(This Cache forms Part of the PEG 2020 game (Port Elizabeth Game 2020). These are caches placed and all published during the second and third weeks of December 2020. the game will run from midnight Sunday day 6 dec 2020 till Sunday 17 January 2021. This cache is available to any geocacher, but we kindly ask that you don’t include any spoiler pics in your log, and no hints or descriptions regarding the cache container, location, or any information that might give an advantage to the game participants. If you are participating in the game, please log DNF’s. This message will be removed after the game ends on Sunday 17th Jan 2021.)

For this Cache you need a decent flashlight, Torch, or a headlamp will do. You would be able to do this during twilight. It does not have to be completely dark.
PLEASE NOTE:-
Don’t attempt this cache alone, make sure there are at least 2 people doing this Cache then you will enjoy wandering down the yellow brick road.
You will be following these little Diamond shaped pieces of reflector tape.
lot of controversy surrounds this
classic story, Implying drug abuse, and political manipulation, amongst other things, and there are various interpretations of the messages in the “Children’s novel” that was only uncovered in the 1960’s, and it’s easy to mistake the 1939 classic as traditional family entertainment, but 80 years on from its release, the musical is more radical and surreal than ever, writes Nicholas Barber
The yellow brick road is a fictional element in the 1900 children's novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by American author Frank Baum. The road's most notable portrayal is in the classic 1939 MGM musical film The Wizard of Oz, loosely based on Baum's first Oz book.
So, What does follow the yellow brick road mean?
A course of action that a person takes believing that it will lead to good things. It comes from the Yellow Brick Road in The Wizard of Oz which Dorothy and her friends follow to the Emerald City.
There are suggestions that Frank Baum the author of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz was on Drugs. He grew up and lived in a world where the poppy and its derivative, opium, would have been a common part of everyday life. Opium use in the U.S. peaked in the late 19th century, just around the time Baum wrote The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.
The lesson from of The Wizard of Oz is to stop trying to be the person you think everyone expects you to be, and simply be who you are.
It teaches us that we must let go of our expectations of who we think we need to be for others and embrace our authentic selves.
After watching the movie a few times, you see things that you never saw before, and then they seem so obvious. Here is typically the message it carries:-
The Set-Up
Dorothy wants to explore the boundaries of her potential. Her curiosity and desire to explore possibilities makes Dorothy’s family uncomfortable. They want her to be a good girl and stay out of trouble.
Dorothy is caught in the tension between her true nature and who she thinks she needs to be to meet others’ expectations.
She is so conditioned by her environment that she doesn’t fully realize this tension even exists until she finds herself in a situation where her life is blown open.
The yellow brick road is the spiritual path. This is Dorothy’s journey of awakening. The road is yellow: it is bathed in the divine light of the sun.
Glinda, the Good Witch, sets Dorothy on her path and watches over her. Glinda is Dorothy’s divine; she comes to Dorothy in an actual ball of light. The imagery is pretty heavy-handed.

The Inner Voices
The Scarecrow, Tin Man and Lion each represent a part of Dorothy. The Scarecrow is her heart. He lacks a brain, so he relies on the wisdom of his heart. He doesn’t get held back by fear.
The Tin Man is Dorothy’s thinking mind. He lacks a heart. He is hardened. Stubborn. Literally set in his ways. He is an over-thinker.
The Lion is Dorothy’s emotional intelligence. His fear paralyzes him; it blocks his other emotions from surfacing. Without courage, he cannot unlock the full potential of his heart and mind.
For most of the journey, these friends are separate from her and from each other. Each is motivated by his own self-interest, and they compete for Dorothy’s energy and attention. Eventually, they put aside their competition and integrate their strengths as they work together to save Dorothy from the Wicked Witch. This leads to the pivotal moment when Dorothy kills the Witch.
The Wicked Witch lacks self-worth and is driven by her insecurities. She is envious of her sisters; she covets what they have. She attempts to rule by instilling fear. She is the voice of Dorothy’s inner critic.
In the moment when Dorothy accepts and integrates her various parts—heart, mind and emotions—she is able to silence her inner critic. This allows her to take the broomstick to the Wizard so that she can return home: home to her true self.
This is actually the “Main Event” of the movie—the beat that precedes the Resolution.

The Warning
Let’s not forget about the Wizard. Of all the characters, he is the most fitting archetype for our modern age, but more about that another time.
The Wizard is Dorothy in the future.
The Wizard projects an image of what he believes the people of Oz expect him to be—a great and powerful wizard—while he hides his true self behind the curtain.
He literally changes his voice and appearance to project what he thinks the people want him to be.
The tragedy here is that he knows he is subverting his true self. He knows that this role isn’t his true self. When Dorothy tells him that he is a bad man, he corrects her:-
“Oh, no my dear. I’m a very good man. I’m just a very bad Wizard.”
The Wizard is a warning: this is the life of suffering that awaits Dorothy if she continues to subvert her truth to meet the expectations of others.

The Lesson
This is the lesson: live your truth.
Embrace and integrate all of your parts, quiet your inner critic, and step into who you are.
“There’s no place like home” is still the lesson, but in a different sense:
What we learn is the importance of returning home . . . to your authentic self.
An allegory about the demonetization of silver
Hugh Rockoff suggested in 1990 that the novel was an allegory about the demonetization of silver in 1873, whereby “the cyclone” that carried Dorothy to the Land of Oz represents the economic and political upheaval, the yellow brick road stands for the gold standard, and the silver shoes Dorothy inherits from the Wicked Witch of the East represents the pro-silver movement. When Dorothy is taken to the Emerald Palace before her audience with the Wizard she is led through seven passages and up three flights of stairs, a subtle reference to the Coinage Act of 1873 which started the class conflict in America. The City of Oz earns its name from the abbreviation of ounces "Oz" in which gold and silver are measured.
