Hemet Maze Stone 2 LbNA #67650
Owner: | Adoptable |
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Plant date: | Sep 14, 2014 |
Location: | Hemet Maze Stone Park |
City: | Hemet |
County: | Riverside |
State: | California |
Boxes: | 1 |
Planted by: | HP Roycroft |
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Found by: | old folks |
Last found: | Feb 5, 2015 |
Status: | FFa |
Last edited: | Dec 22, 2015 |
[This is the word-for-word clue taken from the original, now missing Hemet Maze Stone stamp made and planted by zsmith5. I loved the stamp and the stone so much, I made a new one to hide in the same spot on September 14, 2014. I hope they don't mind!]
Hemet Maze Stone. This pictograph, representing a maze, is an outstanding example of the work of prehistoric peoples. It, with 5.75 acres of land, was donated to Riverside County as a county park on April 16, 1956 by Mr. and Mrs. Rodger E. Miller. Location: From State Hwy 74, go N 3.2 mi on California Ave to Maze Stone Park, Hemet.
Follow the road until it dead ends at a locked gate. Park here. Walk through the gate and continue along the road up the hill. The Maze Stone is on the right, just off of the road in a fenced enclosure, about a quarter mile from the gate.
Standing directly in front of the bronze plaque, face NE and walk ten steps along the fence. Turn NW and walk twenty steps. Turn due W look for the boulder with a tree growing out of it. Walk around to the SW side of the boulder. Its tucked into the crevass near the base of the tree under a flat rock.
Have fun and let me know when you've found it!
Hemet Maze Stone. This pictograph, representing a maze, is an outstanding example of the work of prehistoric peoples. It, with 5.75 acres of land, was donated to Riverside County as a county park on April 16, 1956 by Mr. and Mrs. Rodger E. Miller. Location: From State Hwy 74, go N 3.2 mi on California Ave to Maze Stone Park, Hemet.
Follow the road until it dead ends at a locked gate. Park here. Walk through the gate and continue along the road up the hill. The Maze Stone is on the right, just off of the road in a fenced enclosure, about a quarter mile from the gate.
Standing directly in front of the bronze plaque, face NE and walk ten steps along the fence. Turn NW and walk twenty steps. Turn due W look for the boulder with a tree growing out of it. Walk around to the SW side of the boulder. Its tucked into the crevass near the base of the tree under a flat rock.
Have fun and let me know when you've found it!