Belgrave is a thriving Hills township. It was heaving on a recent Sunday afternoon so we parked down here for the first time. I was enthralled to discover this sculpture down at the bottom of the carpark as part of the Belgrave Food Garden.
The Flower Baby sculpture was donated to the Belgrave Food Garden by Wooranna Park Primary School.The sculpture was designed by Australian artist Sue Davis, who worked with recycled plastics alongside 12 students from the primary school to create the four-metre high art installation.
(source: Belgrave Star Mail )
One of the aims of the Belgrave Food Garden is to "reactivate under-utilised spaces to increase civic pride". I hope this multi cache will bring more people down to this hidden patch of Belgrave to enjoy their efforts.
In the spirit of Flower Baby's recycled materials; the cache container and the contents are all things I had at home. FTF is a wooden geocoin I claimed way back in 2014.
The Cache
All the information your need to calculate GZ can be found by looking around at the posted coordinates.
A = number of garden beds minus 3
B = number of mushrooms in the image at the bottom of the information board
C = number of letter C's in the company that made the sign
D = the number value of the second letter carved into the building behind you
E = the number of kookaburras on the information board
F = the number of letters in the first word at the bottom left of the information board
The cache can be found a short walk away at S37 54.ABC E145 21.DEF
Check sum: S = 31, E = 20
Best access to GZ is via the pathway going down to your right. There are some large stepping stone boulders at the bottom of this path, linking it to the Ringwood-Belgrave Rail Trail.