• A few days after
Baychimo disappeared, the ship was found south of where she was lost, but was again ice-packed. • After several months, she was spotted again about to the east. • In January of the following year, she was seen floating peacefully near the shore by Leslie Melvin, a man traveling to
Nome with his dog sled team. • A few months after that, she was seen by a company of
prospectors. • In March 1933, she was found by a group of
Iñupiat who boarded her and were trapped aboard for 10 days by a freak storm. • On 11 August 1933, she was sighted 12 miles off the settlement of
Wainwright, Alaska. She was boarded by local inhabitants, as well as by the crew of the
M.S. Trader and their passenger, the author and botanist
Isobel Wylie Hutchison. A whale-boat, some furniture, and several other items were salvaged. • In August 1933, the Hudson's Bay Company heard she was still afloat but too far asea to salvage. • In July 1934, she was boarded by a group of explorers on a
schooner. • In September 1935, she was spotted off the Alaskan coast. • In November 1939, she was boarded by Captain Hugh Polson in an attempt to salvage her, but the creeping ice floes intervened and Polson was forced to abandon her. • She was spotted numerous times over the following years, but always eluded capture. • In March 1962, she was seen drifting along the
Beaufort Sea coast by a group of Inuit. • She was found frozen in an ice pack in 1969, 38 years after she was abandoned. This is the last recorded sighting of
Baychimo. • In 2006, the Alaskan government began work on a project to solve the mystery of "the Ghost Ship of the Arctic" and locate
Baychimo, whether still afloat or on the ocean floor. She has not yet been found. ==In education==