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Rock Wren - BAD Legacy Trail Traditional Cache

Hidden : 6/29/2011
Difficulty:
1.5 out of 5
Terrain:
1.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   small (small)

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Geocache Description:

You are looking for a small lock n lock.

Please use caution when driving the Legacy Trail. Be aware of back roads intersecting with highways and wet gravel roads (especially fair weather roads).


Rock Wren

Birds of the Canadian Badlands


Click to go to the Canadian Badlands Geocaching Association web site

The Rock Wren is our most common wren in the Canadian Badlands. The diet is insects, and this wren has an easy time. The male arriving earlier than the female, constructs a number of nests in cavities, thickets, or nesting boxes, with small sticks. The female selects a preferred site and lines the nest with finer material including bark, grass, feathers and hair. This prolific songster, a favourite backyard bird.

This cache is part of the Legacy Trail produced by the Canadian Badlands Geocaching Association for the Best of the Bad Mega Event.

The Legacy Trail

The Legacy Trail is a collection of geocaches that circles its way over 100 miles on country roads traversing some of the most scenic and spectacular landscape in this part of the Canadian Badlands. A large number of caches in a variety of types, sizes and difficulty are placed on the Trail. Every town, village and hamlet in the Canadian Badlands has its own cache. Some caches were named after local historic events and people, as well as celebrities who grew up in this area. Some caches were sponsored by geocachers who attended the Best of the Bad Mega Event. The Legacy Trail was produced by the Canadian Badlands Geocaching Association for the Best of the Bad Mega Event.

The Canadian Badlands

The Canadian Badlands in Alberta are like no other place on earth, home to the world's most extensive dinosaur bonebeds, badlands and hoodoos, and a world-class museum that shelters a 75 million-year-old legacy. The region is rich in culturally and historically significant sites that tell the story of the First Nations people and early settlers, and of a complex and diverse modern society that is still deeply rooted in the spirit of the frontier.

Click to go to the Canadian Badlands Geocaching Association web site

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