Angus visted Dip Falls and now leaves his mark. Deep falls are worth seeing at the best of times but are spectacular after rain in the north west. There are two viewing areas one on the other side of the bridge to the right and the other is on the parking side of the bridge also to the right down about 180 steps. Viewing from both sides is essential. GPS can jump around in this area and was doing so when placing this cache. A further hint is to go to the forest side of the shelter on the left-hand side of the roadway and look down low in about the centre of the shelter.
The Angus visits series. Angus has been busy visiting all sorts of locations. You may like to set the goal of finding all of Angus’ visits, so, for your convenience, there is a continually updated list in the Description of Angus visits Port Sorell [GC91B1R].
The Angus story:
Angus was my first West Highland White Terrier. He was my buddy, my navigator and my little man. He came to me when I retired and hit the road in my motor home [Mylittlebus] in 2006. He travelled all around Australia. Meeting new people every day, he was very social and loved nothing more than poking his nose into other motorhomes and caravans. Beaches were his favourite walks. He was joined by Maggie in 2016 but bonded more closely with the third addition, Mollie, six months later. Mollie was Angus' shadow. He taught her everything - how to 'come', how to 'stay', how to swim, how to navigate and much more. To this day, due to Angus' lessons, Mollie is better behaved than her older sister Maggie. Angus had the unique canine experience of having visited EVERY town in Tasmania in 2016/17. There is a hard cover photographic coffee table book “Every Town in Tassie’ in many Tasmanian and mainland homes. We tragically lost Angus at age 12 at Opossum Bay on South Arm in southern Tasmania. We miss Angus every day but he lives on in our geocaching adventures. Maggie, Mollie and I are now based in Latrobe but still travel and maintain our travel page on Facebook - TASMANIA ALL OVER.