Professional Documents
Culture Documents
N 34° 02.963, W 118° 15.306 - Rule one: every cache has a name. The "Ex-Ex
Libris" cache, accessible only during downtown library hours, is a painted mint tin
located by following a clue found in book section 526.7. Geohunters are cautioned
against asking librarians directions to 526.7. One did and the cache disappeared
almost immediately.
N 34° 03.321, W 118° 14.190 - Rule two: take something, leave something. One
Los Angeles cache, a 35mm film cannister stashed in Union Station, is a foreign coin
exchange. Among original geocoins: Mexican 50 centavos, Philippine 1 peso, New
Zealand 2 pence, a mystery silver coin, a few francs, pfennigs, and a car wash token
from Wyoming.
Another (N 33° 58.365 W 118° 24.993), hidden near the large LMU letters on the bluff
above the Spruce Goose cum studio sound stage hanger, is used to trade small pins.
One visitor traded a 10-year Auto Club pin for a rare Venice-Marina Lions pin.
Unclear on the concept: a cache in La Jolla, said to contain diamonds and a Rolex, was
stolen.
N 33° 58.497, W 118° 26.008 - Rule three: respect the environment. One beach
cache leads to a polluted area of Ballona Creek near Marina del Rey, where geocachers
are asked to carry some trash out with them.
The "Universal City Micro" cache (N 34° 08.215 W 118° 21.104), hidden in the City
Walk at Universal Studios, includes a tip to avoid the $8 Universal parking fee: park on
Oakley at N 34° 07.932 W 118° 21.243, a short walk up the hill to City Walk.
N 33° 45.166 W 118° 07.677 - Another is a dive-thru. Bring a snorkel to find the
"Swimmer’s Cache", located 6-10 feet under Alamitos Bay, depending on the tide.
Original contents: 1 Maglite flashlight, 1 compass, 1 rubber angel fish, some sea shells
from Hawaii and Baja, and a Long Beach Junior Lifeguard patch.
spotting? The "Big Brother" cache, along Tujunga Wash, features a view of the set of
CBS's Big Brother reality show.
Another way to bag a celeb is to use a geocaching feature called ‘travel bugs’, items
that hitchhike randomly from cache to cache to cache and then, hopefully, back to the
starting cache, a painfully slow progress that can be followed online.
One North Carolina fan is sending a travel bug called "Beatin' a Path to Wil" via the
caching circuit to Los Angeles for an autograph of a favorite geocaching celeb - actor
Wil Wheaton.
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