Tasmania: The Apple Isle
TTAI – Tasmania: The Apple Isle is a series of puzzle caches situated east of the historic township of Oatlands. There are 60 puzzle caches in total involved in making a shape of an apple. The puzzles are fairly easy, and the containers are a collection of mainly eclipse tins and bison tubes, although a number of other hides exist as well.
Tasmania was known as the apple isle. There were two schools of thought regarding the reason. The first is that Tasmania is basically shaped as an apple. The second is Tasmania was one of world’s largest apple producers. Apple’s are still grown in large numbers, but agriculture has diversified over the past 20 years (http://tourtasmania.com/tasfaq/economy/apple.html)
Tasmania’s apple industry has been reduced to 50 – 60 apple growing families, with the industry worth $40-$50 million dollars per annum. Tasmania still produces over 55,000 Tonnes of apples each year. Further information can be found at http://www.aussieapples.com.au/growing-regions/tasmania.aspx
The pattern of the TTAI puzzles is simple. Refer to the Cache Map that is attached to cache 60 for the sequence for solving caches and how to find the coordinates for the final cache TTAI 60. This cache is the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.
Puzzle : A is for Apple
Have a look at the text from the Geocaching web site below
We like to keep things fun for everyone, so we have a few rules we encourage everyone to follow:
1. If you take a trinket from the geocache, leave something of equal or greater value and family-friendly.
2. Be mindful of non-geocaching onlookers. Curious people have been known to take or damage geocaches.
3. Make sure you don't accidentally venture on to someone's private property. Geocaches won't require you to trespass.
4. Leave the geocache area better than how you found it. Try not to disrupt local wildlife and pack out any trash you see.
The Cache can be found at
South 42 19. VZX
East 147 28. QWB
You can check your answers for this puzzle on GeoChecker.com.