FFV - Mohyla Institute Traditional Cache
TheVogonPoet: Hi,
This cache has been in need of maintenance for an extended period of time. Due to the lack of response toward the needed maintenance since my last contact, I am archiving the cache.
Caches archived by a reviewer are not eligible to be unarchived.
Thanks!
TheVogonPoet
Volunteer Reviewer
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The year 2014 marks the debut of Fudgy Fest Five! Fudgy Fest celebrates my favourite cacher: el_fudgeeo!
El_fudgeeo started this as a way to give back to the caching community for all the caches that have been hidden in and around Saskatoon. So thanks - even for the ones I can't find. These caches get published on one special day of the year - can you guess what makes it special?
This year there are 52 caches hidden for Fudgy Fest. Each one is assigned a card from a standard Bridge deck of playing cards. Your challenge is to get the best poker hand you can. However, only I know which card is assigned to which cache. So the first 5 FFV (Fudgy Fest V) caches that you log on the geocaching.com website become your hand.
So find some caches and log them. You have until September 5 2014 to log your finds and then the winners will be revealed. Remember that valuable prizes are up for grabs, as well as Fame, Glory and the undying admiration of your fellow geocachers.
Started in 1916, Ukrainian-Canadians decided to establish a Ukrainian based institution in Saskatoon. They set up a fundraising campaign and put out a call for students. The institute would offer Ukrainian language, history and literature classes. An underlying principle of the institution was 'To be a good Canadian citizen, it was desirable to maintain one's origin and national culture'. Later that year the institute was opened and named in honour of Petro Mohyla, an outstanding educationalist and dignitary of the Orthodox Church in Kyiv.
The Institute was originally located on Lansdowne Avenue where it remained until 1965 when it moved to its current location on Temperance Street. On September 24, 2011, the St. Petro Mohyla Institut was recognized by the Historic Sites & Monuments Board of Canada as a National site, and there is now a bronze plaque in front of the Institute.
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