Showing posts with label DC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DC. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 6, 2025

Geocaching April 2025

The month started with Double Trouble - A Challenge Cache that was near home and requires finding two caches with the Challenge attribute. I had 55 qualifying caches!

My daughter had a high school music department trip to Orlando, Florida, where they performed at Universal Resort Florida. Near the Hard Rock Cafe is Divided We Fall... a virtual which features a piece of the Berlin Wall. The site is almost behind the cafe, so not usually visited.

Wall and me

Another virtual cache had me taking a picture with the Universal globe. The cache is called The Globe

Me and the world

Another virtual cache, Benchmark Hounds: Orlando, had me looking for survey markers in the sidewalks. I took a picture by the Cowfish Grill. 

The Restaurant of Dr. Moreau

The next day, the trip went to Disney's Magic Kingdom and another virtual had me taking a pic by the famous castle.

Fancier in real life

The final day of the trip we were in Disney Hollywood Studios with another virtual cache. Here I am by the spot to get answers for the cache owner. 

Rock 'n' roller coaster

Back at home, I started picking up some mysteries to fill some days: CCT 1/4 of the USA (finds in at least 13 states!), Random Wiki Puzzle: Free (Kate Ryan Album) (questions on tracks!), Crabbing with Grandpa (a virtual jigsaw puzzle), and Don't Call Me Antonin (a cipher puzzle). 

Crabbing

For spring break, my family went to Virginia Beach. We stopped for lunch in Fredericksburg and found the virtual cache Fredericksburg Battlefield Virtual Reward 4.0

Spoiler-free pic at the visitor center

In Norfolk, I went to a meet-up, then found Love Letters, a cache by the water, along with Boom by the water and PiperSmiles #1 by Mount Trashmore.

Letter from loved ones in the military

River by Mt. Trashmore

On the Virginia Beach side, I found a bunch by the shore. First was Haunting of Historic Cavalier Virtual 4.0 by an old and haunted hotel.

See the ghost in the picture? Me neither.

Along the boardwalk are The Sands of Virginia Beach, Dalongestnameforacachethatwouldfitinthisspacecache, Neptune Rocks, Norwegian Lady, and Led Zeppelin

Famous Neptune statue

Beach view

Norwegian Lady

#11 Chrysler Treasures - The Vegetable Vendor and #12 Chrysler Treasures - James Baldwin are tributes to an art gallery in Norfolk that we didn't visit. Maybe next trip! These were out in nature. 

Lake with caches

We went to the local Aquarium that had an adventure lab and a virtual Phoca vitulina

Virtual by an outdoor tank

A nearby park has Pickleball is the New Tennis, Lacerta, and Washington's Treasure, a delightful mystery. 

Duck Washington watches over the treasures!

On the way home, we drove up the Delmarva Peninsula and I picked up Welcome to Maryland!, 5 O'Clock somewhere (at a brewery), and Barflies (not at a brewery!). 

By the welcoming cache

The brewery hide

Back home, I found 12 Days of Christmas - Day One on the day before Easter, so that's something, right? I also found PG County Multi-Cache Challenge nearby.

After Easter, I took the kids to a tire playground in Patapsco State Park and found Chip Off the Old Block. Later that week I went for Quick PNG, RWLS Sunny Skywalker Sangiovese Strikes Samuel (a Random Word Letterbox Series member), Sanctuary, and Big Pine 1 to finish off the treasure hunt for the month. 

Filling some mystery calendar days at the end of the month were Quarantine Grey Matter: #1, and Cryptic Triptych. Muggleville 2 was a regular cache at the same time though in a very different area. The next day I discovered SPECTRE H.Q. and Drop Some BUX in Hillandale! at a shopping center. 


Inside the Summer House

Capitol view!

Botanic Gardens

Street mural

Guess the friend

Library find spoiler

Blocking the Englishman in DC, so not a spoiler

The month ended with 63 finds and an overall total of 1820 finds.

Tuesday, April 1, 2025

Some Bits of DC March 2025

We did a quick visit to The Catholic University of America. The campus has quite a lot of history. Founded in the 1880s, the first building, Caldwell Hall, clearly has had some add-ons in the century and a half since its inception. 

The ever growing Caldwell Hall

Two added, uneven wings

At McMahon Hall (which we couldn't get inside of, I guess some building require card keys!), a statue of Pope Leo XIII honors his establishing of the university in 1889.

Leo XIII

I was surprised to see a solar farm on campus! It is across a street, so the students and visitors don't have access to that either.

Juicing up!

Marist Hall is on the north edge of the campus. Just past it is the location of Fort Slemmer, one of the ring of forts built to protect Washington during the American Civil War. 

Marist Hall

Nothing left of the fort but woods

A new student building, the Pryz, is named after Edward J. Pryzbyla, a benefactor of the University. 

Student hall

An art studio is nearby, a lone building not bigger than a small lecture hall. It looks like it is being renovated. And it might be a temporary addition--see the lack of foundation!

Fixer-upper?

The architecture on campus is a hodge-podge of styles. I guess slowly expanding over 100+ years let's all sorts of fashions come. It's hard to make such fashions go when they are made of concrete.

School of Nursing, pretty classy

Pangborn Hall, generic 1960s look

School of Law, trying to look regal

Cybertruck blowing the "regal" vibe

Some weeks later, I did some geocaching in Washington, D.C.

The Masonic Scottish Rite Temple in the middle of the city is yet another classical construction, invoking Ancient Greece. The temple is flanked by two sphinxes, so invoking Ancient Egypt too!

Scottish Rite Temple, DC

Guardian

A small garden in the back features a statue of George Washington, first President of the United States and a Freemason.

Honoring the man

Nearby is Saint Augustine Catholic Church with architecture more recent, i.e. medieval. I wasn't able to go inside but the exterior looks exquisite.

St. Augustine Church

Just up the hill is Meridian Hill Park. A large statue of James Buchanan, fifteenth president of the United States, is on display at the south end of the park. His niece made a bequest in her will that the memorial be built. She died in 1903; the memorial was finished in 1930. Typical government efficiency!

Buchanan Memorial

A statue of Joan of Arc was donated by the women of France. The pedestal is written in French and it is the only equestrian statue of a woman in the District of Columbia!

Jeanne D'Arc

Serenity is a statue tucked away in a corner of the park. Unfortunately, that did not protect it from vandals (she's lost her nose and one of her hands!) and natural weathering. The sculptor's signature is still visible.

Serenity has seen better days

Signed in stone by Jose Clara

Monday, October 4, 2021

Cute Kid Pix September 2021

More pictures that didn't make their own posts...

We went to see a Washington Nationals game since we got free tickets from one of the summer reading programs. Yay local libraries! Since four of us went in, it was cheaper to buy parking than to ride mass transit (the DC metro is relatively expensive). We discovered a fun little pizza place near the stadium (and even nearer to our parking lot). Wiseguy Pizza does all sorts of pies, including Korean Chicken Pizza which my son loved.

Korean Chicken and Plain slices

Our seats in the stadium had a good view. We were on the fair side of the foul line and in the shade for the first couple of innings.

View from out seats

The Nats have suffered a lot of losses this year, especially players. Some of the big plaza posters have not been replaced yet. 

One of three has gone!

Walking around looking for the best snacks, we found an awesome view of the Anacostia River just behind the stadium.

Looks like a fun place

The game ended in extra innings with the Nats losing by two runs.

My older son went on a caving trip with his scout troop and came back with some muddy, muddy pants.

A sign he had a good time?

Showing off