The Two Towers LbNA #39889
Owner: | N/A |
---|---|
Plant date: | May 17, 2008 |
Location: | |
City: | Pittsfield |
County: | Berkshire |
State: | Massachusetts |
Boxes: | 1 |
There is no ink in this letterbox, please bring your own.
This letterbox is at Fred Garner Park in Pittsfield, MA
Caution: In the winter the path can be icy, and in the spring the river floods, making everything muddy and creating occasional very small streams across the path.
Follow the path south from the parking area to where the two rivers meet. This is the official beginning of the Housatonic River. Go back to five small pine trees on your left (your right when you went past them at first). There is a small path going into the woods between them. Follow this path to the top of the hill and turn right. You should have the West Branch of the river below you on your left. Soon you will come to a fork in the path. Go left, then down a small hill. There is another fork at the bottom, but this fork has four paths coming off it. Go straight (2nd from the left) then across a small gully. The path soon comes to a tall brick tower. Behind the tower, there is a thin, tall tree leaning at about a sixty-degree angle to the tower. This tree points to a path leading up the hill, with a fallen log at the top. Go to the log. At what was the roots, you will see a small white rectangular rock, which we put there. Under the log near the rock is the letterbox, buried under some branches.
If you have any ideas about what this tower used to be used for, contact us at tackpack@gmail.com. Also, tell us if you found/did not find our letterbox. This is our first box!
This letterbox is at Fred Garner Park in Pittsfield, MA
Caution: In the winter the path can be icy, and in the spring the river floods, making everything muddy and creating occasional very small streams across the path.
Follow the path south from the parking area to where the two rivers meet. This is the official beginning of the Housatonic River. Go back to five small pine trees on your left (your right when you went past them at first). There is a small path going into the woods between them. Follow this path to the top of the hill and turn right. You should have the West Branch of the river below you on your left. Soon you will come to a fork in the path. Go left, then down a small hill. There is another fork at the bottom, but this fork has four paths coming off it. Go straight (2nd from the left) then across a small gully. The path soon comes to a tall brick tower. Behind the tower, there is a thin, tall tree leaning at about a sixty-degree angle to the tower. This tree points to a path leading up the hill, with a fallen log at the top. Go to the log. At what was the roots, you will see a small white rectangular rock, which we put there. Under the log near the rock is the letterbox, buried under some branches.
If you have any ideas about what this tower used to be used for, contact us at tackpack@gmail.com. Also, tell us if you found/did not find our letterbox. This is our first box!