Description
I've placed some pretty evil puzzles out there (my ying), so now I'm putting out a short series of P&Gs to produce some yang to my caching energy. It has been a very long, cold and snowy winter. Not a great winter to pick to cache through trying to get to the alluring club of "Zombie Cachers". During this time I have found a variety of styles of caches from evil to easy and even a variety of "P&Gs" that range from the very basic to the very clever. When needing a cache late at night to continue the streak, I've truly come to appreciate the value of the P&G. They're also handy for trying to break personal best for number of caches in a day. To give back and help the other cachers streaking through this miserable winter I'm putting together a mini P&G series along Ward Ave. Ward Avenue runs parallel to the South Perimeter through much of the South St. Vital area. Simple enough except... it jumps... a LOT!!
The first cache in the series takes you to Genesis, the start of the Warde. While making the P&G, you can give in to temptation and get yourself a drink and snack nearby from Tim's.
This cache was moved from a sign post between Warde lanes to this connection path for pedestrians after sign was knocked down one spring. Couldn't find the original cache then it magically reappeared. It's back to the pedestrian path cache only now to increase the safety here.
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To preserve the caching experience, please replace the hide as found. Cordinates are an average of multiple attempts and fine tuned with google maps.
What's with the bracket stuff in the title you may be wondering?
It's simply my personal identifier. The last letter (or sometimes only letter) refers to the hide itself and choices will be:
Traditional style of hide - typically the hide should be a typical container hidden in a "typical" caching way
Kid friendly hide - child reachable, findable and room for tradeables. Aimed at the little cachers.
and Evil style of hide - Something about it that makes me rub my hands together maniacally in anticipation. Perhaps more unique camo, different hiding technique, lots of options at GZ...
If there is two letters together, the first will refer to the style of cache. Puzzle, Multi, Earth, Letterbox etc.
The number after the dash simply is the number of hides in that series for me. Don't expect this number to get too big.
Congratulations to the following cachers:
FTF (met all requirements): SchmallyJB
FTS (sign the log): SchmallyJB
FTL (log electronically): SchmallyJB
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