Trevorsilk Wanderer 5 Traditional Cache
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Difficulty:
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Terrain:
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Size:
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All the caches are accessible to persons with mobility problems although persons in wheelchairs may need assistance retrieving the actual cache. Most caches contain only nano logs so please remember to bring something to remove the log and a pencil with you
Whilst the log is conatined in a small bison tube the article to which it is attached is noticeably larger but will not accept TB's etc
A wander around Arnold
This series of caches can either be done as a 3 ½ mile circular walk or drive around Arnold, in one circuit or ticked off on different visits to the area. There is no gathering of clues to find a bonus cache, it is simply intended to allow you the opportunity to explore an area of Greater Nottingham we have called home for the past 25 years.
We have tried to vary the caches and no two are the same and some will need your geo-senses working to identify them.
If you wish to park up and walk the circuit there are numerous car parks in the area but please be mindful that the town centre car parks are Pay and Display and charge after an initial two hours free parking. Even if you intend to be less than two hours you need to obtain and display a free ticket
Arnold's beginnings link as many other small towns have been lost in ages past, however Arnold's first scratching in the files of history was first known as Ernehale, which means Valley of the Eagles although the topography of the area is totally wrong to allow eagles to soar. The other train of thought is that it was first called 'Heron-hald', meaning the corner of the forest where Herons (large birds) live which becomes over the centuries by 'lazy' pronunciation, Eron-ald, thence Ern-old and Arn-old. Needless to say the ‘Eagle’ as opposed to the heron version is promoted around the town.
Arnold appears in the Doomsday Book (1086) as Ernehale although there is indication of a village in the year 500 AD but no supportive documents and in 1086 there appeared to be a population of 150
Arnold was a centre of the framework knitting industry in the 19th century. It was the site of the first frame breaking incidents of the Luddite riots, in March 1811, when 63 frames were smashed. The Luddite riots were a workers' response to decreasing pay, standard of living and conditions of employment in the industry as a result of changing fashions decreasing demand for their style of hosiery.
Trevorsilk Wanderer 5
Arnot Hill Park dates back to 1792 where it originated as a villa landscape to compliment the house built by John Hawksley, a Nottingham manufacturer and mill owner. Many changes have taken place since that time to both the house and the grounds.
In its time, the park has had a colourful range of uses and activities dating back to 1919 following the end of the First World War, when it was formally opened to the public as an open space for the people of Arnold. Arnot Hill Park boasts its own duck pond and aviaries and is now the home to the Gedling Borough Council offices
This cache is located at the roadside so stealth will be required as well as keeping kids and dogs under control
Additional Hints
(Decrypt)
eblny erserfuzrag
Treasures
You'll collect a digital Treasure from one of these collections when you find and log this geocache:

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