We will be holding the annual WGA Lonely Cache Game Presentation & Awards Ceremony at Horicon Marsh Visitors Center this year. The plan is to have a pot luck so check the food schedule below.
There is no need to be a WGA member or LCG player to attend the event. This event is open to all geocachers.
Stop by to enjoy the meet and greet, grab some food, and find out what the Lonely Cache Game and Wisconsin Geocaching Association is all about.
LCG Leaderboard
What is your standing? Who's going to take the number one spot this year? It's been quite interesting the last couple of years. Can it still be anyone's game?
For anyone that has played the LCG, this is always a great way to reminisce on all the great adventures from 2019, as well as talk about strategy for 2020. If you are curious about the game, come on out and get informed! Many of Wisconsin's best caches are "Lonely"!
Join us for socializing and geo-talk about everything that makes Wisconsin geocaching special. We'll talk about Cache Rescues and the Lonely Cache Game, designed to encourage people to visit those geocaches across the state that are not often visited and to keep our caches in tip top shape for all visitors.
Schedule:
11:15-12:15pm: Socializing & Food
12:15-12:45pm: Presentation
12:45-1:15pm: Award Presentation and Q&A Session
1:15-1:30pm: Wrap Up/Socialize
ABSOLUTELY no food in the theater
Food Schedule: Use your caching name
0-9 & A-H: Finger food/appetizers
I-P: Desserts
R-Z: Salads
Plates, Silverware, Napkins, and water will be provided
A little bit about the Horicon Marsh Education and Visitor Center:
Visitors have a unique opportunity to travel through time as they explore some of the exciting new features on display at the Horicon Marsh Education and Visitor Center in Horicon, WI. Long before Horicon Marsh achieved international status as an important bird and wildlife area and a destination for outdoor recreation, glaciers carved a basin where a wetland would one day form. Today, guests of Horicon Marsh’s Explorium can get a glimpse of life at Horicon Marsh thousands of years before European settlement and witness how the current wetland came to be. The experience is narrated by a Clovis spearpoint that keeps visitors company throughout the journey as they view, listen to, touch, and even smell exhibits that document the changes to the marsh over time.Videos and interactive displays greet guests at every turn, encouraging audiences of any age to learn more about the history and ecology of Horicon Marsh. A woolly mammoth replica that children are free to touch and climb represents wildlife that roamed the land during the Ice Age and also served as an important food source for early Native Americans. Relics from the age of European settlement as well as modern hunting and trapping equipment illustrate the marsh’s popularity as a waterfowl hunting site. Games encourage visitors to learn about wildlife identification. Viewers can also gain a singularly thrilling perspective on the management and conservation activities currently occurring on the marsh before heading out to enjoy it for themselves. These exhibits are just a taste of the many educational themes in the new Explorium.
Everyone is welcome to join us for socializing.