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Abandoned NYC Traditional Geocache

This cache has been archived.

Sapience Trek: Hello signinffs -

As the issues with this cache have not been resolved, I must regretfully archive it.

Please note that if geocaches are archived by a reviewer or Geocaching HQ for lack of maintenance, they are not eligible for unarchival.

Sapience Trek

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Hidden : 8/20/2015
Difficulty:
4 out of 5
Terrain:
5 out of 5

Size: Size:   small (small)

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Geocache Description:

Beware of snakes, ticks, scratchy plants, steep and slippery rocks, horse shoe crabs, regular crabs, broken glass, a group of squatters, and the occasional rip current and band of teenage hoodlums. Would not recommend for children.

It seems like every square inch of New York City has been categorized, labeled, and filled beyond capacity.  But if you know where to look on the fringes of the city, you can still find places without names.

On the waterfront of Gravesend, Brooklyn, such a place still stands. It’s an all but untraveled wedge of vacant land, nestled between aging marinas and the northern border of Calvert Vaux Park on Bay 44th St. It’s a place that can be called “the secret park,” but there’s no mention of it on the park's department website. In its place, the all-knowing Google maps shows only a dull gray transected by the mysterious Westshore Avenue, though no such road exists.

The small peninsula was born out of the construction of the Verrazano Bridge in the 1960s when excavated material from the project was deposited on the shore of Gravesend Bay. Most of the new land was incorporated into the existing Drier-Offerman Park (now Calvert Vaux Park to the South-East), but for some reason, this small finger of land was left out of the plan. Through the 1970s, it served as an illegal junkyard, but by 1982, developers came forward with a plan to construct a seaside residential development at the site. Apparently, the project never came to fruition. The city of New York suggests environmental remediation as a condition for future development.

On the north shore of the peninsula, decaying pilings show the outline of a former pier and oddconstruction debris lie scattered throughout the landscape. A family of squatters lives comfortably out of industrial containers near the lot’s entrance, where a handful of abandoned watercraft comes to the surface at low tide. Beer cans and fire pits point to recent nights of youthful revelry, but by daytime, fishermen flock to this desolate place to cast their lines into the muddy gray waters of Gravesend Bay. At the shoreline, a few minutes of rock flipping will fetch you dozens of small green crabs.

For the time being until the potential of this area is realized, the unkempt wilds of the secret park offer a rustic alternative to the paved walkways and manicured lawns of our city parks. If you’re ever looking to live off the land in New York City, you’d be hard-pressed to find a more suitable spot to pitch a tent.

(Credit: Will Ellis)

Congrats to Chris Saves and ukipiper on being the FTF! *If the cache ever goes missing, feel free to message me if you have the desire to replace it yourself, I would be very grateful!*

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Qba'g ebpx gur obng.

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)