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Dinky little cache Traditional Geocache

Hidden : 5/26/2006
Difficulty:
1 out of 5
Terrain:
1 out of 5

Size: Size:   small (small)

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Geocache Description:

Located on the site that is maintained by the Fennimore Railroad Historical Society Museum. NOTE: There is also a letterbox cache located at this site. You are looking for a metal box with a flip close lid not a plastic container with a lid with four snaps on top.

I lived and went to school in this town for three years during college and I always liked the history of this special type of rail system. I felt it was a good site for a cache. You are looking for an small container, modified to defy gravity. You should not have to look to hard for this and you do not have to climb on or walk behind the chain around the train. (Hey! That rhymes…)

Fennimore's narrow gauge train, affectionately known as the Dinky, operated from 1878 to 1926, far longer than most 3-foot gauge lines in Wisconsin. At a nearby depot, standard and narrow gauge trains exchanged their passengers and freight. Trains ran daily between Fennimore and Woodman by way of Werley, Anderson Mills and Conley Cut, meandering 16 miles through the Green River Valley and serving as a key link to other railroads. The line was famous for a horseshoe curve that made it possible to climb the steep slope from the valley to the ridge west of Fennimore. The Dinky was noted for its versatility, carrying farmers, fisherman, salesmen and school children, as well as the U.S. mail, milk, livestock and other freight.

The narrow gauge line was a remnant of a larger, 92-mile system in southwestern Wisconsin purchased by the Chicago and Northwestern in 1880. All except the Fennimore, Woodman line were converted in 1882 to standard (4-feet 8 1/2-inches) gauge. Narrow gauge tracks once were scattered across the country, as railroad builders looked for economy in construction and equipment costs to reach remote areas. At the peak of narrow gauge operations, the state had 150 miles, some used in logging operations in northern Wisconsin, now all abandoned.

Thanks to Fennimore Chief of Police Richard Kruel, Fennimore Promotions Coordinator Linda Parrish, Fennimore Railroad Museum president Bob Brugger and the rest of the board of directors for allowing me to place this cache.

Thank you to everyone who voted for this Geocache.

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Uvqqra ng gur evtug erne pbeare bs guvf qvaxl ybpb. Vg vf whfg oruvaq gur senzr envy.

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)