This is a mystery cache, not a puzzle.
To find this cache, you will need to listen to an audio file
either on your computer or on a portable mp3 player or similar
device.
Ideally, you will listen to this podcache as you make the
journey, but you can also listen to the podcache at your computer
and take notes before heading out. Most browsers will play the file
when you click the link, or you can right click the link and save
it to your computer. Good luck!
If you don't want to use the mp3 file, you can use this
transcript of the audio to find the cache:
Hello fellow cachers, this is Ichabod, welcome to
10 and 13: a podcache adventure. To find this cache, you need to
listen to this recording and follow the clues that I provide. The
intent is that you listen to this recording as you search for the
cache with a portable mp3 player, or similar device, or you could
listen to the recording on your computer before you head out and
take notes while you listen. If you don't have an mp3 player, or
don't want to play the file provided, you can use the transcript of
the recording on the cache page.
This cache is dedicated to my grandparents. It is
set-up similar to two of my multi-caches in the Silverton area in
honor of my parents, 30 and 31. It should be fairly straight
forward, but since final coordinates are not provided, it is a
mystery ... but not a puzzle.
Before we get to how to find the cache, just one
word of warning about the hike to the final location, it can get
rather muddy at times and the path to the final is not very well
traveled, so it could be quite over-grown, particularly in the
summer, so please come prepared.
Alright, enough of that ... let's get on with the
cache ...
To start, go to the posted coordinates at
Willamette National Cemetery. The cemetery is open from 7am to 5pm
daily. At the given coordinates you will find a headstone for my
grandmother and grandfather who's birth years are 1910 and 1913,
respectively, so you are looking for a man, listed first on the
headstone, born in 1913 and his wife born in 1910. Go ahead and
look around until you find them, I'll wait.
Once you've found the headstone, you will need to
extract some information for the next set of coordinates, so grab a
notepad or your pda. You will be gathering ten numbers from the
information found on the headstone. I will label these numbers with
the letters A through J.
Let's start with my grandfather.
Look at his birth date and specifically at the
day he was born. Our first letter, letter A equals the first digit
of the day he was born. So if he was born on the fifteenth, A would
equal one.
Now take a look at his middle name. Count the
total number of letters in his middle name. This equals
B.
Now that you've got that. Look at the third line
of his inscription. There are a total of four lines for his
inscription. His name is on the first line, followed by his rank,
etc. You will find a number on the third line of the inscription,
this equals C.
My grandfather served in the Army for more than
twenty one years and another nine years in the reserves. During his
career he served in two different wars. Count the letters in the
second war, shown on the marker, take that number and add two to
it. This equals D.
Now look at his rank. Count the total number of
letters on that whole line and subtract one from the total. This
equals E.
You should have five numbers now, A, B, C, D and
E.
Let's move on to my grandmother. She was born in
1910 in Arkansas. She did a great many things during her long life,
including teaching school during the depression and building
airplanes during World War II. After WWII she continued building
aircraft for a company in San Diego.
Take a look at the date of her death. Add one to
the month of her death. This will equal F.
My grandmother had a rather unusual first name.
Count the letters in her first name and then subtract five from
that total, this will equal G.
Now take a look at her day of birth, which just
happens to be the same as her day of death. Take the two digits of
the day she was born and add them together. This equals
H.
Sticking with her birth date. Take the month she
was born and subtract seven from it. This equals I.
We are almost done. Now, for the letter J, look
at the marker number in the upper right hand corner of the
headstone. It is a letter followed by a three digit number. J
equals the last digit of that number.
Okay, so now you have your ten numbers, A through
J. The checksum for all of the numbers you've just gathered is
forty-three. Punch those into your GPS as North 45 AB.CDE and West
122 FG.HIJ.
These coordinates are for where you will park to
continue your journey. These parking coordinates are less than two
miles from your current location. The best way to get there is to
head North when leaving the cemetery to Foster Rd. and then
continue on from there. Go ahead and pause the recording now and
turn it back on once you've reached the parking
coordinates.
Okay, you've reached the parking coordinates.
You'll know you are in the right spot if you see a post here with a
four digit number. The first and last numbers are the same and the
middle two numbers are the same. Go past the barriers and head up
the hill. When you reach the top, you will be on a plateau with
some young trees on it. This area is owned by the Portland Metro
Parks System.
From this spot, turn North and head across the
plateau. Once you reach the North side of the plateau, you'll see a
road heading down the hill to the North. Turn West. You can just
make out a faint road bed heading off to the west. Go that way,
past the pile of fire wood and on up the hill. The path is rather
over-grown here. Head up the hill and after about 60 meters you
will come to a Tee in the road.
The road goes down the hill to the north and up
the hill to the south. Turn South and head up the hill. This
section can be pretty muddy. Continue on up the hill about 100
meters until you come to a spot that is very wet and the trail
turns to the East and continues uphill.
Follow the path to the East and up the hill.
There are blue flags on both sides of the road. There is a blue
flag on a fir tree on the right side of the road as you start up
the hill. A little bit wet through here. As you come up the hill,
the road turns slightly to the south. There are a bunch of downed
limbs and logs that you have to step over. Once you get across
those logs, you come to the next Y in the road.
A branch of the road goes down the hill and off
to the East. That goes on for about a ¼ of a mile and then vanishes
off into the Forest. We're going to continue on up the hill to the
South.
There is a moss covered tree down across the road
here that has been cut away just after you pass under a large
widow-maker. The road branches off here. A branch of the road heads
off to the West on slightly level ground. You could follow that
road to another branch that turns up hill to the South, but we are
going to continue straight up the hill to the South
here.
There are quite a few small logs and branches
across this part of the road, and I've noticed a lot of young
nettles in the middle of the roadway that will be quite nasty in
summer. More small logs in the road way. A lot of moss on the
ground here and a bit drier.
After about 100 meters from the last junction,
you will reach the next Y that turns back to the Northwest. There
are a bunch of branches across the road heading back to the
Northwest and a tall cedar tree on the Southwest corner of the
junction.
Continue up the hill to the South for about 15
meters until you see a game trail crossing the trail, running from
Southeast to Northwest. You can follow the game trail to the East
almost directly to the cache, but if it is over-grown, it will
likely be easier to continue up the trail for another 10 meters or
so and find a more manageable path into a group of cedar and fir
trees. There is a rusty 5 gallon bucket near this stand. Walk
through the clearing underneath and down and around these
trees.
There is a small stream bed running down the hill
to the North about 15 feet East. Once around the trees, turn North.
Directly ahead is a stump about 10 feet away and another stump
another 10 feet beyond that. The game trail mentioned earlier comes
in between these two stumps. The second stump has a large piece of
sheet metal bent around it. Go around to the North side of the
stump. There is a hole between the stump and the sheet metal. Reach
in and pull out the cache.
Congratulations.