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2015 Year of the Goat LbNA #67995

Owner:Adoptable
Plant date:Dec 31, 2014
Location: Hohlt Park
City:Brenham
County:Washington
State:Texas
Boxes:1
Planted by:Chrivid
Found by: topcrop
Last found:Feb 21, 2015
Status:Fa
Last edited:Dec 31, 2014
There was this wonderfully amazing man I met at work who I wanted to get to know better…I was talking to him one day and he mentioned that he had to mow his yard because he had several acres and it grows up quickly. I told him he should look into buying a goat so he would not have to mow all the time. I followed that statement with an invitation to go goat shopping with him anytime he wanted. And this, is how it all began. Two years strong we are still dating, but have not yet become owners of a goat.

On another interesting note the goat is an animal known for its curiosity and inquiry. “Goats are insatiably curious. They will poke and prod at everything in their environment. Goats encourage us to engage and entertain our own sense of curiosity. “Curiosity is free-wheeling intelligence.” So often curiosity and intelligence go hand-in-hand (or, hoof-to-hoof in this case). The goat is a grand reminder of this, and urges us to be inquisitive.”

Remember 2015 is the Year of the Goat, so be extra curious and inquisitive and may you all have someone goat shop with!


To the Letterbox:

Take Business 36 to Hohlt Park in Brenham. Park at the end of the entrance that takes you to the Amphitheater. Walk behind the Amphitheater on the gravel road/path to a small green metal & wood foot bridge on your right. Take the small green metal & wood foot bridge across the ravine. After crossing the bridge follow the foot path and go left at the intersection. The path will curve and you will take the long wooden foot bridge on the left that leads into the wooded area.

Follow the trail until it comes to a wide area with a medium-small lone oak tree right in the middle. If you end up in the large clearing you went too far. Standing on the right side of the small oak tree (in the intersection) take 6 steps forward. Now turn right and take 36 steps on the trail (from the intersection with the lone oak tree). At the intersection turn right and walk 31 steps. On your left (one step off the trail) will be a gnarly looking, multi-trunk tree. Step backwards two steps and walk 12 steps to the left, into the wooded area beside the trail. In front of you should be two trees of different species (one cedar and one non-cedar) and a ravine behind them. The “non-cedar” of the two trees has large initials carved into it about 4 ½ feet up. Standing between these two trees (one at each shoulder) with the ravine on your right, look straight ahead between them at a tall tree on the other side of the barb wire fence, this is roughly 13 steps from the two trees that form your line of sight. The camo box is hidden behind this tree on the other side of the barb wire fence (you do not have to cross the fence).