The month started in Washington DC at the
Earth Day Park Bioswale, an earthcache about the importance of little green parks in big cities. We were visiting a museum that day anyway, so it was a nice two-for-one trip.
On a Sunday we went into DC for some museum time and I discovered the earthcache
Smithsonian Castle, all about the iconic stones that made the castle red. On the same day, I found
Wisdom Mural while doing maintenance on one of my hides in Laurel, Maryland.
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Downtown DC |
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Downtown Laurel |
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Another mural! |
Back at home, I found
October 30th Is National Checklist Day (maybe I should have waited a bit on finding this one),
The road to nowhere..., and
Wilde Lake Channel Repair. The last is an earthcache by the dam that made a milde stream into Wilde Lake.
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The dam |
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Cool tunnels under a bridge |
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Apocalypse Watch found! |
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Town War Memorial (or big chip on my shoulder) |
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Can you guess which one is the cache? |
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Union Mills mill wheel |
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Carroll County farm equipment |
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Ellsworth Cemetery |
The next day I went to the
Geocaching HQ Block Party Celebrating 25 Years of Geocaching in the DMV just north of Frederick, where I found two caches on the way, both at the same location!
Jug Bridge is a virtual cache about a bridge that used to be here. The same memorial is also an earthcache
9 Jug Bridge and Lafayette, another of the geotour caches. The bridge was nicknamed "Jug Bridge" because it was rumored that the builder hid an actual jug of whiskey inside the memorial. No one has put in the effort to x-ray the stone to see if there's something valuable inside. Maybe 200 year-old whiskey is not valuable?
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Memorial with a secret stash! |
At the actual block party, I found a couple of caches:
13 Snook Farm (another geotour find),
Name Your Game! (by the sports fields),
Dairy Barn (by one of the outlying buildings), and
Snook Farm Ag Center (right in the middle of the farm).
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The meet-up (there were a lot more people there) |
One of the presentations was by "the Bomb Guy," and FBI bomb disposal person who is also a geocacher. He gave advice about how not to decorate or hide a geocache so that law enforcement mistakes it for an explosive devise. He had a lot of pictures and videos of bombs that look very similar to many geocaches. He even brought what was left of a lamp post skirt (a popular hiding spot for caches) when it was blown up by the leavings of a non-geocacher.
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Yikes! |
The next presenter was a guy describing how to build gadget caches, with a lot of wires, batteries, and other things that the previous speaker warned us against!
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The Snook Farm House |
I end the month with 45 finds and a grand total of 2074. I'll probably break into the 2100s next month!
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