Home News They get a wonderful surprise while cleaning the beach — you won’t...

They get a wonderful surprise while cleaning the beach — you won’t believe what it is!

Have you ever discovered something enjoyable to do while hiking a mountain trail or walking on the beach? A beautiful seashell, a tree with a distinctive shape, or a stone? While working to clean the beach, a group of schoolchildren and their teacher, Park Lee were in for a big surprise – a strange object.

In fact, it was a camera that was lost for two years under the sea. To view additional images, make sure to read the entire story.

According to the BBC, the camera was found washed up at a beach in Taiwan – covered in barnacles and shells and barely recognisable. Believe it or not, it was in perfect working condition, thanks to a waterproof case.

The camera was found by a group of schoolchildren and their teacher, Park Lee, who decided to trace it back to its owner. And with the help of a Facebook post that instantly went viral with almost 13,000 shares, they managed to do that in just one day.

Incredibly, not a drop of water had entered the camera even though it travelled hundreds of kilometers underwater. Even more amazingly, when a student turned it on, it was still charged and working fine.

Mr Lee said to the BBC that they initially had doubts over whether to look through the photos on the camera and share them on Facebook, but it seemed like their only chance of finding the owner.

As some of the pictures on the camera were from Japan, they wrote their Facebook post in both Chinese and Japanese.

Within 24 hours, they managed to track down the camera’s owner.

“I can’t still believe this is happening” camera owner Serina Tsubakihara wrote in her Facebook post.

“In 2015, I went to scuba diving trip to Ishigaki island in Okinawa with my friends. When we were enjoying fun dive, I accidentally lost my camera under water and never found it. However, after almost 3 years, it was found in Taiwan by elementary students at beach clean event!!” she said.

Ms Tsubakihara planned to travel to Taiwan in June to get her camera and meet the people who found it.