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St. George West Black Ridge (N. of Devil's Saddle) Traditional Cache

This cache has been archived.

BlueRajah: I am archiving this cache to keep it from continually showing up in search lists, and to prevent it from blocking other cache placements. Please notice that I asked you some time ago to check this cache, and no action was taken. I had hoped that the cache may be replaced, or a note placed that you were going to go check on this cache in the near future.

If you wish to repair/replace the cache sometime in the next three months please contact me, and assuming it meets the guidelines, I will be happy to unarchive it.
Thank you,
BlueRajah
Volunteer Geocache Reviewer - Utah

Geocaching Guidelines: http://www.geocaching.com/about/guidelines.aspx

bluerajah@geocachingadmin.com

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Difficulty:
3 out of 5
Terrain:
3 out of 5

Size: Size:   regular (regular)

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Geocache Description:

This cache is hidden beneath a large boulder on the eastern side of St. George's West Black Ridge, north of Devil's Saddle. While the hike is short (less than a quarter of a mile), it gets steep in spots (we climbed 250 feet from where we were parked), where we had to scramble over large basalt boulders.

If you are familiar with St. George, then you know that the West Black Ridge is one of the most well-known geographic features. It's the hill with the St. George Municipal Airport atop the southern, lower section, the hill sporting the big, white "D" on the eastern face, overlooking St. George's central valley. From below, if you follow the hilltop with your eye from south to north, you will notice that near the northern end, the hill dips down like a saddle, then climbs back up again, almost like a saddle horn. This saddle is known as Devil's Saddle. This cache is on that northernmost peak, north of Devil's Saddle. (Can a hill have a peak, or is that reserved solely for mountains?).

What's nice about this cache is that it doesn't require any 4-wheel drive or high clearance vehicle to reach. Nearly anyone in St. George can drive to within a quarter of a mile or less of the cache site to make the short but steep hike to the top. From where we (AlAndaluz and I) parked and hiked, we climbed 250 feet over the course of our quarter-mile hike, scrambling over the black basalt boulders that pepper the hillside.

The top of this saddle-horn peak is relatively flat. The cache was originally hidden on the northwestern edge, but was later discovered and vandalized. On Friday, 22 March 2003, the cache was replaced, this time just off the summit on the eastern edge. Hopefully the new cache site will go undiscovered by the many hikers, kids, and other curious visitors who aren't specifically looking for the cache. It's well concealed in a fissure within a very large black boulder.

The best way to extract the small cache container (smaller than the original ammo box, now a wide mouthed half-gallon plastic container) is from underneath. On the lowest side of the boulder, one can reach beneath the cracked boulder(s), removing the rocks stacked there to conceal the cache from casual hikers and curious kids as necessary to reach the container. I don't recommend trying to extract it from above, removing the rocks wedged in the crack above it.

We took several separate G.P.S. coordinate readings of the cache site and averaged them together, so I hope that the provided coordinates should take you to within 10-30 feet of the cache. I have uploaded several "cheat" photos showing the rocks in which the cache is hidden.

Since there are so many fissures, nooks, crannies, and other hiding spots where a cache should reside, I've rated this cache a "3" on the overall difficulty scale. Additionally, the cache container has been well concealed from sight to avoid rediscovery. Please hide it carefully when you are finished, so that this cache isn't vandalized again. Because of the steep climb (short though it may be), it warrants a "3" on the terrain difficulty scale.

Like so very many of the caches in this area, this site affords a stunning view of the central St. George valley to the east, the red cliffs of St. George's Red Hill, as well as an excellent view of Green Valley to the west, Ivins Red Mountain, and even the white sandstone north and east of Snow Canyon.

The cache container was originally a large green ammo box. We replaced it with a much smaller (and more easily concealed) clear plastic half-gallon container with a white lid. So bring something that will fit through the wide-mouthed container opening, and that won't take up too much of the limited space inside. Don't expect to catch sight of the container without searching for it, perhaps even having to remove some small rocks concealing it before catching a glimpse of the container.

Please, when you do find it, make sure it is at least equally well hidden. So many kids play on this hill, exploring the nooks and crannies that hiding it well is absolutely essential. And please don't leave any obvious signs that something is hidden if possible. Likewise, please don't give the cache site away with hints or markers.

I hope you enjoy the find!

-Astounding (with AlAndaluz originally, and with Percible when hiding it anew in 2003) St. George, Utah

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Vs lbh jnag gb purng, ybbx ng gur "purng" cvpgherf V'ir hcybnqrq.

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)