Skip to main content

Blog posts

Landmarks and Milestones

Submitted by ares on

December. Its that time of year when we all start thinking about the holidays:

  • Hanukkah
  • Christmas
  • Festivus
  • New Year's
  • Medallion Hunt
  • Winter Carnival
  • Super Bowl

You get the idea. For me that means trying to spend some time doing stuff for this web site, always frantically hoping I can get something new added before the hunt and the Carnival, knowing full well that if I don't, it'll be there waiting for me next December (although I am going to commit to getting the Able Minds archive into this site before the hunt). It always does, and I don't mind. But as I get myself into that particular mindset, I find myself poring over the site statistics. This year, I've come across several interesting landmarks and milestones that we've hit this year.

Landmarks, as we all know from hunting, are insanely important. When the clue writer doesn't give us any, we whine incessantly. When we get too many, again we whine incessantly. But we have hit a few this year. And I'm going to touch on them.

20 Years

The first rehash bash took place in 1998, and this site was born not long thereafter. The Rehash bash was on February 8, 1998, and as near as I can tell from the archives that I pulled together when I migrated everything over to this format, Greg Sax wrote the first entry here on the 24th. So, once this years festivities have come and gone, we will have been around for 20 years. I mentioned that in my reflections on the 2017 hunt last February. That's a long time. We've had people come and go, but the group has persisted. We've ventured out into hunts well beyond just the Pioneer Press Hunt. Between other festivals and mock hunts, there's information on 92 different medallion hunts spanning the entire year on this site.

But 92 doesn't make for an interesting landmark or milestone, unless its your birthday or you graduated in 1992 (or 1892, in which case we'd be really impressed that you were reading this page). So there's the list of hunts in the summer that I know about but haven't had the time to add in to the site yet. That'll get us to at least 100, and that is a milestone worth mentioning. Even if you discount extinct hunts, it'll be over 100.

500,000 Posts

OK, we're not quite there yet. The database only has about 285,000 posts in it right now. But there are 222,110 posts at Able Minds, and pulling that in will make for 507,000 posts in the database. That's 20 years worth of discussions within the group, folks. Sure, Facebook has made the influx fall off, but a half a million posts, 25,000 per year, is pretty impressive. And that doesn't include the first few years of posts that will be forever lost to time, before we became a group and thought to save such things.

1500 Pages

When I click "Save", this will become the 1500th page of content on the site. 

  • 5 Blog Entries (mostly mine).
  • 72 Calendar Events (Rehashes and Predigs and other get-togethers).
  • 641 Copies of News Paper Articles (many of which while present are not available for viewing).
  • 2 Polls.
  • 1 Recipe (yes, we have a cookbook. Feel free to add to it!).
  • 167 Stories or other pages that we wrote ourselves (most of which should really fall into blog entries, but the concept of a blog didn't really exist in 1998).
  • 508 Treasure Hunts (containing 3586 clues).
  • 104 Lists of Treasure Hunts.

So maybe the treasure hunt lists and invisible newspaper articles don't really count, but there's 1500 distinct pieces of content here, and, well, with an extant hunt count in the 80s, I'm adding well over 100 pages a year right now. How cool is that?

In closing, since the subject of calendar events popped up right there, we do have several coming up in the next couple of months, namely the predig and rehash bashes. Check back soon for formal announcements of both.

Reflections on the 2017 Hunt

Submitted by ares on

As February begins, and the 2017 Winter Carnival and Treasure Hunt are behind us, I think it an appropriate time to reflect on the past hunt, the fact that the Cooler Crew has been around for 20 years now (in person versus just online), and what's in store for the future.

The 2017 Hunt

Wow. Just wow. After back to back years outside of the city, there was a lot of speculation that the medallion would have to be back in St. Paul this year. The masses on the Pioneer Press boards were visibly agitated after Snail Lake was followed up by Bald Eagle/Otter Lake, which came on the heels of Tony Schmidt only 3 years earlier, since it is after all the St. Paul Winter Carnival, not the Ramsey County Winter Carnival. If 2015-2016 were unprecendented, 2017 was one for the books. Ma Press hid the puck in Keller Park, leaving the city for three consecutive years, and when including Tony Schmidt, leaving it four out of the last six years. As of this moment, a full half of the hunts in the 2010's have been outside of the city.

