Clue #1
Signal ye the start of fun for ye old Mock Hunt has begun
Thou shalt go out and seek thee the Crown Jewel
Tis hidden in St. Paul, nestled before snow did fall
And before Mother Nature decided to be so cruel
This wintry hunt of 07 may not strike thee as pleasant
But doth it not represent all that hunters stand for?
Perhaps ye can satiate by dwelling instead on 08
Or hunt like a Tiger and ye shall have riches galore.
The first verse is mainly just there to introduce the hunt and tell you what you already know, that it is hidden in St. Paul and that we seem to have a lot of snow. The second verse makes reference to “08” which is meant not as 2008, but rather 1908 which is when Newell Park was founded. It was named after Stanford Newell and Stanford is both an anagram of “stand for” and the college that Tiger Woods went to. Tiger Woods of course comes from “Tiger” and “Woods” also hints at it being hidden in a tree.
Clue #2
Ten times ten, squared, a hundred then
Is how many chains thou shalt need
Core to thy hysteria, use them to cover the area
Ruts in thy thinking are a danger indeed.
A chain is a unit of length and 100 chains would still be a unit of length, but 100 square chains is a measure of area and is equal to 10 acres, the size of Newell Park. Also, if you look at the first word of each line- Ten Is Core Ruts, and say it fast, you get Tennis Courts, referring to the courts that are in the park.
Clue #3
Don't be defensive friend, tis all but a game in the end.
Tis the goal to have wintry fun, not to prove ye be hardcore.
Thou art well likely to howl, if thou likes to stay foul.
But it's not how well ye boast, but how well ye keep score.
This clue has various sports references meant to hint at the various sporting fields in the park which include tennis courts, a basketball court, a volleyball court, and a softball field. It also hints more specifically that you’d be in foul territory of the baseball field. Also, to “keep score”, since a score means 20, if you count every 20th letter through the first three lines, you get “Newell”.
Clue #4
Thy lord doth state, that ye best not wait.
This clue shant lead thee easily to thy destination.
Yet at the end of thy jaunt, thou shalt find what ye want
Where 100 and 96 doth meet in conjunctive combination.
No doubt this will be remembered as the “rich Shepard’s dirt” of this hunt. A quick look at a map will tell you that highways 100 and 96 do not meet and even if they did, it wouldn’t be anywhere near St. Paul. The next question I was hoping people would ask is “Do they meet anywhere else?” If you look “at the end” of each line, you’ll get “tntn”. If you look at a map then of TN for highways 100 and 96, you will see they meet in Fairview, TN. Fairview is a street that borders Newell.
Clue #5
Bid thee search high and low, over hills and under snow
Search every cranny where the lowly worm sneaks.
In the depths shall thee dwell, whilst the heights they do tell
The right park in which ye shalt find the twin peaks.
This clue had mostly general information. “Over hills” refers to the rolling hills of the park. “Cranny” refers to the diamond being hidden in a crevice”. “Where the lowly worm sneaks”, and “in the depths shall thee dwell”, refers to the crevice being on the ground at the very bottom of the tree. The heights that do tell is a vague reference to the smokestack that is visible from the park and the twin peaks refers specifically to the two picnic shelters with pyramid-like tops.
Clue #6
As thou moveth to and fro, inscribing arcs as ye go
Near where a medallion was found in days of yore,
Thou shalt surely know that the place to go
Is to a park in which ye can find a door.
If you are making an arc as you go back and forth, then odds are you are sitting on a swing. Back in 2000, the Winter Carnival Medallion was found near a swing in Newell. Finding a door simply refers to the building on the property and is meant to eliminate other small parks that have no buildings (or doors) at all.
Clue #7
To find thy secret stash, think of a ring of cash
Though thou hath no need to try and step through it
Envision it with thy mind, for though ye be not blind
Thou shalt find thyself unable to see to chew it.
Johnny Cash had a very famous song called “Burning Ring of Fire” which in turn should make you think of a fire ring. There is a fire ring in Newell, but the treasure is not really near there. As for “unable to see to chew it”, if you remove the “c” from “chew it”, that leads you to Hewitt, another street that touches Newell.
Clue #8
Tis surely a curious thing that Americans have no king.
Who shall lead thee in the future is most anyone's guess.
What a crazy condition when there's an open position.
And yet thou must fill one more or perhaps fill one less.
This clue is pretty clearly talking about Presidents for the first three lines. With that in mind, the last line makes you think of President Fillmore. But once you have that, then you have to think of one more and one less, the Presidents before and after Fillmore, Taylor and Pierce. Taylor and the Pierce Butler Route and two more streets that touch on Newell.
Clue #9
Under the national tree is where thou shalt be
If thou wishest to recover thy Lord's lost treasure.
Find thee a gnomon tall, seek where the shadow doth fall
As if to say two hours past high noon were the measure
The national tree is the Oak, of which there are many in Newell, including the tree the treasure is hidden under. A gnomon is the part of a sundial that casts a shadow. The obvious choice for a gnomon in Newell would be the smokestack. If you then look at a map of the area, and draw a line from the smokestack, through Newell Park such that the line would be in the same position as the hour hand would be at 2pm if it were a clock, that line would then go through almost exactly where the treasure is.
