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mcwilli series - 01 Traditional Geocache

Hidden : 2/8/2013
Difficulty:
1.5 out of 5
Terrain:
2 out of 5

Size: Size:   small (small)

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Geocache Description:

This is a series of caches for mcwilli to say Thank You for all the trails you have placed for cachers:



One of the requirements of Geocaching is for you to sign the log in order to get credit. Forgetting Pen is NOT acceptable. As a result your log may be deleted at anytime


Fort Langley dates from a time when the boundary between British and American possession of the transmontane west had not yet been decided. Sir George Simpson, Governor of the Hudson's Bay Company, realized that Fort Vancouver built near present day Portland, Oregon might be lost to the Americans if the border did not follow the Columbia River. Fearing the 49th parallel north would become the demarcation line, Simpson ordered the Hudson's Bay Company to construct the original Fort Langley in 1827 at a location 3 km downstream from its present site. Fort Langley was intentionally constructed on the south bank of the Fraser River in the event that, if Fort Vancouver was lost to the Americans, that Fort Langley could secure British claims to both sides of the Fraser. By 1830, Fort Langley had become a major export port for salted salmon in cedar barrels, as well as cedar lumber and shingles to the Hawaiian Islands.

In the days before the Colony of Vancouver Island and the Colony of British Columbia united, Governor Sir James Douglas chose Fort Langley to be the provisional colonial capital. By 1858, a town by the name of Derby, adjacent to the original location of the Fort, had been surveyed and subdivided into town lots and sold. Construction had begun on a barracks for the Royal Engineers, however, when Colonel Richard Moody, commanding officer of the Royal Engineers, visited Derby that year, he disapproved of Douglas' choice in location. He noted American territory lay just a few miles away across easily traversed land and that Fort Langley would be impossible to defend against attack. On the 14th of February 1859, Moody selected a new site at the mouth of the Pitt River on the north side of the Fraser and suggested the town be named Queensborough. In July of that year, Governor Douglas announced Her Majesty had decided the new capital should be named New Westminster.

Derby Reach has 38 unserviced sites available for camping on a first-come first-served basis between March and October. The campground is open for day-use only from October to March.

Derby Reach has roughly 9.5 km of trails.

Caches are only available during park hours which vary depending on time of year. Failure to follow park hours will have your log deleted.

Park Hours

It is requested that you pick-up any trash along the trail as you cache as suggested by the Township of Langley.


NOTE Placed September 12 2022
I have had many messages saying the size is wrong and could I please correct it.
The short answer is No.
You see when this cache was placed there was not a size below small. Micro and nano came later. If I adjust the size now it will affect all past finders stats as it will change them. They may have used this cache for a Challenge and by changing it will make the challenge a void log if someone checks.

If you have any problems with Spiders or Spider Webs I suggest you don't even attempt this cache.

 

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Haqre - obyg. Ercynpr nf sbhaq.

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)