When you think about it though, it is rather necessary. With thousands of people searching the clues would have to be spectacularly (and disappointingly) vague in order to have a longer hunt in a smaller park, since we all know far too much about the parks in St. Paul. We'd have nine clues of obscure references around the park, one clue of street names, one clue saying this is the park, and finally the x marks the spot. That's not the makings of a fun hunt. At the same time, we know way too much about the "prime" hunt parks (Highland, Como, Hidden Falls, Crosby, Cherokee, Phalen, Indian Mounds, and Battle Creek) to have an effective hunt in one of them either. And if one of them were used, hunters would be complaining about how Como is overused. Yes, Highland is overdue, but so are Phalen, Crosby, and Beaver Lake for that matter.

Beaver Lake could actually make for an interesting hunt, although its size is mostly the lake. The medallion was last there in 1964, when it was known as Lincoln Park. We've had a Mock Hunt there too. At the same time, its not one of the top contenders for a hunt. Why? I know not. Perhaps it should be. Perhaps one of us should plan another Mock Hunt there. We'll have to see.

What's that leave? The suburbs. To the naysayers, I say "get used to it". No one has gone around and landmarked and geocoded every single thing in the larger suburban parks. And there are a lot of them, making up a lot of space. The parks are ripe for the picking to use. Its going to be very interesting indeed to see if, after another two years, the title for the 2010s page on this site changes to "When the suburbs became the stage" to go along with "When the city was the stage" from the '60s.

20 Years of the Cooler Crew

Well, yes and no. We had our 20th annual Rehash Bash this year, and I think everyone agrees that having the thing indoors is far superior to having it in a frigid park. We all remember how bone chilling Phalen's rehash was in 2004. having the 20th annual of anything means 19 years from end to end. Really the number to use is the number of Pre-Digs we've had, since the first one of those didn't happen until 1999. But the thing to remember is that's how long its been that the first Coolerheads cautiously braved the cold for a winter potluck picnic where no one knew anyone else, save for the online relationships that had been forged.

With an attendance of about 60, it was nice to see that we're still bringing in newbies, both before and after the hunt. We welcomed 5 adult newbies and a few kids to the group this year at the Rehash, with our famous rubber chicken initiation ceremony. No one around really knows what the bottle of rubbing alcohol or white towel are really supposed to be for, but it sure is fun to watch the look on people's faces when we tell them they need to provide them. It must be the humor factor that it provides, since none of the intitiates actually brought their own.

Aside from myself, keeping this website running and growing and enhancing it, there are so many people within the group who need some credit for keeping things running smoothly. Shout outs go to Clue Master for setting up the pre-dig at Josephs for the last several years, to him and Barefootguy for handling the Park Pick Pool. Thanks to Allison Wonderland for organizing the room rental for the Rehash Bash for umpteen years, and to everyone who chips in for the room rental fees. Thanks go to Mystical Muzik, AW, Red Bear, Cluey, KT, and everyone who now and in the past has run the show at the Rehash Bash every year. To everyone who has contributed door prizes through the years, thank you!!! And thank you to everyone who has in the past done anything to make the group and this web site viable over the last 20 years. That includes everyone who finds new city hunts throughout the year and sends them to me to include here. There really are too many of you to name

That said, next year will be the 20th anniversary of the Rehash Bash. You gotta admit, that's pretty impressive. I can't wait to see everyone!

The Future

Something I've noticed over the last few years is folks lamenting "the good old days" of the  Ableminds / Peoples Forum / Water Cooler discussion boards. After the Water Cooler shut down in 2002, there weren't a whole lot of Coolerheads who cared for the more "modern" forums that were explictly threaded with boatloads of topics, as opposed to individual posts with up to thousands of comments. Its understandable then that the lamenting is becoming more and more pronounced; the Facebook groups are a lot more like those threaded forums with boatloads of topics.

I've had my eyes on developing some sort of Ableminds-esque forum to incorporate directly into this site (and to incorporate the entire discussion board archive into it). And I still plan to do something along those lines; the general layout has been in my mind for quite some time now. The reason I haven't done anything with the idea is that a couple of years ago the software that runs the web site got a major core upgrade. I've written a lot of code to handle various aspects of the core site. Out of the box, Drupal has no knowledge of Treasure Hunts. Being our bread and butter that's kind of important. Unfortunately, its not a simple drop-in to move the code from the old version to the new, it has to be re-written. As such I've faced a dilemma. Do I write the code for a forum, only to have to rewrite it before I can migrate the site to the new version of the software? Or does it make more sense to migrate the site and write forum code only once? It seems that the latter is the far preferable option, so that's what I plan to do.

