What wonderful weather we had Labour Day weekend! Besides getting lots done around the house.....scraping the paint off the garage, trimming the cedar hedge and getting the netting off the blackberry bushes (that’s harder than it sounds), there was also some automotive body work being done around here. But all work and no play makes for a boring weekend, so we took advantage of the weather on Sunday afternoon, and finally went geocaching.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgb42JFWQ-F5EFpyaz_RkBcPaf0jBOLs6JjKhjOmKSGjsVkArSQ1nvrpT42s5YIDAy2Bi5tiRbljwi4iL-h6QLc2FqjIj5NWERZqNMNj0-ynRXYT2zRn880L-pV0BBVlVNCJHIEjO2gjhT4/s320/Rocky+areaR.jpg)
The first one we stopped at was at a park in Metcalfe. I’m sure this is often a busy area, and we lucked out as there was nobody in sight to wonder what we were up to. The area that the cache was hidden in had a multitude of hiding spots, and also an over abundance of mosquitoes. I wondered if we would have to give up on that, as I expected it to take too long and neither of us were in the mood to feed the bugs that day. However, my hubby has sharp eyes, and can spot the tiniest thing out of place. It only took him seconds to find the cache. I swear, I don’t know how he did it. The whole area is full of rocks, and it could have been behind or under any of them. How he found it so fast is beyond me, but we made a quick trade, signed the log and got out of there as quickly as we could. I wondered if the rest of the day would be like that too. The logs for this particular cache did warn us about the mosquitoes, and none of the others made mention of it, so off we went.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjzgnoJYnUyq7vmHhoKy-AiKF5Ekew3VBSgCYAnRdH9KQbO5Kk8fwMq9CJMO_jP5WjaIh1DM-VdGa8iG5-o5rRfudkU1HAMpunGZSAkd-Azegj5pMqOAxkd1-NhL0_9gDdl3dsDqBZuz9yV/s320/Russell+DamR.jpg)
I think the people in Russell are very lucky. They have lots of lovely trails in at least two separate conservation areas. One had a dam on the Castor River, that somehow is supposed to help regulate the South Nation River. The Nation is famous for flooding. I couldn’t figure out how this would work, upon seeing the dam, so I may have to do a little research on that, as now I’m curious.
To get to the other cache, you walk along a paved bike trail, that has a deep ditch on either side of it. From the size of the culverts there, I suspect the water runs deep and fast in the springtime.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiJ9eoRDMzOhqYIovFQCh7wKDSI3kilKDonHoGaVPqsbIa1oHI7OA3vrAKwLXdVdkQp2G2wo2iYOLMWUnLjQcOVlOuxfrKr6TwamMAEPRV-HW-lgf5lavkuHQNDQohBIQOmrlB6M4Fuu6xb/s320/double+bridgeR.jpg)
I’m just recovering from a bout of chronic fatigue, and though I hoped to do more caches this fine day, I decided I’d call a halt to it, as I was starting to trip over my own feet. We found some relatives to visit on the way home, so all in all, it was a great day.
1 comment:
That sounds like a fabulous weekend!
Post a Comment