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Hail to the Chief formerly Long Island Dinosaur Traditional Cache

This cache is temporarily unavailable.

Sapience Trek: Hello JP -

The cache appears that it may need owner intervention. You likely have received a notification indicating that the health score has fallen below the threshold. A low health score doesn't always mean the cache is missing or has other issues, but that together with a manual inspection of logs shows that this cache would benefit from a visit by the cache owner.

For more information on the geocache health score, please see this help article:
https://www.geocaching.com/help/index.php?pg=kb.chapter&id=38&pgid=713

I'm temporarily disabling it, to give you an opportunity to check on the cache.

If you have checked on it and it's ready to be found again, please post a note of type "enable listing" so it starts to appear again for other cachers to find.

If you are unable to check on this in a timely manner, please post a note on the cache page indicating your plans for this cache. If it will take longer than 1 month, please continue to post updates approximately once a month.

In either situation, do so in a timely manner (within 30 days) to prevent the cache from being archived for non-responsiveness.

Please do NOT email as this will not make your intentions known to all reviewers.

Thanks!
Sapience Trek

More
Hidden : 2/26/2001
Difficulty:
2 out of 5
Terrain:
1 out of 5

Size: Size:   regular (regular)

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Geocache Description:


Please leave the toy dinosaur with the cache. Tread lightly and leave no trace. HISTORY of the Area: Tackapousha was the leader of the Matinecock indians and related Algonquian bands along the North Shore. In the mid-1650s, Tackapousha feared his people would be crushed by Dutch settlers on western Long Island. So he formed an alliance with sachems from other Indian bands of the region to represent the Algonquians at negotiations with the Dutch. This action by Tackapousha helped make him one of the two most powerful Algonquian leaders on Long Island, the other being Wyandanch. Tackapousha died around 1694, more than 30 years after Wyandanch's death. Like Wyandanch, Tackapousha's exact burial place is not known. Nassau County operates the Tackapausha Preserve (spelled differently), in Seaford. December 13,1643 - Sachem Tackapousha, chief of the Indians occupying the "Rockaways" and south shore of Long Island, and six other chiefs signed a deed granting Englishmen a large tract of land encompassing all the southern half of what is now Nassau County. Twelve years later, fearing that the Indians felt inadequately compensated. Governor Nichols of New York wrote the magistrates of the newly established Town of Hempstead to "pay Tackapousha further gratuities for payment of lands which he said were bought too cheap . . . and prevent trouble and settle it one and for all." In 1657 they did just that and added to the original payment "some great cattle, and some small cattle, and some wampum, and some hatchets, some knives, some trading cloth, and . . . some powder and lead, and they went away for anything I know very well satisfied." as recorded by one of the negotiators.

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Uvqqra va n angheny bowrpg ba gur tebhaq whfg fbhgu bs gur sbhe ynetr cvar gerrf gung ner fcnprq jvqryl ncneg. Uvqqra jryy bss gur cngu va gur bire-tebjgu. Gur UBYR vf Gnpxncbhfun'f oevny fvgr ohg ur cersref gb jnaqre uvf angvir ynaq fb ur pyvzorq bhg lrnef ntb.

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)