So what have I done to customize the site?

  • The logo up in the top of the page you may have noticed changes on holidays. Big G created the logo that's there normally, and East Side Digger did the holiday ones. I wrote the code that allows the logo to change. 
  • When you go to a treasure hunt page, particularly ones for the Pioneer Press hunts, you may notice that there are links to other pages within the site containing newspaper articles relevant to that hunt. Without going into too many technical details, I wrote a separate module to create that.
  • The calendar. While it wasn't really a huge amount of code, this does consist of enough to create a Calendar Event content type, and a view to show the calendar. 
  • The code to handle treasure hunt pages. This is where a lot of the meat of the custom code is.
  • Finally, the overall look of the site.

In order to make a migration, I'm thinking that the Related Content module, the Calendar Event module, and the Treasure Hunt module (and the associated sub-modules) are absolutely necessary to migrate the site over. If the logo is static for a while, and if we can't necessarily have a calendar on day one, even though the events are there, I can live with that (though I'd prefer to have the calendar very quickly if we don't). Of these, the code for related content is complete. I've made some headway on the Treasure Hunt code, and hope to have it finished up before the Summer of this year. Hope is a big word since I've got a lot of projects on the house to work on between now and then too. But hey, we'll try. And to be perfectly honest, I'd like to be in a position to have the code up to snuff for all of it before Summer. If that ends up being the case, I can work to migrate the site to the new version of the software in the downtime between the end of the Summer hunting season and the 2018 medallion hunt.

Speaking of the summer hunting season, one of the things I decided to do last summer was to restrict access to the clues for active hunts on this site until afte the hunt is completed. If you have an account and are logged in, you get to override this restriction.It may sound like we're being rude, but being a hunter myself, the clues on this site are more for the convenience of this group of hunters than anyone else. With the exception of a very small handful of hunts, the clues can be found on Facebook or some other web page by anyone else. After discussion with several hard core summer hunters, this just seemed like the right thing to do. If you need an account, feel free to hit up the contact link at the bottom of the page. I'll need an email address and a name you wish to be known as (we all have a history here of using pseudonyms, though you're free to use your real name if you so choose). For the moment, we don't allow access to the account creation page in order to avoid spammers on the site. With an account, you can also click on the stars underneath clues and give your opinion on them, and even create blog entries like this one, and comment on posts that allow comments on them.

After I get things ready for migration, I do intend to dive in to creating the Cooler Crew forum. While it would be really nice to have it in place for the 2018 hunt, I don't think that's a realistic possibility. This is one of those things I want to have a good amount of testing on before we go through wiht it. But, for the 2019 hunt it could definitely happen. And that's where you'll need a site account to participate. Because no good web site that requests a password does so without using encryption, at that point I'll consider taking donations to pay for the SSL certificate annually. If there are enough donations, we can contemplate moving the site into the cloud rather than having it hosted in my basement. We have one now and you can use https instead of http if you'd like, but you'll have to accept the security warning to do so, because its a freebie certificate that's not from a mainstream certificate issuer.

Joining the Group and Coming to Events

Many of us have known each other for the better part of the 20 years the Cooler's been around, and as such there are some incredibly tight friendships that have formed. That said, we're open to anyone. If you're on Facebook, join the groups. Join in the fun too. We have plenty of get-togethers throughout the year that anyone can come to. Obviously there's the pre-dig gig and the rehash bash wrapping around the Pioneer Press hunt, and during that, you can be sure you'll meet at least a few of us wherever the Pioneer Press decides to distribute early editions of the newspapers each year. Just show up and ask "you dig?". You'll find us. We also have get-togethers during the year for our Mock Hunts. There's usually 3 or 4 of them each year, and they're posted here along with the kickoff events. They're open to anyone so feel free to show up; no invitation is needed.

I think that about wraps up my immediate thoughts on the past, present, and future of the crew. Until next time, I shall return to obscurity on the site by posting as Joe Medallion.

