The area where Watts Wood now stands was originally part of the church's land but was sold to the district council with the intention of building a sewage pumping station, however this never took place and the pumping station was built elsewhere and the land converted into a nature reserve.
The woods are named after Bill Watts who, along with other volunteers, planted many of the trees that now grow in this small woodland.
The coordinates given below mark an object which will then lead you to a second location where you need to look for a another object.
The first object is located at N52:11.0AB E0:1.9CD
A = add together individual digits of second date
B = last digit of first date
C = three times first digit of second date
D = second digit of second date
Once at the above location look for the fence post, the material it is made from is -------- where each letter represents a number (a = 1, b = 2, c = 3 etc).
The location of the final cache is given by:
N52 11.AB000 E 0 1.CDE00
A = first letter minus fourth letter
B = third letter divided by two
C = fourth letter times two, then add one
D = seventh letter minus third letter plus one
E = first letter
The geocache is a small round clear plastic tub.
Parking can be found on the road leading onto the public footpath / track (The Drift), this road is off the mini roundabout on Barton Road / Long Road and leads to Thornbury and there is plenty of space.
The geocache on placing contains ten unique badges for the the first ten people to find the cache.