Cache is NOT at the Posted Coordinates.
Like most geocaching puzzles this isn’t an original idea. See https://coord.info/GC5HFTZ and the series by charliewhiskey, as one of my inspirations.
I thought I would hide a few puzzle caches that could teach new cachers about some of the more common types of puzzles. I’m doing this, NOT because I’m a great puzzle solver. Quite the opposite! I struggle with most puzzles greater than 2 difficulty and I often must ask for a hint. Although this website https://www.geocachingtoolbox.com recommended by butcherandswimmer does help.
But I have seen many of the more common and easy puzzle types and I want to encourage new cachers to NOT automatically avoid all caches with the “?” icon. I’m also currently out of original puzzle ideas, so this will be easy for me. 😉 And easy for you! 😊
Puzzle Type #3 – Hidden White Text.
Hiding the final coordinates with white text on the cache page is probably the easiest puzzle type to solve. On your laptop or desktop computers web browser you simply need to highlight the text with you mouse to see the white text. On your phone when viewing the description simply switch from the “web” tab at the top of the screen to the “Text” tab.
But there are variations to the hidden white text puzzle. Sometimes the white text is hidden on a log entry on the cache page, or it could be a log entry on a benchmark or travel bug. Even the travel bug page description is fair game to hide white text.
There are even more places for white text to be hidden, so always be on the lookout. Especially if the puzzle is rated a 1.5 or 2.0 difficulty and the information presented on the cache description seems to be more complicated than the rating would suggest. Hidden white text is often used in a puzzle that contains a “Red Hering”, which means information presented on the cache page that is meaningless and not really part of the puzzle.
Go to TB3VWDV.