Joe Medallion's Treasure Hunting Tips -- The Don't Wait Edition

Submitted by Joe Medallion (not verified) on

I supposed that with the hunt starting in a couple of weeks that its time, once again, to put together a list of treasure hunting tips. I completely forgot about doing this last year. Oops. Not gonna forget this year. And this year, there's going to be something of a theme to it, inspired by last year's five clue hunt: "Don't wait". This can mean a lot of things. Don't wait to get your hunting gear ready. Don't wait to get your button taken care of. Don't wait to go out hunting. Don't wait to mingle. Don't wait to turn in the medallion. 

Don't wait with your gear. If you're a true Coolerhead, you've already started on this one. Chances are you have some gear from some of the summer hunts you've done. But guess what? We've got snow this winter, and with the subzero weather this weekend, its hard as a rock. Your rake isn't gonna do you any good on it. Change it out for your ice pick, shovel, boots, and hand warmers. Seriously. If they're in your car or truck you're prepared for when you get the great brainstorm.

Don't wait with your buttons. Sure they may not be great this year, but buy one anyway and get it registered before the deadline. You've got until the 23rd at midnight to get it registered for the $5000 bonus cash (despite the registration card appearing to say the 28th; that's the date of the Carnival). No one wants to take the risk and lose out on that $5000, even though its been done before. The "Highlander Rule", inspired by the 2012 hunt, means you can't count on one of your hunting buddies to have one registered unless you're counting on that same hunting buddy to be the one to turn in the puck if you find it. And that rule will not be going away any time soon. No excuses.

Don't wait to get out and hunt. No one who ever found the medallion ever told a story of how they found it while watching tv, or while sitting at their computer in front of the chat boards. Yes there are those who live vicariously through the discussion boards and they have their reasons. But as James Goodhue IV told us a few years ago, "get off thy duff and hunt, hunt, hunt!". This millennium has given us some comparatively short hunts. Last year's, despite being at a new park outside the city, actually comes in among the shortest in terms of the number of clues needed for the find. Waiting until the weekend definitely has its risks. If you've got an itch of an idea, don't wait to go scratch it. Put that shovel into the snow and look! And if its that good of an idea, you will go out and look, so not waiting to get your gear ready is important.

Don't wait to mingle. Many of us in this group and others will tell you that the greatest treasures we've found while hunting are the friendships we've formed. As a group we might seem really cliquey to people on the outside; yes there really are groups of us that get together outside the two weeks of the hunt in January and February, whether its to go see a movie, or watch the Vikings play, or go to someone's kid's graduation party, or someone's wedding or funeral. There are two times though that you can be certain we'll all be together. Our Pre-Dig Gig and Rehash Bash. Both are open to any and everyone. We'll post the details of the Rehash Bash when they're finalized. Plus, a lot of us and other hunters get together every night before the clues come out (we don't know where that's going to be yet either). You might have noticed our group on Facebook. The only way into that group is knowing someone in the group already. And the only way to do that is to come out and mingle. Come out to the predig or the rehash. Come out and wait for the clues to come out. Its part of the fun!

Don't wait to have fun. Oh yeah. Don't wait to have fun hunting .

Behind the Scenes of the 2015 Allison Wonderland Mock Hunt

Submitted by Allison Wonderland on

by Allison Wonderland

Some of you may be interested to know some of what happened behind the scenes of this hunt. It all started of course when the PP medallion was found and people were calling for a second hunt. I didn't believe the PP would do another one and some Cooler Crew people were suggesting an immediate mock hunt. I'm usually up for such a challenge so I was thinking about it, waiting to hear for sure what the PP would.

When they said they wouldn't, Jake called me and said we should do one. It was his idea to do two clues a day. I had a meeting that night I had to go to so we said we would meet up later to discuss where to put it. In the meantime Jake decided not to help, but later realized he had an idea of what I had in mind, so he didn't hunt either. So as I headed to my meeting, I knew I was on my own.

After the meeting, I actually started towards Indian Mounds with the medallion in hand. I'm not even sure why now, but as I was driving I suddenly decided to go to Highland instead. As someone on here guessed, I was looking for a park that people had already been digging in. Not to hide footprints, but because of how I wanted to hide the medallion. I wanted to find a spot someone had already cleared, and hide it under their pile of snow so that when people came looking at Highland, they would think that spot had already been checked.

I got to the park and went to the south side because parking was easier. I went up to the picnic grounds and found a pile of snow next to an area someone had swept clean. I stuck my shovel under the pile, lifted it up, and put the medallion underneath. Then I pressed down on the snow with my shovel and scraped a bit more onto the pile. With that I was out of there.

