Letterbox clues5/18/2023 Design, create and carve your own personal stamp. Know how to find the four major directions without a compass List at least five behaviors you should practice while letterboxing. It’s a bottoms-up sport that has flown under the radar for so many decades that has enlisted millions of loyal and eager consumers. But there is something pristine about letterboxing. In a world that really needs to chill and get some fresh air after COVID and riots, this is a great promotion just waiting to happen. Imagine a convention and visitor’s bureau wishing to attract followers to their city by sharing clues to a half dozen letterboxes there with a prize to letterboxers who’ve documented in their logbooks that they found all six? Imagine a restaurant chain promotion encouraging their customers to enjoy the great outdoors by dropping hints for finding their letterboxes with a grand prize of a new RV for touring the country. This sport or hobby is just waiting for a sponsor to make this their own. Who’s buried in Grant’s Tomb? A former general and President and likely nearby-a letterbox! Letterboxers also rejoice in the fact that there are millions of letterboxes hidden across the world right under the noses of the uneducated masses. On our few days of letterboxing, we found them under old tree stumps, in ancient cemeteries, along The Appalachian Trail and hidden in a streetlamp of an auto parts store. There is creativity in crafting their rubber stamps and in creating clues for fellow letterboxers to discover their own and in finding others. Letterboxing is a way to exercise one’s brain without heavy physical exertion. This low-tech experience is a perfect answer to individuals or couples of almost any age. Letterboxing is an activity that encourages people to get out of their post COVID cocoon and experience nature and creativity. There is joy in finding hidden letterboxes that have been hidden for years or decades and in the creativity of the stamps that they find. Then, they return their discovery to where they found it and alert fellow letterboxers to their find on. They add an impression of the stamp they found to their own logbook and jot the date and location of their find. The letterboxer adds an impression of their own rubber stamp to the found logbook and writes their name or “handle” and the date they found the letterbox. Once found, the container is opened to find a logbook and a rubber stamp. Hidden inside plastic containers or waterproof pouches, letterboxes are found in public parks, national forests, really anywhere. Three letterboxes were found in this Virginia cemetery that was also the resting place of two Confederate generals. Then alert fellow letterboxers of their discovery online. Letterboxers stamp their logbooks of found treasure and note the date and location of their find. Using the website, participants seek out hidden letterboxes by cracking codes and the clues. They go online to to find where fellow letterboxers have left clues to where they have hidden their own letterboxes to be found. Can you say viral?Ī mix of orienteering and art, letterboxers today craft their own rubber stamp and carry with them a container that includes their logbook, their stamp(s) and a variety of ink colors for stamping. Now, their friends would want to take his tour and find their own treasure and send to their friends. The postcards proclaimed to the finder that they had found the treasure along the way that could be mailed to their friends. Not gold or diamonds, but postcards inside a bottle. Yet, would a sponsorship sully a subculture of millions of consumers that has flown under the radar of corporate America for more than a century?īorn in 1854 England by a creative guide to the tours of the Moors who created hints to finding hidden treasure along the path for his customers. Credit son and daughter-in-law, Wes and Kourtney, for answering the question of “What the heck is letterboxing?” Newlywed Texas A&M Ph.D students, they turned my wife and I on to what may be a sponsorable craze of the post COVID world.
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