The street you'll have to go up is called Richview Road, just North of Scarlett Rd. and Eglinton Ave. West. Along the North side of the street there is a stretch of an old board fence that has a gap at one end - people walk through here a fair bit, so there's a little foot path on the other side of the fence (so no, it's isn't sketchy). Once you find and enter the gap it's just a matter of looking around! The cool thing about this cache is that it has an NFC sticker tag on the bottom of the container with a small text message on it that I wrote. If you want to read the message, or write your own message for the next geocacher to read, you can download an app onto your android device (I have the one called Tagstand Writer) or iPhone (I believe NFC Tags is an app that will read the tag, not sure if it will write). Make sure that in your phone options NFC or Near Field Communication is enabled (it should be alongside the Bluetooth and WiFi settings). If you want to read the tag, simply find the place on the container that says 'scan here for NFC' and touch it to the back of your smartphone. This might be trickier with tablets because they have their NFC antennae in different places, depending on the model. But a quick google search of the model of your tablet will tell you exactly where the antenna is - that's where you need to touch the NFC tag to read it. Also note that the messages you can leave need to be small - roughly a sentence or two. This is because the NFC tag doesn't have a lot of memory to store the message. Ahh, and one last thing. When leaving a message for another geocacher, sign it with your name/nickname and the date so that the next person to find the cache knows when the message was left!
Happy Geocaching! :)