IOM
Phoneboxes: Greeba

The red
phonebox is a British landmark pre-dating WW2, found abundantly in
both urban and rural areas, and for several decades was the most
effective means of communication between the people of Great
Britain, alongside that of the Royal Mail Postage Service, which
also used to be operated by the General Post Office; encompassing
both postal and telephone communication. They have survived through
some harsh decades' worth of poor British weather, facing storm,
snow and torrential rain, accompanied by blistering heat (though
not as much heat as the other weather variations!). The phonebox
has been with us almost as long as living human memory; however its
downfall is soon to come. They are too costly, too infrequently
used, too much a bother to the organizations which service them, to
be of much profitable value. Some have already been uprooted, taken
away and left for scrap, merely because of the small cost of
electricity required to power them, and with the era of the mobile
phone completely upon us, their demise can only be
hastened.
However, it is because of their
cultural, sentimental and heartening value that I have decided to
create a series of caches which will (hopefully) eventually include
every phonebox left standing on the Isle of Man. I would also like
to dedicate this series to my loving uncle, a part-time historian,
who has documented the progression of human communication
including, with great reference, the British phonebox in one of his
books, and has also expertly taken the pictures to accompany each
one, throughout all seasons of the year.

The cache is
a magnetic key-lock box (with pencil), exceedingly close to
something big and red...
Please watch
the magnet on the back of the case - it tends to stay with whatever
metal thing it's attached to!