By the time I got home it was after 10pm. I started making a list of things I could use as clues. I knew I had to get at least the first clue written before bed so that I could post it in the morning and I did manage to do that while also keeping up with the details of the PP hunt.

So the next morning I post the first clue thinking I had been pretty clever and used some obscure references. Five minutes later the first response appeared. It was Valley Girl saying it must be in Highland because Highland used to be called Reserve Township. My hunt lasted 5 minutes and they had already figured out the park!

So there was a bit of panic there as I furiously set about trying to write the rest of the clues. I knew I wasn't going to fool anyone into thinking it was a different park, but there was one tactic that might work. The "Boomerang". Often I like to use the "Eclipse" strategy which is where you use a small park, but you write clues in such a way that they also kind of fit a big park and the little park hides behind the big park. This would be the inverse of that. I would use a big park, but make people think the big park was a decoy for a little park, when in fact the little park was the decoy.

Mattocks Park was my target. I knew it had a Charles Schultz connection as did Highland, it was sort of in the Highland area, and they both had a street named after a college. My goal was to try and lure some people there through the 1st six clues anyway and then maybe the hunt would have a decent chance. The second clue was meant to talk about the Peanuts connection, but also to sow some doubt about whether it was really at Highland, or was it just the decoy yet again.

That strategy kind of worked, except somehow people ended up at Hillcrest instead of Mattocks. They would have to tell you why. I've never been to Hillcrest.

That first day was a furious one of clue writing. I actually had all 12 clues written within 24 hours of the PP hunt being done. I did tweak the wording on some of the unreleased clues later on, but didn't make any major changes or alter the order of them.

And then it was just a matter of waiting to see how long it would go. It was interesting to watch this year because there was a lot more discussion on the PP boards than I usually get to see during a hunt. People came up with Highland in half a dozen different ways from the first clue, and only two were intentional. I think I see now why the PP doesn't use Highland. Everyone tends to go there and dig no matter what the clue actually says.

On the other hand, even though the Reserve Township and District 15 thing came up very early on, people started going to parks all over town anyway. It's amazing what power a vague phrase can have on splitting the masses.

But eventually people got back to Highland right about on schedule and the hunt almost made it to Clue 10 which I think is a pretty good length. So despite a crazy start, I think it was a good hunt and I am pretty happy with it.

 

A Recap of the 2015 Hunt

Submitted by ares on

It isn't often that I break character as the webmaster of this site, and my stolen persona of Joe Medallion and write as myself, but since there's a wide variety of opinions on the subject, and I'm not presuming to speak for the Cooler Crew, for this I am breaking character.

There's no doubt that this year's hunt was a quickie. Not the quickest hunt for sure, but going 5 clues leaves your head scratching as to where you went wrong and how the guy who found it got there so fast. Going five clues with Snail Lake, a park that's never been used before, leaves you scratching your head even more. The irony of the combination of finder and park isn't lost on me. In fact, I gave Steve a hard time about putting all that effort into writing the Treasure Hunter's Guide, covering most of the parks in Saint Paul, only to have all that work be for naught because his find was outside the city.

Now because the find was so fast, there's a lot of conspiracy theorists out there and that's to be expected but people, you don't have to be jerks in order to have theories. But jerks we have. And I've seen an awful lot of comments like "why do the same group of people keep finding the thing" and "I'm tired of seeing these guys' names in the paper about this". I'd like to know where people come up with that. This year was the first time Steve found it. I hope he writes the extended Ramsey County edition of the guide. I really do. I'll buy one. Maybe more. And when I do you can bet money that I'll have him sign them, just like my other copies are. Then there are Jake and Rob. Their names have shown up a time or two over the course of the hunt, and they are the names people have got to be talking about. I have to wonder if people said the same thing about the Longin family in 1959 and 1961. Maybe Peggy Fritzke and Iola Mossbrugger caught flack in 1972 after finding 1966's medallion. Let's not forget about Kirk Condie's finds in 1984 and 1992. Probably, but we'll never know about it because there was no internet back then.

