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Leap Day 2016 Event Cache

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Suikerbossies: Thanks to everyone who attended.

Suikerbossies

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Hidden : Monday, February 29, 2016
Difficulty:
1 out of 5
Terrain:
1 out of 5

Size: Size:   other (other)

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Geocache Description:

 

By way of pure dumb luck, we had managed to fill our Leap Day date matrix block back in 2012 within the first 10 caches we ever found.

With this Event, we hope to return the favour with the added bonus of a souvenir.


Location:  Lizette's (20 on 8th Street, Hermanus)
Date:  Monday, 29 February 2016
Time:  17h00 - 18h00
RSVP:  27 February and please remember to mention the number of attendees in your "Will Attend" log so that we can secure a table.

 

Now for the geeky bits...

2016 is a leap year with 366 days instead of 365. The leap year’s extra day is vital because a complete orbit around the sun takes slightly longer than 365 days – 5 hours, 48 minutes, and 46 seconds longer, to be exact.

At one time people observed a 355-day calendar with an extra 22-day month every two years. But in 45BC Julius Caesar ordered his astronomer, Sosigenes, to simplify things.

Sosigenes opted for the 365-day year with an extra day every four years to use up the extra hours. The extra day was added to February because it used to be the last month of the Roman calendar.

The system was then fine-tuned by Pope Gregory XIII.  He coined the term “leap year” and declared that a year that is divisible by 100, but not by 400, is not a leap year.  So 2000 was a leap year under the Gregorian calendar, as was 1600. But 1700, 1800 and 1900 were not.

The tradition of women proposing on leap day is thought to date back to 5th-century Ireland when St Brigid complained to St Patrick that women had to wait too long for suitors to propose.  He then gave women a single day in a leap year to pop the question – the last day of the shortest month.  Legend has it that Brigid then dropped to a knee and proposed to Patrick that instant, but he refused, kissing her on the cheek and offering a silk gown to soften the blow.

Others believe the tradition originates from Scotland when Queen Margaret, then aged just five, declared in 1288 that a woman could propose to any man she liked on February 29.  She ruled that men who refused the proposal would need to pay a penalty in the form of a kiss, a silk dress, a pair of gloves or a fine of one pound. To give suitors fair warning – and possibly a chance to escape – a woman was required to wear breeches or a scarlet petticoat on the day of the proposal.

In Denmark, a man refusing a woman’s leap day proposal must give her 12 pairs of gloves, while in Finland it’s fabric for a skirt.

People born on February 29 are called “leaplings” or “leapers”. The chance of being born on a leap day is one in 1,461.  There are five million leaplings around the world.  For centuries, astrologers believed children born on leap day have unusual talents, unique personalities and even special powers.


About the owner:

Suikerbossies are a South African geocaching team.

You can follow our adventures on our Facebook Page Suikerbossies Geocaching Adventures.


Join us 1-2 October 2016 at Cape Town 2016 (GC5YRDE), the biggest Geocaching Event the Mother City has ever seen.

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Erzrzore gb EFIC

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)