You can't judge a book by its cover and you can't judge a person by their visible traits. Age, race, gender, language... that's just the tip of the iceberg! To really know a person you have to dive below the surface. Religion, education, values, personality... these are what really determine your worth in society but all too often the visible 20% guides our fates. The same is true of geocachers. I've cached with toddlers and nonagenarians. The unemployed and doctors. Soldiers and hippies. Immigrants and Native Americans. Most of the time it was only in retrospection that I even noticed those aspects. Geocaching levels the playing field. In any other situation when you first meet a person you might ask what they do for a living or if they have kids but watch Geocachers meet for the first time and there is none of that. Orientation? Education? Religion? Irrelevant. But if they solved that special puzzle or can lend you a kayak... now THAT's what is really important! Geocachers have their own Iceberg. Unlike the Diversity Iceberg we're in control of what is visible. With only your find count, hides and logs to tell your tale will you be prejudged a Puzzle Snob? A Numbers Runner? A FTF Hound? A Lot Lizard? Will you take the easy route or will you dare to challenge yourself and others? It takes all kinds of Geocachers to make up the population of this silly game we all love. I generally hate caching in parking lots. However, if you love taking it easy and grabbing parking lot caches... I figured it was time I hid one for you. But I have to be myself because that is the visible aspect I choose to display. This cache is meant to get a chuckle if not many finds. It should generate some interesting logs which is what the game is all about for me. Enjoy!
The cache is in plain sight. You are looking for a small magnetic key-holder. It is NOT under the lamp skirt. It is on the lamp pole. It is NOT on the fast food sign or the stop sign. It is, really truly, on the lamp pole. I put it there by hand and had a blast doing so. My daughter loved it as well and I hope you do to!