• More Stories
Buffalo Man Marinated Cat in Peppers, Chili, Planned to Eat
Man Marinated Cat in Peppers, Chili

A Buffalo man allegedly marinated his live cat in a mixture of …

'Botox Bandit' Nabbed For Not Paying For Beauty Treatments
'Botox Bandit' Nabbed For Bounced…

In the case of a Miami-area woman, beauty really does come at a…

Mc-Freakout at drive-thru window caught on video
Mc-Freakout at drive-thru window

VIDEO - OHIO - Police say back in January, 25-year-old Melodi …

Steve Slater considered a 'hero' after JetBlue incident
Steve Slater is a working-class hero

The Facebook fan page created for Slater less than 24 hours ago…

Jetblue Flight Attendant Steven Slater Gains Thousands of Facebook Fans
Steven Slater Gains Facebook Fans

A Facebook fan page for Steven Slater, the JetBlue flight …

Pea of Life Grows In NY Man's Lung
Pea of Life Grows In NY Man's Lung

Months of coughing had Ron Sveden worried that something was …

Twitter Has a Plan For When You Die
Twitter Has a Plan For When You Die

Twitter has established a policy for the accounts of people who…

JetBlue flight attendant flips out, grabs beer, quits job & gets arrested
Flight attendant quits, bolts from jet

A JetBlue flight attendant from New York is under arrest after…

Man ties $9,000 ring to sand dollar, bride-to-be drops it in the ocean
Bride-to-be drops $9,000 ring into…

CAPE COD - A local couple's engagement went awry after the …

Man ties $9,000 ring to sand dollar, bride-to-be drops it in the ocean

Updated: Thursday, 12 Aug 2010, 9:30 AM EDT
Published : Tuesday, 10 Aug 2010, 10:31 PM EDT

CAPE COD (FOX 25 / MyFoxBoston.com) - Thousands of dollars washed away slipping into the sea as a newly engaged couple learned a tough lesson.

That lesson? Tying a diamond engagement ring to a sand dollar and leaving it above the ocean is not a very good idea.

Matt Cawley had planned to propose to his girlfriend Stacey Scanlon on the jetty of Bass River Beach on Cape Cod. The Dedham, Mass. native tied the $9,000 engagement ring to a large sand dollar and left it on the jetty, hoping to lead Scanlon there shortly after.

When he pointed out the sand dollar, Scanlon picked it up and to their dismay, the knot got untied sending the ring into the ocean.

The couple, along with 10 lifeguards and some good samaritans searched for the ring for more than four hours. At one point, they even moved parts of the jetty which was built of rocks weighing about 250 lbs.

No one could find the ring, but Cawley's mother had the ring insured without his knowledge one day before the ring took the plunge.

Some would call it a rough start to a marriage, but that is not how this couple is looking at it.

“We’ve come to our senses and we can laugh about it now” said the bride-to-be.

Word is definitely out that this ring is still missing because there has been an army of people with metal detectors on the beach looking for it.

Story originally posted on myfoxboston.com

  • Marketplace Ads

  • Most Popular

  • Share this Story

  • Marketplace Ads