Welcome to Jamaica! Lil' Jamaica
Just inside the DC/Maryland border lies Lil Jamaica. You can see the flag waving in the wind from down the block. Homeowner Donald G. Morgan has constructed an enormous relief map of the island of Jamaica on his front lawn.
Mr. Morgan emigrated to the US from Jamaica in 1961. After living here a while, he began to think that most Americans had a poor image of Jamaica, mainly due to the Prime Minister at the time. In 1979, when political unrest between Jamaica and the US was at an all-time high, Donald Morgan took it upon himself to show his neighbors the "real" Jamaica. It took Morgan one year to transform his property into a giant topographical lesson on Jamaica. In an 1983 interview with the Washington Post, he said "As a sociologist, I know that you get along much better with people if you know something about where they came from."
An unscientific guesstimate puts this Jamaica at about fifteen by fifty-five feet in overall size. However, nearly everything on the island exists in the replica: Montego Bay, Bull Bay, Morant Bay, cove upon cove, and even Blue Mountain. I've been told that real water fills the bays thanks to an electric pump. However I've never seen the water flowing. Likewise, I've never been around when Mr. Morgan is out with his informational pamphlets on Jamaica. Maybe you'll luck out though.
Take a close look at Lil Jamaica to get the information that you need to find the physical cache, a short walk away.
The coordinates to the physical container are: N 38 58.A9C W 77 01.6DB
A = sum of the last two digits of the year of death of the reggae king
B = last digit in the year of Sam Sharpe's rebellion for emancipation
C = number of planes in replica + number of boats in replica + number of fire trucks in replica
D = (number of lion statues in the yard + number of donkey statues in the yard) * 2
Although the cache is available 24/7, you really should visit during the day to see Jamaica in it's full glory :)