Important Note: parking is located on the north side of Mission Hills City Hall
The Cache: Beware of Muggles as this is a great park to stroll, play, bike, fly a kite. The cache is a micro that is camouflaged to look like its neighbors in order to hide from muggles. Although it is hiding, it wants you to find it! Use your best powers of observation and you'll have it in no time!
Once you find it, make sure you put it back properly and securely so that it looks "correct" and it won't be muggled.
A brief history of Mission Hills-excerpted and adapted from https://www.missionhillsks.gov/15/About-Mission-Hills on 5/21/2024.
First-time visitors to Mission Hills can’t help noticing our fountains, statues, sculptures and urns. Some are hundreds of years old and many are museum pieces imported from abroad. You’ll see them decorating our traffic islands or adorning our roadsides. But that’s not the only thing that’ll stop you. In how many other cities would you come upon a ford crossing a creek? Or a water garden where a heron waits patiently for his dinner? This is Mission Hills. America’s first and foremost garden community.
You don’t have to leave the city to escape the city. Mission Hills has remained true to its original plan, first conceived by J.C. Nichols in the early 1900’s, to be America’s premier garden community. Wooded hills, winding streams and pleasant valleys provide a natural backdrop for what is one of the most beautiful American suburbs. Three golf courses form a green belt surrounding our stately homes and magnificent landscaped gardens. Passing a split-rail fence on a Sunday morning bike ride, you could easily imagine yourself in the country, miles from the hustle and bustle of city life.