Let's have a bit of a look at the three names that people are talking about now:

  • Steve Worthman: Prior to the 2015 hunt, Steve appears in four stories that we have copies of here on the site. These were in 1998, 1999, 2005, and 2009. Why? Because like I said earlier he wrote the book on the parks in Saint Paul. He's done his homework. If anyone deserves to find this thing, its Steve. Finally, this year, he did.
  • Rob Brass: Rob's name appears in a few more stories, and only in regard to his find in 2010, and the tip that led Jake to the medallion in 2007. There's a bit on him right before the 2008 hunt in a story about he and Jake trying to get a back to back in 2008.
  • Jake Ingebrigtson: Jake's name appears more than the others here. That's not surprising. He's also one of the most vocal pushers that Ma Press has for the hunt. And he probably has most of this site committed to memory, and then some. Jake's life revolves around this hunt, so much so that he wouldn't accept a job that wouldn't allow him to participate. You'll find that quote somewhere in this here site.

The last time we heard any of these names connected with the hunt was with the non-find in 2012. Since people won't ever be convinced of anything, I'm not going to discuss the matter here. Contrary to popular belief their names aren't always mentioned in connection with the hunt. Believe it or not, the press has actually interviewed other people as well. Jay Kuehn has been searching for the entire time the hunt has been going on; she was interviewed by the PP this year. Jake's and Rob's names haven't even come up in the media since the 2012 hunt.

So where does the hate come from? Beats me, but its totally unnecessary. I imagine a lot of it stems from the pseudo-anonymity of the internet. One can post something and bask in the fact that unless they've made themselves known to the group of people to whom they are speaking, one is anonymous, except for in the server logs of the website in use.

But let me say this to the questioning masses out there. There are very few, if any, people out there that I can say deserve this more than these guys do. Not because of a sense of entitlement, but because they've worked their tails off for it. Jake has pretty much dedicated his whole life to the hunt. Rob almost has. Steve spent years researching the parks in Saint Paul, writing and updating his beloved treasure hunter's guide. To those who say that their presence in the hunt is detracting from the family aspect of the hunt, Jake and Rob are bringing their kids into the hunt as soon as they reasonably can, creating the next generation of treasure hunters, just as those of us with older kids have done before them.

Someone on one of the boards somewhere noted that Steve started looking this year the day before the hunt started, and wondered how you can do that. Its really easy. He got in his car and started driving to parks. Its called scouting. Professional sports teams aren't put on the spot making their picks on draft day; they go scouting. They're evaluating potential players for skills they're looking for and whether the player would be a good fit for a team. In the hunt,,scouting involves checking out park conditions; things like snow cover and recent changes are at the top of the list. Apart from the times it was found by a spontaneous hunter, I'd bet a lot of finders in the last couple of decades have spent a lot of time doing just that. And we know Steve's been "scouting" for nearly 20 years.

For a good deal of us, this treasure hunt is a passion. Look at this site. When it started out in 1998, it existed solely because of the Pioneer Press hunt. We've greatly expanded our scope since then. Today, in addition to clues for mock hunts, this site collects clues on at least 45 different local hunts around the Twin Cities and in greater Minnesota and Western Wisconsin. And people in this group have found several of them. Just look at the Hall of Fame: 28 finds. And all the information we can gather is right here. Available for free for anyone who wants to check it out. That information will always be freely available. What's not free is the discussion board site that the Cooler Crew uses. It's at a site called ableminds, a site which hosts many more discussion groups than just the Cooler Crew. They are the ones that charge a fee to post. As a group we have decided to allow access, even read-only access, only to those people who have chosen to support the site we post at, because page views aren't free. At some point in the near future we hope to have our discussion boards integrated into this site. At that point, I may set up a donation portal because I'll have to move the site into the cloud from my basement, but the content here will still be available gratis. How we'll handle the discussion boards is a question that will be answered at that time.

I don't know how may times I've said it in the past, nor do I know how many more times I'll say it in the future, but for a not insignificant number of people in the Cooler Crew, the treasure of friendship outweighs the treasure of the medallion. Maybe its easy for me to say that since I've never found the thing. But I know several people who have said that exact same thing or something similar.

The Pioneer Press this year ran an article on balancing camaraderie and competition during the hunt. Apart from the professor at the U and a former PP staff writer, the only people quoted in the article are Cooler Crew. I can only speculate that the reason for this is that no one else answered the open call for comments. When you read that article, you learn that while the Cooler Crew is all about the hunt, we're about a lot more than just the hunt. It should come as no surprise that if and when one of us finds the treasure, more of us are nearby when it happens. Why? Because coming full-circle, the greatest treasure a lot of us have found has been a good number of friendships that exist far longer than a mere 12 days a year. And because they exist for more than just 12 days a year, we're bound to be even tighter during those 12 days a year.

