Today marks my 18th Geo-anniversary, I found my first cache, The Lake Wheeler Cache in this park on 8/7/02, but did not create my account until the following day. That cache has since been archived, so I hid a cache nearby A Cache for Wimsey to give me an excuse to return to that park. I thought I would celebrate the occasion by hiding 8 9 new caches.
Lake Wheeler Park is closed on Mondays from October-March.
Quite a few people had found that first cache before I did, but only four are still active today and one of them, Nittany Dave is still one of my regular caching pals. I wonder what the first generation of cachers who only found a few back in those early days would think about the game we play today. It’s still finding containers hidden all over the world, but it is a different game. Back then they were all out in the woods or in parks, they all had room for swag and some of it was pretty good, and people wrote logs.
The Number 18 is an interesting one. In most countries, 18 is the age of majority (adulthood) and also the voting age. In mathematics it is considered a semiperfect number as three of its divisors (3, 6, and 9) add up to 18. It is the atomic number of argon. The Hebrew word for "life" is חי (chai), which has a numerical value of 18. Consequently, the custom has arisen in Jewish circles to give donations and monetary gifts in multiples of 18 as an expression of blessing for long life. In Chinese tradition, 18 pronounced 十八 (shí bā) and is considered a lucky number due to similarity with 實發 (shì fā) 'definitely get rich', 'to get rich for sure'. There are 18 chapters in the Bhagavad Gita, which is contained in the Mahabharata, which has 18 books. 18 is the number of wheels on the most common type of North American tractor-trailer truck, which are hence often called 18-wheelers. 18 is the number of chapters into which James Joyce's epic novel Ulysses is divided. And finally, "I'm Eighteen" was Alice Cooper's first Top Ten hit single.
Constructed in 1956 with the aid of the Army Corps of Engineers, Lake Wheeler once served as Raleigh's secondary auxiliary water supply lake.Beginning in 2010, Lake Wheeler was reinstated as a primary water supply for Raleigh and surrounding Wake County communities and feeds water to the Dempsey Benton Water Treatment Plant. Lake Wheeler Park is part of the Raleigh Municpal Parks system and is approximately 650 acres large plus 150 acres of lake and waterfront conservation buffer.
This one is near the gates which are open from 8 AM-8PM currently. There might be room to park near the cache but it would be best to park a few hundred feet away at the Simpkins Pond lot, or even further at the main park lot and stretch your legs, That's the whole point of these caches. You are looking for a 3" camo taped tube.