What Word is This? LbNA #33458
Owner: | Adoptable |
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Plant date: | Jul 27, 2007 |
Location: | |
City: | Canton |
County: | Hartford |
State: | Connecticut |
Boxes: | 1 |
Planted by: | Rubaduc |
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Found by: | Nairon |
Last found: | Aug 25, 2019 |
Status: | FFFFFFFFFF |
Last edited: | Jul 27, 2007 |
Same parking lot for Capen’s Cabin and Brook Bandit (if I plant enough up here, they will come).
This box is located on Canton Land Trust property at the Ratlum Mt. Preserve. The Canton Land Trust is a very active land preservation organization.
From the intersection of Routes 44 and 179, go north on 179 for 1.9 miles, turn left onto Barbourtown Rd. At the first stop sign go left, at the next stop sign go straight ahead and then just after the drum rock, take a left onto Breezy Hill Road, go till it appears to dead end (from here on it's a primitive dirt road)and park on the right in front of a fallen tree. This is 2.5 miles from where you turned onto Barbourtown Rd.
Stepping over the fallen tree take the yellow trail (which is almost a woods road at first) watching closely for a left turn onto a narrower path. After about 15 min. (my speed, not brisk but moving somewhat) look to your right for a mossy glen (knoll?) Stop 40 steps before two hip high boulders ( the right one sporting a tree on top) turn uphill into the glen, walk past a three sister tree and looking uphill spot a large rock kissing a tree. There’s a word under the right front overhang.
PLEASE don’t tread on the mossy parts and replace carefully.
This box is located on Canton Land Trust property at the Ratlum Mt. Preserve. The Canton Land Trust is a very active land preservation organization.
From the intersection of Routes 44 and 179, go north on 179 for 1.9 miles, turn left onto Barbourtown Rd. At the first stop sign go left, at the next stop sign go straight ahead and then just after the drum rock, take a left onto Breezy Hill Road, go till it appears to dead end (from here on it's a primitive dirt road)and park on the right in front of a fallen tree. This is 2.5 miles from where you turned onto Barbourtown Rd.
Stepping over the fallen tree take the yellow trail (which is almost a woods road at first) watching closely for a left turn onto a narrower path. After about 15 min. (my speed, not brisk but moving somewhat) look to your right for a mossy glen (knoll?) Stop 40 steps before two hip high boulders ( the right one sporting a tree on top) turn uphill into the glen, walk past a three sister tree and looking uphill spot a large rock kissing a tree. There’s a word under the right front overhang.
PLEASE don’t tread on the mossy parts and replace carefully.