My Alma Mater has been added as a personal traveler in my Empty Basket series. To get it, one just has to tell me that I went to the college with the following logo:
Welcome to my Letterbox Clues blog. Here you will find the clues to many of my letterboxers, usually accessible through Atlas Quest. Although finding letterboxes is my main interest, I do occasionally get into a "planting" mood and this blog grows considerably when this happens. I hope that you enjoy finding my boxes and send me an email when you do locate them to tell me how they are doing. Happy Boxing!
Sunday, November 17, 2013
Tuesday, October 01, 2013
There's No Place Like Home - The Reading Railroad
Most people who have played Monopoly may not give much thought to the railroad properties but they, just like the street names are based on real railroads. Next time you hop onto the space occupied by the Reading Railroad, you will know that it was based on the railroad which
ran through Reading, PA. For a time in the 19th century, the Reading Railroad was the largest corporation in the world, doing business hauling coal through Pennsylvania, Delaware and New Jersey. When the coal business declined, so did the business for the Reading Railroad. Today, most conversations around the Reading Railroad are concerned with the correct pronunciation of it. Is it Reeding or is it Redding? For those who don’t know, it is Redding.
When the Berks County Conservancy gave me permission to place letterboxes on its property, it sent me a packet of information. Most of the places I had already heard of, Angelica Park, Neversink Mountain, Earle Poole Sanctuary, but one of the brochures was new to me – the Gravity Trail which follows the old tracks of the Mt. Penn Gravity Railroad. I spent an afternoon exploring the three parks which are located side by side on the trail and began my walk after parking in the middle one. I passed two old pavilions and tried to imagine the picnics that were held there long ago. After crossing a lovely arched stone bridge, I headed left and began my uphill walk. Soon, I forgot that I was actually in the city limits as pretty little waterfalls and several rock formations surrounded me. I crossed a second little stone bridge and after walking a very short distance, I saw an unmarked trail to the right which lead by a rotting tree stump about ten feet tall. I followed the trail about ten more feet and found a tree with an interesting base filled with nooks and crannies on the left side of the trail. The most interesting nook was located on the side facing the road above me.
My walk was only about a half mile one way but it provided me with a little piece of history, a big piece of beauty and the pride of knowing a new area in the town I live in.
Saturday, September 21, 2013
There's No Place Like Home - the Reading Pagoda
I love to travel in the US and we recently came home from a wonderful vacation in the Southwest. We drove from Nevada back to Pennsylvania and thoroughly enjoyed an area of the country which was so different from our own lush green state. There was beauty everywhere we looked but as we got closer and closer to home, I had to admit how much I had missed the state we live in and this inspired a new series of boxes I hope to create showing some of the highlights of our state.
The Reading Pagoda
Tq53 529
94qht3 54q8o 23w5
3hu96 f832 59 h945y u7w5
g3r943
51491-36591
w2 e92h3e 5433
4995 3he
Sunday, April 14, 2013
Flood Plan 2
We live near the Schuylkill River and although it doesn't happen often, it does flood occasionally. A few years ago it flooded badly and I decided that I needed an escape plan in case it happened again so I planted Flood Plan 1. Unfortunately, I chose a bad spot for this box and it floated away - I guess it was good to find this out before I really needed it. Then a few weeks ago, I found what looked like a much better location. See what you think!
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