Heber’s Heavenly Hideout (GCHW5K)
Saturday, April 1st, 2006 This one was quite interesting.  This was the first geocache of the morning.  This was also Christopher’s first geocache.  My family had only three tickets for the Saturday morning session of General Conference so it was decided that Christopher and I would go geocaching in the vicinity of Temple Square while Dawn and my grandparents attended the conference.  This was probably my favorite cache of the day.  This cache is located behind some apartments just to the east of the Conference Center.
This one was quite interesting.  This was the first geocache of the morning.  This was also Christopher’s first geocache.  My family had only three tickets for the Saturday morning session of General Conference so it was decided that Christopher and I would go geocaching in the vicinity of Temple Square while Dawn and my grandparents attended the conference.  This was probably my favorite cache of the day.  This cache is located behind some apartments just to the east of the Conference Center.
On our way there Christopher asked me if it was fun being a missionary. I told him that it was a lot of work, but that you get to do a lot of things you would never have a chance to do otherwise. Just as I was saying this we came upon a group of about twenty Elders standing in front of one of the apartment buildings. I walked up to them and asked if I might ask them all a question. I told them that this young man here would like to know if it’s fun being a missionary. All together they started cheering that it was great! There was one senior Elder who said that it is fun, “even at my age!”
We walked past the missionaries and into the parking lot they were standing in front of. The GPS pointed right up a steep embankment with a fence at the top. Christopher was considering climbing it, but I convinced him that there was probably a much better way. We walked back out of the parking lot and a little further up the street found a walkway between two buildings. behind the northern building we found what looked to be a small fenced-off park. This was the Kimball cemetary. Heber C. Kimball is buried there along with many of his family members and descendants.
When we arrived there were a few muggles looking at the monument in the center of the tiny plot. While we were waiting Christopher pointed out the “No Dogs Allowed” sign. I wondered aloud if anyone had realized that dogs can’t read. In the back corner we found the cache. Christopher got a kick out of the old rusty Altoids container that the loot was hidden in. The logbook was a little damp, but still signable. I took out of it a Yankee Stadium keychain and put in the Keeping An Eye On You travel bug that I got at the meetup on the last Wednesday in March. It was tough getting all the things back in the container, but Christopher got them all in. It still wanted to pop back open, so he wedged a couple of rocks in on top of the container when he hid it again.



 Third time’s the charm.  This is the third cache I tried to take Krissy to find.  The first two we couldn’t ever find for one reason or another.  I was happy to finally find one with her and let her get the gist of what geocaching is all about.  This was also our third try to find this particular cache.  I guess we just weren’t thinking creatively enough the first two times.
Third time’s the charm.  This is the third cache I tried to take Krissy to find.  The first two we couldn’t ever find for one reason or another.  I was happy to finally find one with her and let her get the gist of what geocaching is all about.  This was also our third try to find this particular cache.  I guess we just weren’t thinking creatively enough the first two times.