With that, I'm gonna go put my webmaster hat back on. Joe Medallion has a few features to add to the site before next year's hunt.

2015 Predig Gig

Submitted by Joe Medallion (not verified) on

With Thanksgiving now past, you may have noticed that we're now less than two months away from the hunt with no announcement (save for the countdown on the page) of the details of the Predig gig. Due to a mix-up with Joseph's we're unable to hold it there again this year. Rest assured that it is being planned, and there will be a predig gig, and it will hopefully be announced very very soon. Keep an eye here and in the Cooler Crew Facebook group for details. 

Ode to Hunt

Submitted by ComedyCurtis on

Ode to Hunt

The hunt is over and I guess, 
I’ll clean my house, for it’s a mess. 
Through sleet and snow and low wind chill, 
We’re like mailmen but mentally ill. 

It ended Monday, blessed is he, 
To find a puck that looks like pee. 
I must admit the kid has class, 
Has anyone seen my frozen ass? 

At Como Park the hunt was bold, 
The polar bears said, “Damn its cold!” 
Hid was treasure for us to find, 
Some looked up a frog’s behind. 

Braving the cold takes lots of guts: 
I’m getting the feeling back in my nuts. 
The wife was great throughout the hunt, 
But now she has a frozen c….offee. 

So now it’s over what to do: 
Re-hash with the Cooler Crew, 
We’ll whine with wine and jeer with beer, 
And say, “I guess it’s mine NEXT year.” 

Joe Medallion's Treasure Hunting Tips -- 2014 edition

Submitted by Joe Medallion (not verified) on

I supposed that with the hunt starting in under a week that its time, once again, to put together a list of treasure hunting tips. I've done this for the past couple of years now, and stopping just wouldn't be right. Compared to those two years, I'm a little late, but what the heck, right?

Buttons. Buy a button and get it registered. They've been available for over a month now, and have to be registered by January 17 at midnight in order to qualify you for the extra $5000 in cash if you find the puck. Who wants to throw away 5 grand? Not me. Don't count on your hunting buddies to have one, because once again there will be only one finder and one check. If your group's finder (probably the person with the lowest tax bracket) doesn't have a registered button, you're out 5 grand. No questions asked. I know I sound like a broken record, including this tip every year, but its sad to see the number of winners who just didn't do it and missed out on a bigger prize. The hunt that inspired the "only one finder rule" in 2012 was the most recent encounter. Already have a button? Well, if you're reading this, you've got an internet connection so go find the card and follow the web site link. There are no excuses.

Be prepared. This can be taken many ways. One of them is right above this paragraph. Others include keeping your hunting gear in your vehicle. Whether this is your boots, ski pants, shovel, rake, maps, guide books, hat, scarf, etc. Keep it with you. I always look like a dork when I'm out in a park in two feet of snow wearing nothing but my tennis shoes, and so does everyone else who does the same thing. Not only does it look bad but tennis shoes make for lousy traction in the snow bank, which creates a dangerous situation. "I don't go out digging during the day so I keep that stuff in my 'hunting car'" you might say. So does everyone else, but I tell ya, when that light bulb comes on, and you get the urge to go hunt, you will go hunt and nothing's going to stop it.

Get out and hunt. Yes, I say this one almost every year too but its true. There are a lot of armchair hunters out there who live vicariously through the online message boards. Many of those people don't actually expect to find the medallion, or are physically unable to search, and being online is their "fix", and that's OK. But if you really really want to find the puck bring home the glory, you're going to have to go out and look. When I was a kid, my parents figured out the torpedo clue in the 1990 hunt at Como. We even got in the car to drive by the place. No one actually thought to get out of the car and go searching for the $4,000 that was laying in a clump of grass and clay in that snowbank. That was a Tuesday evening in a time when the hunt ran from Sunday to the following Saturday with two clues per day. Had we looked, we could have found ourselves among the list of quickest finds ever. Alas we didn't and even though I didn't have a say in the matter, I do have myself on the wall of shame for that one.

