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Blazer Park Traditional Geocache

This cache has been archived.

Gat R Done: If you can fix or verify this cache it can be easily unarchived if the location is still available and the cache listing meets the current guidelines. For now I am going to archive it. Feel free to contact me through my profile linked below if you fix it in the next 90 days.

**NOTE: If you have any questions, do not reply to the archive note email. Click on the link to go to the cache page and click on my name in the archive log at the bottom of the page. You can then send me an email regarding the cache. Please send me a link to the cache in question so I will know which cache it is regarding.

Thanks for your understanding,
Gat R Done
Geocaching.com Volunteer Cache Reviewer
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Hidden : 5/1/2003
Difficulty:
1 out of 5
Terrain:
1.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   regular (regular)

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Geocache Description:

This is the third cache in the Lost Parks of Lilac Way series. The container is a small clear plastic cylinder about 6 in. tall by 3 in. in diameter.

Blazer Park
This is the third cache in the Lost Parks of Lilac Way series.

About the Lilac Way Historic District:
The road we know as Highway 100 was once known by the nickname "Lilac Way".  Lilac Way, named for the lilac bushes that were planted along the highway, was the brainchild of Carl Graeser, German immigrant and architect for the Minnesota Highway Department.  Graeser is now known as the "Father of the Beltway" for his dedication to creating a beltway system around the Twin Cities in the 1920s and 1930s, an idea that was foreign to most people at the time, as the road does not go "to somewhere" but "around somewhere."   Built during the Great Depression under the leadership of Graeser, this stretch of Highway 100 between Highway 7 and County Road 81 created many jobs under the Works Progress Administration, including those of the stonemasons who built the sturdy park tables, grills and walls.  Because this was still a rural area at the time, the highway became known as a leisure drive, where families could drive through in the Spring and see the lilac bushes in bloom, stopping at the five roadside parks for lunch or to just relax, a far cry from the bumper to bumper headache it has become today.  For more information on Lilac Way and its history, check out this link to streaming video from TPT television of their documentary on the topic.

To get to the cache:

    Exit Highway 100 at Glenwood Avenue and go left at the top of the ramp (if you were going northbound on 100).  Take a right at Xenia/Turner's Crossroad.  The park is right at the corner of Turner's Crossroad and Lilac Drive.

About the park:
   This park, while once a roadside rest and picnic grounds for Highway 100, is now not visible from the highway as it is behind the sound wall.  The park was significantly modified during the construction, a lot of dirt was dug up and it looks like it may have been slightly regraded, but there are still plenty of remains of the original structures, including a large "chimney" grill.  I found the remains of three grills, can you find them all?

The final remaining park in the series is Graeser Park at 100 and Cty 81.  Wardomon has a cache at that park if you want to go there.



Minnesota Geocachers please visit the Minnesota Geocacher Association website at www.mngca.org!


Additional Hints (Decrypt)

V nz arne na negvsnpg ohg abg vafvqr vg

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)