Nedlands Crawley, Western Australia, Australia
By
Chwiliwr on 26-Jan-20. Waypoint GA5609
Cache Details
Difficulty: | |
Terrain: | |
Type: | Traditional |
Container: | Regular |
Coordinates: | S31° 59.196' E115° 49.477' (WGS 84) |
50J 388959E 6460446N (UTM) | |
Elevation: | 3 m |
Local Government Area: | Perth |
Description
Placed for the January 2020 game and to add an extra cache to this dragonZone.
I do not know whose dumping ground and landscape supply area this belongs but parts of it are still in use however it hasn't changed all that much since I first saw this some years ago when there was a moveable placed nearby.
Cache is place away from the products stored here.
Hints
Tebhaq |
|
Decode |
Logs
Having been down Australia II Drive a number of times, did wonder what might be down that track.
Getting down & dirty. TFTC
Crawley is a suburb located within the City of Subiaco and City of Perth. The earlier name of the locality was Crawley Park. It was named by an early landowner Henry Charles Sutherland, whose mother's maiden name was Crawley. It is home to the University of Western Australia.
The Crawley Edge Boatshed is a well-recognised and frequently photographed site in Crawley. It is thought to have been originally constructed in the early 1930s. It has changed hands several times, and after being refurbished in the early 2000s, it was re-launched by triple solo-circumnavigator of the world, Jon Sanders, and single solo-circumnavigator David Dicks.
A statue called Eliza is also located in Matilda Bay in the Swan River, in Crawley. Created by Tony and Ben Jones, the statue was unveiled October 2007 to commemorate Crawley Baths, Perth's prime competition and recreational swimming venue from 1914-1964.
The Royal Perth Yacht Club re-established on the shore of Pelican Point in Crawley after moving from its location in Perth, in 1953.
Getting down & dirty. TFTC
Crawley is a suburb located within the City of Subiaco and City of Perth. The earlier name of the locality was Crawley Park. It was named by an early landowner Henry Charles Sutherland, whose mother's maiden name was Crawley. It is home to the University of Western Australia.
The Crawley Edge Boatshed is a well-recognised and frequently photographed site in Crawley. It is thought to have been originally constructed in the early 1930s. It has changed hands several times, and after being refurbished in the early 2000s, it was re-launched by triple solo-circumnavigator of the world, Jon Sanders, and single solo-circumnavigator David Dicks.
A statue called Eliza is also located in Matilda Bay in the Swan River, in Crawley. Created by Tony and Ben Jones, the statue was unveiled October 2007 to commemorate Crawley Baths, Perth's prime competition and recreational swimming venue from 1914-1964.
The Royal Perth Yacht Club re-established on the shore of Pelican Point in Crawley after moving from its location in Perth, in 1953.