further ado, scenes from the frenzy. Maybe an Airstream trailer ship will go down next.
In October, the spilled 109 shipping containers near the WA/BC border. Debris has floated north ever since, onto beaches on Vancouver Island, then Haida Gwaii, then SE Alaska, and most recently the Kenai Peninsula (top of the Gulf of AK).
A debris thread… 1/n— KUOW Public Radio (@KUOW)
But Alaskan beachcombers have been thrilled to find in working condition. The high-end coolers retail for hundreds of dollars. 3/n
— KUOW Public Radio (@KUOW)
Found a yeti in Alaska !!! Unreal !! A shipping container tipped over and we found this gem on the beach !! @YETI
These were all found on beaches near Seward, Alaska: ~1,000 miles from where the spilled containers off WA’s Olympic Peninsula. Pics courtesy Duke Marolf. 4/n
— KUOW Public Radio (@KUOW)
Marolf has been flying the coast and offshore islands of Alaska’s Kenai Peninsula in his small plane with fat tires this summer, looking for beached treasure. He says he needs just 200 feet of beach to take off and land. 5/n
— KUOW Public Radio (@KUOW)
Hannah Richter uses two beach-found coolers as a platform for cutting salmon in Craig, Alaska. Courtesy . 7/n
— KUOW Public Radio (@KUOW)
Treasure hunting for yeti coolers that fell off a cargo ship! @yeti
Steven Peavey finds a Yeti cooler on Alaska’s Suemez Island in April, kicking off a “fun frenzy” of cooler hunting in SE AK.
Melissa Nagamine Peavey pic. 8/n— KUOW Public Radio (@KUOW)
A Yeti cooler found on a remote beach near Elfin Cove (across from ), Chichagof Island, Alaska, in July. Courtesy Chris and Serena Lillehoff 9/n
— KUOW Public Radio (@KUOW)