Follow your heart (and your brain). This is related to the last one. If you have a brilliant explanation for a clue, don't cast it aside. Investigate everything. You might not be right. But then again, you might. Knowing that in the end, there can be only one, there is some pride in being able to say afterwards that you correctly figured out a clue. At the same time, follow your brain too. If your idea for a single clue pinpoints one park and you can't make any of the others fit there, chances are you're not at the right park. Look at the 2003 hunt in Como, for instance. Even though many many hunters felt a pull to Harriet Island, there were certain things you just couldn't match up there no matter how hard you tried, such as "wide as triple e". Perhaps that's part of the reason the hunt lasted as long as it did. Everyone was in the wrong park.

Mingle.  Every year the Cooler Crew organizes a Pre-Dig Gig and a Rehash Bash. The Pre-Dig is always the Saturday night before the hunt starts. This year its at Joseph's on Wabasha Street. It's an open event and provides a great way to meet fellow hunters. The Rehash is a potluck picnic usually (but not always) held the Sunday after the Winter Carnival is over (yes, it is also almost always on Super Bowl Sunday), so you need to pay attention to this site to know when that happens. But there's more than just those two events. One, there's always mingling in the parks. Two, there's usually a gathering of hunters every night before the clue comes out. We're expecting that to be at Gabe's once again, but who knows. 

Once again, there can be only one finder. And hunting alone is no fun anyway. A good many hunters will tell you that despite not having found the puck, the friendships they've formed over the years are of far greater value than finding the medallion. WCCO-TV even did a story about it with the Cooler Crew a couple of years ago.

Have fun. 'Nuff said.

Site update

Submitted by ares on

Every year, I try to make at least one improvement behind the scenes to the Cooler Crew site. Over this past year, we've added in as many of the small-town treasure hunts as we could get our hands on into the site. This has involved a lot of googling and other tracking down of articles from smaller newspapers, contact with the folks who run the various hunts, etc. As of right now, we have 633 distinct pieces of content on the site, dating back to some of the original writings of Greg Sax back in 1999, and including all of the hunts we know of that took place in 2013. I hope to keep that particular tradition up. I'm also in the process of trying to make the url names of each of the individual pages more consistent, something along the lines of content_type/source/year/name. 

On the back end of things, I'm tweaking the code that powers the treasure hunt section of the site. One of the more prominent things you'll notice is the addition of a Google Map to the hunt information section of the treasure hunt pages where we have GPS coordinates for the location of that particular treasure hunt. On that same note, I'm working to change the way the summary maps work on the site. As of right now, the summary map pages, e.g., the Pioneer Press Treasure Hunt map are relatively static. Yes, they update based on hunts being added, but the underlying database structure isn't very conducive to maintenance, and all of the boundary data for cities, and hunt location data are sent to you, regardless of whether they're visible in the map you're looking at or not. I'm working to change that.

Finally, I'm actually working on a replacement for our forum. I think its kind of obvious that with Facebook, there are a lot of people who can't justify the $10 per year to maintain their membership at Able Minds. The last post in the Cooler Crew boards at the time I write this took place on September 25, nearly three months ago. A while ago, I started a conversation with many of you on Facebook just as a brainstorming place. I got a lot of good ideas from that. While I can guarantee that there won't be a forum hosted on coolercrew.com for the 2014 hunt, I'd really like to have something in place for the 2015 hunt. Don't be surprised if you see invites from me to test out a development site sometime over the summer. As for the history at Able Minds, well, you know we've got our boards from 1998-2005 archived here. I'm working to get the Ableminds content archived here too (as well as to keep it updated as people post). 

Oh and don't forget, with an account, you can create content here too. At the moment that's the only reason you need an account. As a result, accounts can now only be administratively created. When the forum comes online, you'll need an account for that as well. Until then, if you don't have an account, and would like one, follow the contact us link below and we'll set you up. We've done a major purge of "inactive" accounts, so if you had one before, or even thought you had one before, you might not now. Once the forum is back online, account creation will be re-enabled.

The All Star Break, as It Were

Submitted by Joe Medallion (not verified) on

We've reached the halfway point of the summer hunting season. The Cooler Crew has picked up a pair of medallions. Coldest Hunter snagged Roseville, and Matt Koskie grabbed Cottage Grove. Way to go guys! Nine hunts are down, and not all of them without controversy. Columbia Heights had the brick-breaking problem to ultimately get to the medallion in Judge Wargo Court. The Blaine hunt lasted only a single clue which was taken down fromt he web site before any of us knew what it was. C'est la vie though, right?

The good news is that there are still a lot more hunts out there for us to get. So crew, lets get out there and find them!