This is a quick stop along Barre rd for a park and grab. There is parking near gz, but it may be an issue with heavy snow. You are looking for a nano so be sure and have a pen with you. The true purpose of this cache is to divert you along Upper Church St for a short ways. If you take the time and drive up the road you'll immediately see great examples of field stone stone walls bordering the road and field perimeters. Some of these walls have been repaired while others are in original state. The nearby farm on Barre Rd. owns and uses this land for equestrian purposes. Olympic equestrian qualifiers and National riding events were held here in the early 2000's. If you pay attention you'll see some areas in the walls which are topped by earth creating jumping obstacles. Further down the road are the remains of an earthen ramp used to enter a long gone barn. You can see the age of some of the walls and guess at a fields use by the width and structure of the wall bordering it. A farmer wouldn't waste their time removing stone annually for cattle and other livestock other than to pen them in, but if they were harvesting the land, every year a new crop of stone would be tilled in the Spring. Thereby adding to a walls thickness regularly. These walls are laid dry, without mortar, allowing them to rock and roll with the freeze and thaw cycle which along with their immense size has allowed for their survival. Farmers weren't masons, they were simply trying to remove and utilize something in their way. It was somehow determined that more stone was laid in the walls of New England than in all the Cathedrals in Europe. Which if you think about all the walls you've seen while caching isn't that hard to believe.
So stop by and get a park and grab, but if you have the time turn onto Upper Church St for a nice view and quick diversion.