To find the cache, you need to visit all the co-ordinates listed and find the clues to complete the co-ordinates of the final cache. You can visit the clues in any order, however it makes a nice circular walk of a couple of miles if you do them in the order suggested. If you don’t want to walk that far, clues 1 and 2 can be reached by car, but you will still need to walk to find the others take care on the road. (please note that the clues and the final location were revised on 21-May-23)
N = BD (C+D)C.F(G-F)H W = EKD J(B-J).DK(A+G)
As the route follows the edge of a lake and a canal, and also along a quiet country road, please be very careful with geokids. Footpaths round the lake are conpacted and easy to navigate with a buggy, but smaller strollers may struggle with long grass along the canalside.
The History of Guiding In the early years of the 20th century, Robert Baden-Powell, a famous army general, developed a scheme for training boys. He tried out his ideas at a camp on Brownsea Island in 1907 and the following year published them in a book, Scouting for Boys. The book was an instant success and boys throughout the UK enthusiastically took up Scouting. As a result, Baden-Powell soon found himself organising the Boy Scout Movement. At the Scouts' first rally, at the Crystal Palace in 1909, a small group of girls turned up. They represented hundreds of other girls and insisted that they wanted to be Scouts too – they wanted ‘something for the girls’. In an age when skirts were ankle length and young ladies never ran, the idea of girls being involved in camping, hiking and similar activities received a mixed response. Angry critics denounced 'girl scouting' as a 'mischievous new development', a 'foolish and pernicious movement' and an 'idiotic sport'. However, Baden-Powell's letters from this time show that he had a scheme for girls in mind. In 1910 he formed the Girl Guides, asking his sister Agnes to look after the new organisation. A few years later his wife Olave became involved and, in 1918, was appointed Chief Guide. Such was the enthusiasm for guiding that it soon spread worldwide and since those early days countless millions have made the Guide Promise. Today there are ten million girls and women involved in guiding worldwide, and over half a million in the UK alone.