Green message:  The 60ft-long Plastiki catamaran, built from plastic bottles, under the Sydney Harbour Bridge 
 
 
 
  Excited:  Expedition leader David de Rothschild (second on left) and his crew 
 
   
A crowd of  about 100 erupted into cheers after the Plastiki finally docked. 
De Rothschild - a  descendant of the British banking family - exchanged high fives and hugs  with his crew, pumping his fists into the air in victory. 
'It has been an  extraordinary adventure,' he said. 
The 31-year-old  said the idea for the journey came to him after he read a United Nations report in  2006 which said that pollution - and particularly plastic waste - was  seriously threatening the world's oceans. 
He decided that a  good way to prove that rubbish can be effectively recycled was to use  some of it to build a boat. 
 
  Long journey:  The Plastiki completes her 8,000-nautical mile trans-Pacific voyage from  San Francisco as she approaches the Sydney Opera House 
 
 
 
  British  adventurer and environmentalist David de Rothschild sails as the  Plastiki arrives at Sydney Harbour
 
   
The Plastiki -  named after the 1947 Kon-Tiki raft sailed across the Pacific by explorer Thor Heyerdahl - is  fully recyclable and gets its power from solar panels and windmills. 
The boat is almost  entirely made up of bottles, which are held together with an organic  glue made from sugar cane and cashews, but includes other materials too.  The mast, for instance, is recycled aluminium irrigation pipe. 
'The journey of  the Plastiki is a journey from trash to triumph,' Jeffrey Bleich, the U.S.  Ambassador to Australia,  who greeted the team after they docked, said. 
During their  128-day journey, the six-member crew lived in a cabin of just 20ft (6m)  by 15ft (4.5m), took saltwater showers, and survived on a diet of  dehydrated and canned food, supplemented with the occasional vegetable  from their small on-board garden. 
 
  'Trash to  triumph': During their 128-day journey, the six-member crew lived in a  cabin of just 20ft (6m) by 15ft (4.5m)
 
 
 
  Divers next to  the keel of the boat made from 12,500 plastic bottles 
 
 
Along the way,  they fought giant ocean swells, 62-knot (70mph) winds, temperatures up  to 38c (100f) and torn sails.  
The crew briefly  stopped in Queensland state last week, after battling a fierce storm off  the Australian coast. 
  		 	   		  
 
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