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Picky & Hubby R Hoping 4 Custard: 250th Feb. 15th Event Cache

Hidden : Sunday, February 15, 2026
Difficulty:
1 out of 5
Terrain:
1 out of 5

Size: Size:   other (other)

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Geocache Description:


Welcome to Walky Feet!


Our kids' teams used to come here sometimes after practices or games; at some point we gave it that nickname**.  At least two other geobuddies have events here (one very regularly) but we're going to miss next week's event, I need this date for my event calendar, and hubby loves today's special flavor, so we're hosting our own. 

Family, friends, neighbors, kids, visiting cachers, and the geo-curious welcome.  Come for the duration or just pop in.

Come to share trackables, commiserate over the weather and/or shoveling issues, or just to huddle inside.  Hopefully we'll get to watch the train go 'round. 

NO purchase necessary, but please don't bring outside food/drinks. 


It's February in NoVA.  Likely freezing and/or slushy :( but let's hope the roads are clear enough that we can warm up together (I still remember the winter we had a ton of ice storms*).  The event will be ON unless the roads are impassible. And whether you are cold or wet or not, 2026 is the 250th anniversary of US independence in 1776 so that's be the theme for this year.  


Actual physical location:
Milwaukee Frozen Custard <-- ** Mil*waukee* = "Walky", and you walk with your feet, so... ;) 
13934 Lee Jackson Memorial Hwy <-- aka. Route 50 just east of Centreville Road and 28
Chantilly, VA 20151

Plenty of free parking - surface lot.  Public buses stop nearby.


background image generated with Gemini AI


 

* My memory has it as 17 ice storms that winter; weather site says closer to a dozen:
https://www.weather.gov/lwx/winter_DC-Winters

January-February, 1994These two months saw an unusual assault of ice storms on the Washington area. It began in mid January with an arctic blast that sent temperatures below zero over northern Virginia and western and central Maryland for a couple of mornings. The sudden cold wave shot up the use of electricity and natural gas. The effect was over such a large portion of the Eastern US that the power companies went into rolling black outs so as not to lose the grid entirely and requested people to conserve energy.

Between mid January and mid February, about a dozen storms hit dropping snow, sleet, and freezing rain. The most devastating storm struck February 10-11 leaving a coat of ice, one to three inches thick, from freezing rain and sleet! The hardest hit was an area from near Fredericksburg across southern Maryland and Annapolis. Some counties lost 10 percent of their trees from the heavy ice. Roads were blocked and impassable. Electric and phone lines were down with as much as 90 percent of the area's people without power. Even with help from out-of-state utility companies, many people were without power for a week. A presidential disaster declaration was given. Damages were estimated at near 100 million dollars for the region. There were numerous injuries from automobile accidents and people falling on ice. It was likely the iciest winter the Washington area has ever seen.


 

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Jr jvyy or VAFVQR hayrff jr trg n snyfr fhzzre. Pna'g zvff hf. Cnex va nal yrtny fcbgf.

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)