The Abraham Crijnssen in all its jungle finery. Wikimedia Commons Sometimes in life, the guy with the drunken, so-crazy-it-just-might-work ideas hits one out of the park and saves the day.

This seems to be what happened in 1942 aboard the HNLMS Abraham Crijnssen, the last Dutch warship standing after the Battle of the Java Sea.

Originally planning to escape to Australia with three other warships, the then-stranded minesweeper had to make the voyage alone and unprotected.

The slow-moving vessel could get up to only about 15 knots and had very few guns, boasting only a single 3-inch gun and two Oerlikon 20mm cannons — making it a sitting duck for the Japanese bombers that circled above.

Knowing their only chance of survival was to make it to Australia, the Crijnssen's 45 crew members frantically brainstormed ways to make the retreat undetected. The winning idea? Turn the ship into an island.

You can almost hear crazy-idea guy anticipating his shipmates' reluctance: "Now guys, just hear me out …" But lucky for him, the Abraham Crijnessen was strapped for time, resources, and alternative means of escape, automatically making the island idea the best idea.

Now it was time to put the plan into action.

The crew members went ashore to nearby islands and cut down as many trees as they could lug back onto the deck. Then the timber was arranged to look like a jungle canopy, covering as much square footage as possible.

Any leftover parts of the ship were painted to look like rocks and cliff faces — these guys weren't messing around.

Check out that ship-shaped island. Oh, wait ... Wikimedia Commons Now, a camouflaged ship in deep trouble is better than a completely exposed ship. But there was still the problem of the Japanese noticing a mysterious moving island and wondering what would happen if they shot at it.

Because of this, the crew figured the best means of convincing the Axis powers that they were an island was to truly be an island: by not moving at all during daylight hours.

While the sun was up they would anchor the ship near other islands, then cover as much ocean as they could once night fell — praying the Japanese wouldn't notice a disappearing and reappearing island among the nearly 18,000 existing islands in Indonesia. And, as luck would have it, they didn't.