Wildflower Garden - Western Ring Path St Albans, Victoria, Australia
By caughtatwork on 01-Jul-17. Waypoint GA10341
Cache Details
Difficulty: | |
Terrain: | |
Type: | Traditional |
Container: | Small |
Coordinates: | S37° 46.025' E144° 48.763' (WGS 84) |
55H 307344E 5817774N (UTM) | |
Elevation: | 50 m |
Local Government Area: | Brimbank |
Description
Wildflower Garden - Western Ring Path
The Western Ring Path is the continuation of the Western Freeway Path along the Western Ring Road and provides opportunity for some walking or cycling along a nicely made asphalt path way.
There is precious little information about this little wildflower garden that exists along the western ring path. It is evident that there are native plants and flowers here that are to be preserved as the fence is quite nicely done and is built to be rabbit resistant. As this look like a fragile area the geocache is NOT located inside the garden area and from the wildflower garden sign you should be able to spot the geocache with ease. The plants on the outside of the garden are well maintained so please ensure you cover the geocache well when you leave so the gardeners do not spot it.
Hints
Haqre gur ebpxf ng gur onfr bs gur srapr cbfg oruvaq gur jvyqsybjre tneqra fvta. |
|
Decode |
Logs
Cache and contents were dry and in good order.
Thanks caughtatwork.
I enjoyed the garden a bit more than I needed to, making an interesting approach to the cache that meant a bit more of a stretch.
------
Well.
This wasn't the day I'd planned, but family matters had turned the weekend on its head. Between sleeping in after the fun of caching in the dark until so late it was almost early, and staying at home to referee while the better half ran some errands, it wasn't until mid afternoon that I rolled out the gate.
Finally logging my first cache for the day after crossing the Whitten Bridge, I continued anticlockwise around the Ring Road, bagging 42 finds, and a handful of DNFs.
Thanks, C@W... today's haul has gone a long way toward my ambition of getting my GA logs over 10% of the GC total.
GCA#274
All was good though and unless stated, all caches were found in good condition.
Thanks for this one C@W.....
Thank you caughtatwork for this series.
An interesting place to find a wildflower garden. I wonder how many people will visit it.
All was running smoothly until the Christmas in July game was announced. We would be travelling in the latter part of the game. It was difficult to include this in our target caches as we did not know what was required. Once the game began and we understood what we needed to do we could then add other caches to the target list.
We were just getting our heads, yes all four of them, around this when more Dragon Zone trophies were added. Which ones could we meet and which should we ignore? Do we need to add more GA caches and/or do we need to change our route and our targets? We decided on our target list and then our route and timeline. We had just drawn a line under everything and were about to begin printing our caching booklets, route maps and target lists when caught@work published 23 new caches on the Western Ring Path. Earlier we had decided on the caches in the Edgewater Walk series. If we added the new ones on the Western Ring Path and as many of the CCC series as possible, we could probably reach the required number of caches to qualify for the Dragon Zone trophies “Restraining Order Stalker” (Find 100 DZ caches hidden by the same cacher) and “Obsession!=Insanity” (find 50 DZ caches in a day). As the latter would give us our first Blaze Trophy, it was decided to alter everything to include the CCC series.
We usually head out of the Melbourne CBD as soon as we disembark from The Spirit of Tasmania as we do not enjoy city caching. If we were going to tackle the CCC series we would have to start in Docklands, then move to the Western Ring Path. Caches in these series also carry nice points for the Christmas in July game. New lists drawn up, alterations made to the route and maps. New line drawn and printing and collating begun. No major changes now (unless something significant gets published just before we leave – we cannot be too inflexible when caching is involved).
By contrast to our experience in Docklands earlier in the day, our GPS units behaved faultlessly on this section of the Western Ring Path with very accurate coordinates being recorded for each cache.
Accurate coordinates and good hint led to a quick find of a well hidden cache. Contents were in good condition. We will have to try and remember to come back to this little reserve when the majority of the wild flowers are out. This is certainly an interesting little spot.
Thanks caught@work for this cache and all the caches you have placed along the Western Ring Road Path. They have become a recent focus for us as we travelled through Melbourne. And yes we are still practising for our dissertation.
Today was the perfect day to pick up some GCA smileys.
Xmas in July points need to be scored.
I threw the bike in the car and parked in a supermarket car park close by.
Nice to see some natural greenery and not just the odd wastelend here.
Nicely hidden.
TFTC