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TTMT 023 Aye-aye Traditional Cache

Hidden : 6/17/2012
Difficulty:
1 out of 5
Terrain:
1.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   micro (micro)

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Geocache Description:

CONTAINER TYPE: Matchstick Holder

Welcome to the Team Trunk Monkey Turnpike - "TTMT"
This series of caches runs along this stretch of 4-lane road, which features a wide paved shoulder along it's entire course. These caches will all be on the South / East side of the road. There will be caches of several different sizes and types, and the hiding spots will vary in difficulty and terrain, as the locations allow. As such, several of these caches will have you walking through tall grass & looking through vegetation. During the "tick season" it is highly recommended to use a quality insect repellent, and as always if it is sunny out, use a good sunblock too.

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Aye-aye

Distribution: NW Madagascar (discontinuous)
Status: Near Threatened - IUCN Red List

Order: Primates;
Suborder: Prosimii

Family: Daubentoniidae;
Genus: Daubentonia

Species: madagascariensis
Related Species

The aye-aye is the only living member of the family Daubentoniidae, and is considered to be the most unusual of all primates.
Key Facts

Adult Size : 5.5 – 6.2 pounds

Social life : Solitary, nocturnal forager

Habitat : Moist forest – rainforest, occasionally found in dry forest

Diet : insect larvae, interior of the ramy nut, nectar and fungi

Lifespan : 26 years in captivity, unknown in the wild

Sexual maturity : 2 years, in captivity

Mating : No restricted season, births may occur at any time of year

Gestation : 160 days

Number of young : One offspring every 2 – 3 years

DLC Naming theme :   creepy character names (Nosferatu, Endora, Merlin, etc.)

Malagasy names : Hay-Hay, Ahay, Aiay
Interesting Facts

    Aye-ayes are the largest nocturnal primates.
    Aye-ayes are one of the few solitary primates.
    Aye-ayes have a unique method of foraging: A large percentage of their diet consists of insect larvae that live inside dead wood. They find the larvae by tapping on branches and listening to the reverberations. When it finds a cavity in the wood (which may contain insect larvae), an aye-aye will bite through the outer layers of bark with his beaver-like teeth and reach a long, slender finger inside the hole to pull out the prey.
    Aye-ayes are killed in some parts of Madagascar because they are believed to be harbingers of death or misfortune or because they are agricultural pests. In other parts of the island, however, they are revered.

#006

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Svergehpx

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)