Honey! We're ..... STILL in Grafton. Traditional Cache
Wis Kid: As this cache has been disabled for months, I'm archiving it to keep it from continually showing up in search lists, and to prevent it from blocking other cache placements. If you wish to repair/replace the cache sometime in the future, just contact me (by email), and assuming it meets the guidelines, I'll be happy to unarchive it.
Wis Kid - Volunteer Reviewer
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Honey! We're ..... STILL in Grafton.
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Difficulty:
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Terrain:
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Size:  (small)
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This is another cache along the Ozaukee Inter Urban Trail
This one is between Cedarburg and Grafton along a portion of the trail that is reachable on foot after a short walk. The cache is a plastic spice jar made to blend in, using hi tech bi-sided cloth tape coated with a poly-ethylene resin having image modulating properties on one side and pressure activated rubber-based adhesive on the other.
Needless Reference information
Duct tape is a strong, fabric-based, multi-purpose pressure-sensitive adhesive tape. It is generally silver or black in color but many other colors, like transparent, have recently become available. Duct tape is usually 1.88 inches (48 mm) wide. It was originally developed during World War II in 1942 as a waterproof sealing tape for ammunition cases. Permacel, then a division of Johnson & Johnson, used a rubber-based adhesive to help the tape resist water and a fabric backing to facilitate ripping. Because of these properties, it was also used to quickly repair military equipment, including jeeps, guns, and aircraft. Duct tape is also called "100 mph tape" in the military, citing the fact that duct tape will maintain its adhesion when subjected to winds traveling at up to 100 miles per hour (160 km/h), which is why duct tape is used for quick repairs to cars during NASCAR races.
After the war, the housing industry boomed and people started using duct tape for many other purposes. The name "duct tape" came from its use on heating and air conditioning ducts, a purpose for which it, ironically, has been deemed ineffective by the state of California and by building codes in most other places in the U.S. (which means professionals are forbidden to use it in systems they install, but do-it-yourselfers are not). However, metalized and aluminum tapes used by professionals are still often called "duct tapes."
Now that you’re thinking the cache has something do with DUCT TAPE or is it DUCK TAPE, your right. Time for all geocachers to go caching.
Additional Hints
(Decrypt)
Tragyr Pvephvgbhf Zrnaf Erdhverq