Time Capsule Project 2026 to 2056

  • Steve Broadbelt
  • February 08th 2026

Ocean Frontiers has always measured time a little differently. Not just in years, but in tides, seasons, and the slow, patient growth of coral. So when our East End dive company approached its 30th anniversary in 2026, we knew a simple party would never capture the depth of the journey. We wanted something that honored the past, celebrated the present, and spoke to the future. We chose to speak in the language we know best: diving.

The Idea

The spark came during a late afternoon boat ride after a dive off the wall at a site known as The Maze. Someone joked that Ocean Frontiers’ retired scuba tanks had “seen more history than a museum.” That joke turned into a question: What if the tanks really could hold history?

From that moment, the 30-Year Time Capsule Project was born. Three retired 100-cubic-foot scuba tanks—once used to explore Cayman’s reefs—would be transformed into time capsules. Each tank would represent a chapter:
 

  • -The Past (1996–2006) – The pioneering years
  • -The Present (2006–2026) – The years of growth and community
  • -The Future (2026–2056) – The legacy yet to be written


When filled, the capsules will be sealed and, at the end of the 2026 anniversary year, buried beneath the grounds of the Ocean Frontiers Dive Shop in East End. A large bronze plaque to mark the spot. They will rest there for 30 years, not to be opened until 2056.

Gathering the Memories

Announcing across the Cayman Islands and around the world:

   If you’ve ever dived with us, worked with us, laughed on our boats, or made a memory with Ocean Frontiers—you’re part of this story.

Customers and crew from the past three decades are invited to contribute small artifacts and memorabilia.  Faded logbook pages stamped with Ocean Frontiers’ logo, old underwater photos of their first dives, crew T-shirts from the early years, handwritten notes about proposals, milestones and life-changing moments underwater, a child’s drawing of a turtle from a family’s first Cayman trip, dive tags, a weathered dive flag, a Green Shorts medal, Cayman Islands money or a rubber duck - we look forward to sharing the final treasures selected for this 30 year journey.

For the Future capsule, contributions will be different. Letters to future divers, to their children, and even to themselves. Predictions and fantasy of where technology will take us, drawings from local schoolchildren, of what they imagine Cayman’s reefs will look like in 2056—some hopeful, some imaginative, all heartfelt. Ocean Frontiers contributes its own items:

 

  • -The original cork of the champagne bottle from Nauti-Cat’s launch from 1995
  • -Crew photos from the decades
  • -Company swag and random unusual items
  • -A message about reef stewardship and conservation
  • -A digital archive of photos, videos and voice notes sealed in
  • waterproof storage


The Sealing Ceremony


As the anniversary year draws to a close in 2026, the community will gather at the East End shop. Divers, families, longtime staff, and visitors will stand together as each tank is carefully filled, cataloged, and sealed. The tanks, polished but still proudly bearing the marks of their working lives, will be placed into a prepared vault beneath the shop grounds. Above them, a bronze plaque will be installed, engraved with words that capture Ocean Frontiers’ spirit:

    “From those who explored before us,
    to those who dive beside us today,
    to those who will discover these waters tomorrow—
    this is our story beneath the waves.”


The etched at the bottom, with these words “The Time Capsule below this plaque is to be opened in February 2056 on the 60th Anniversary of Ocean Frontiers Ltd.”

Looking Forward


We ask Ocean Frontiers’ co-founders how they hope people will feel when the capsules are opened.

“Gratitude. For the ocean, for the people, and for the chance to share both.”

And so then, the three tanks will begin their longest dive—not into the sea, but into time itself—holding stories of adventure, friendship, and a small dive shop in the Cayman Islands that grew into a home for ocean lovers from around the world.

 

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