It's Midwest GeoBash week so where else would we be but Ohio?
Ohio, yes. GeoBash, no.
GeoBash is another casualty of COVID-19, but ShelleyJean & I needed an road trip. With WAY too many supplies in the back of Shelley's car, we headed to the Columbus area for an overnight adventure (and an awful lot of rain).
Our goals were high Favorites, Roadside Americana, and several geotrails posted on the
GeoTrails with Rewards Facebook group.
Fayette County Ohio Historical Society GeoTrail
Fayette's geotrail is old for a geotrail - released in 2016, we were told there were coins left (but there's a current debate if the latest batch are trackable). We selected this one because it is near our target-area of Columbus, and (up until the last minute) all the caches were reported intact.
Fayette County is a peaceful, hilly area dotted with quiet little towns. In some instances, the "trail" cache was the only cache in area. Shelley and I enjoyed our drive cache-to-cache along roads dividing vivid green cornfields and many, many memorial benches.
The
SQ Presidential Past was our favorite stop - a small cemetery tucked back into private property. We received a nice message from hiram392 via Messenger, congratulating us on the find (on his wife's family farm) and wishing us a good time in Fayette County. (Ohio cachers are the nicest people!) Pretty cool cache write-up, too. SQ Presidential was one of four cemetery caches including one along the Underground Railroad.
Off to the races gave us some trouble. First, it was at the county fairgrounds which was hosting... a county fair! Second, the rain started to downpour and would follow us the rest of the trail. And, finally, after 45 minutes of standing in the rain, the CO messaged us and confirmed the cache is missing. Kudos to the FCHS for their quick response in checking the cache and sharing the code word.
End of day one and we completed the FHCS trail, completed a cool Virtual (
Grove City Remembers) using Phip technology, and then headed to our hotel to sanitize our rooms.
Cornhenge and the Knox County Park's District "All Aboard" Geotrail
Thursday morning started overcast, but we didn't mind as long as it didn't mean rain. I mean... the forecast said 'no rain'. Really, it did. It lied.
We checked out of our hotel and headed west for a little Roadside Americana. We can't pass it up.
Have you been to
Cornhenge, in Dublin, OH?
"The inventor of a number of hybrid corn species is immortalized with a field of giant corn. Corn stalks are notoriously tall but the ears themselves were never as tall as a human being until the construction of the public art display in the Columbus, Ohio suburb of Dublin."
Early in the morning, this place is kinda creepy. Shelley and I walked up and down the rows. We found the
Traditional cache in the odd rows of of Osage Orange Trees, but we decided to save the onsite Puzzle cache for another day.
A forty-minute drive took us to the newest Ohio geotrail, Knox County's "All Aboard" released in June 2020.
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#1 All Aboard to Centerburg GC8VMWM |
The best reward this trip was making new friends! 💚 Shelley and I were signing the cache at the first stop when along came three hikers. They slowed as they approached, and one (Ms.CallaLilly) asked, "Are you geocachers?" What a hoot! They were on the hunt, too.
Introductions all around and so geeked that Ms.CallaLilly recognized me, without prompting, from this blog! She was the hider of the fabulous Medina County geotrail!
Post 1 Post 2 Just the night before Shelley & I had agreed that Medina is our favorite geotrail in Ohio so far! So disappointed that it's been archived -
really good caches in some
really interesting spots - and so flattered that the CO remembered me.
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Ms.CallaLilly, Stachey Pete, Scrapcat, ShelleyJean and flaglady |
And off we went - the five of us - to the remainder of the Knox County caches! The miles along the rails-to-trails sped by like, well, a train on a mission.
Knox County did it right. They had a mixture of long rails-to-trails walks and a few downtown caches to rest your aching feet.
Many bridges - just as beautiful in the soaking downpour that started around cache #5. There was also a train involved, but the simultaneous thunder & lightning prompted us to wait that out and miss the photo shoot.
Each cache contains a QR code plus a URL, which navigates you to cache-specific web pages.
There you can read history, find lists of hospitality spots (local businesses offering discounts to cachers - sweet!). and learn fun facts. Spied this "fun fact" on the Brinkhaven page. Fun?!?
To earn the geocoin, you gather information off these pages to complete a 15-question Challenge. A score of 90%+ earns the first 200 finders a geocoin. Shelley and I got a perfect score!
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Reach, Shelley!
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The sun is finally peaking out. Gosh, these are some beautiful trails! Here's the team (AKA "Team Soaked") trying their best to social distance as they are stepping into the
Bridge of Dreams for the final two stops on this railroad geotrail.
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[source: ShelleyJean] |
Built on the abandoned CA & C (Cleveland, Akron, and Columbus) Railroad line, the 370-foot long Bridge of Dreams is the longest pedestrian covered bridge and the second longest covered bridge in Ohio! Can you hear the history behind it?
VICTORY is ours as we finish the "All Aboard" geotrail approximately five hours after starting (yes, there were a few additional caches along the way!).
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Ms.CallaLilly, Stachey Pete, flaglady, scrapcat, ShelleyJean
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Waving goodbye to our new friends with promises of connecting at next year's GeoBash, Shelley and I turned toward Detroit. However, we didn't get too far before we spied the "
World's Largest Horse & Buggy made by 2x4s" in Greenwich!
It's outside an Amish bakery/store/deli/ice cream parlor and famous for their Fried pies! TaGeez and I can now attest to the Raspberry Cheesecake fried pie and the Strawberry Rhubarb Cheesecake fried pie.
Hey, we walked 6 miles today. We deserved it!