Today I found my 100th geocache, and in honor of that milestone I decided to hide a geocache of my own at none other than the location of the very first geocache I ever found. On May 18, 2014, I kicked off my geocaching journey by finding a now archived hide originally titled “San Sebastian.” Unfortunately, it was archived on New Year’s Day, 2018. Out of respect for the hide that first got me into the game, and as a look back to where it all began for me, I’ve placed this cache at the same coordinates as the original. Because no description beats the original description, the following is an exact copy of what was written for the original hide that once sat at this location:
The cache is located at the San Sebastian Trailhead for the Seminole Wekiva Trail.
This trail is a paved recreational trail that has been designated as one of Seminole County's Showcase Trails because of its length, beauty, and accommodation of many users.
The Seminole Wekiva Trail has been built on the former Orange Belt Railway, at one time the longest railroad in the country. Peter A. Demens of Longwood was the driving force behind this railroad and, despite many difficulties, had the railroad built all the way to St. Petersburg.
The Seminole Wekiva Trail connects four parks: Westmonte Park, Sanlando Park, the Seminole County Softball Complex and Sylvan Lake Park (via a sidewalk connector); two schools: Heathrow Elementary and Wilson Elementary; and provide access to Wekiva Springs River Nature Preserve. The Seminole Wekiva Trail now connects to the Cross Seminole Trail via the I-4 Trail Overpass in Heathrow. This trail connection is part of the master plan goals to create a 40-mile continuous paved trail that will connect Altamonte Springs, Lake Mary, Longwood and Winter Springs to the Orange County trails system.
PLEASE...Re-hide the cache in the same manner or better.