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Did anyone hear me? Traditional Cache

This cache has been archived.

Doctor Teeth: Greetings.

This cache has been temporarily disabled for some time now without any action taken on your part to address the issues with the cache. The cache is being archived at this time, so please return to this location and remove what is left of your cache.

Should you resolve cache issues and wish it re-posted, contact me through my profile. Please include GC Code (GCxxxxx) and cache name in all correspondence. Please keep in mind archived caches go through the review process once more and current guidelines apply.

Sincerely,

Doctor Teeth
Geocaching.com Volunteer Reviewer

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Hidden : 2/28/2017
Difficulty:
2 out of 5
Terrain:
1.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   small (small)

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Geocache Description:

Welcome to Geochacing in Mason-Dixon Historical Park.  

To find this stash you will need to take a short 1.0 mile and easy/flat hike along the banks of the Dunkard Creek Trail.  

Keep an eye out for deer, ducks and other types of wildlife on you adventure!


Welcome to Geochacing in Mason-Dixon Historical Park.  

The publicly owned, 295-acre Original Mason-Dixon Historical Park was established in the 1970s to commemorate the great achievement of Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon, the English astronomers who surveyed the Mason and Dixon Line. Brown's Hill is a National Historic Landmark and the Mason and Dixon Line is a National Civil Engineering Landmark. This location has been so honored because it was on Brown's Hill that Mason and Dixon were obliged to end their survey, 23 miles short of their goal.

In 1763 the English astronomers Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon were hired to settle an 82-year boundary dispute between Penns and Calverts, who had received royal grants in America. They kept a daily detailed journal that was lost for a century; reprints are available at this park. They describe the process of obtaining permission from the Indians to draw the line westward, and the travails of a 4-year, 240-mile mission, cutting a 24-foot-wide swath over mountains and across rivers through the wilderness.

Although relations with the native Americans they met and worked with were friendly, there came a point, on October 9, 1767, a warpath, at which safe passage ended. They did continue a short distance, crossing Dunkard Creek three times. For 10 days they made astronomical observations and established their final survey point on top of a steep ridge. Then they returned eastward, unable to complete the last 23 miles of their survey. It was completed 14 years later by other surveyors.

To find this stash you will need to take a short 1.0 mile and easy/flat hike along the banks of the Dunkard Creek Trail.  

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

V jbaqre vs nalbar urneq zr?! <br /><br />Vs lbh unir gb gvc-gbr lbh unir tbar gbb sne.... Lbhe srrg fubhyqa'g trg jrg svaqvat guvf pnpur...<br /><br />Svaq zr!

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)