Clue #10
Play not the fool, look for the jewel
In a park that fitteth this little rhyme.
At the right plot, thou mightst not see a lot
But ye shall be dry above the water and slime
This clue is just saying to look for a park that rhymes with “jewel” such as, Oh, I don’t know, maybe Newell! And then you’ll want to look at the far end from the parking lot where you can’t really see the parking lot (or not a lot of it anyway).
Clue #11
No sign of the jewel? Then get thee to Newell
Thou hast little time left to fritter.
And if thou pauseth to eat, then find thee a seat
Then search around as far as thou can throw thy litter.
This clue is finally stating to go to Newell and that the treasure is within a litter toss’s distance from a picnic table.
Clue #12
Art thou having displeasure finding thy treasure?
Then thou shalt mark fifty three paces southwest
Starting on ground made holy by the find of John Davoli
And there ye shall find the tree that hath been blessed.
Thou shalt see most stark a split in the bark
Or perchance more like a woodchucks first meal
Down in the shadowy black, deep in a baseline crack
Thou shalt bring forth the jewel to seal thy deal.
This clue starts at the spot where the person who found the Winter Carnival Medallion in 2000 actually found it. It’s a bit west of the bench swing. The directions then lead you to a damaged tree and in a crevice at the very bottom of the tree, the diamond was tucked.
Signal ye the start of fun for ye old Mock Hunt has begun
Thou shalt go out and seek thee the Crown Jewel
Tis hidden in St. Paul, nestled before snow did fall
And before Mother Nature decided to be so cruel
This wintry hunt of 07 may not strike thee as pleasant
But doth it not represent all that hunters stand for?
Perhaps ye can satiate by dwelling instead on 08
Or hunt like a Tiger and ye shall have riches galore.
The first verse is mainly just there to introduce the hunt and tell you what you already know, that it is hidden in St. Paul and that we seem to have a lot of snow. The second verse makes reference to “08” which is meant not as 2008, but rather 1908 which is when Newell Park was founded. It was named after Stanford Newell and Stanford is both an anagram of “stand for” and the college that Tiger Woods went to. Tiger Woods of course comes from “Tiger” and “Woods” also hints at it being hidden in a tree.
Clue #2
Ten times ten, squared, a hundred then
Is how many chains thou shalt need
Core to thy hysteria, use them to cover the area
Ruts in thy thinking are a danger indeed.
A chain is a unit of length and 100 chains would still be a unit of length, but 100 square chains is a measure of area and is equal to 10 acres, the size of Newell Park. Also, if you look at the first word of each line- Ten Is Core Ruts, and say it fast, you get Tennis Courts, referring to the courts that are in the park.
Clue #3
Don't be defensive friend, tis all but a game in the end.
Tis the goal to have wintry fun, not to prove ye be hardcore.
Thou art well likely to howl, if thou likes to stay foul.
But it's not how well ye boast, but how well ye keep score.
This clue has various sports references meant to hint at the various sporting fields in the park which include tennis courts, a basketball court, a volleyball court, and a softball field. It also hints more specifically that you’d be in foul territory of the baseball field. Also, to “keep score”, since a score means 20, if you count every 20th letter through the first three lines, you get “Newell”.
Clue #4
Thy lord doth state, that ye best not wait.
This clue shant lead thee easily to thy destination.
Yet at the end of thy jaunt, thou shalt find what ye want
Where 100 and 96 doth meet in conjunctive combination.
No doubt this will be remembered as the “rich Shepard’s dirt” of this hunt. A quick look at a map will tell you that highways 100 and 96 do not meet and even if they did, it wouldn’t be anywhere near St. Paul. The next question I was hoping people would ask is “Do they meet anywhere else?” If you look “at the end” of each line, you’ll get “tntn”. If you look at a map then of TN for highways 100 and 96, you will see they meet in Fairview, TN. Fairview is a street that borders Newell.
Clue #5
Bid thee search high and low, over hills and under snow
Search every cranny where the lowly worm sneaks.
In the depths shall thee dwell, whilst the heights they do tell
The right park in which ye shalt find the twin peaks.
This clue had mostly general information. “Over hills” refers to the rolling hills of the park. “Cranny” refers to the diamond being hidden in a crevice”. “Where the lowly worm sneaks”, and “in the depths shall thee dwell”, refers to the crevice being on the ground at the very bottom of the tree. The heights that do tell is a vague reference to the smokestack that is visible from the park and the twin peaks refers specifically to the two picnic shelters with pyramid-like tops.
Clue #6
As thou moveth to and fro, inscribing arcs as ye go
Near where a medallion was found in days of yore,
Thou shalt surely know that the place to go
Is to a park in which ye can find a door.
If you are making an arc as you go back and forth, then odds are you are sitting on a swing. Back in 2000, the Winter Carnival Medallion was found near a swing in Newell. Finding a door simply refers to the building on the property and is meant to eliminate other small parks that have no buildings (or doors) at all.
Clue #7
To find thy secret stash, think of a ring of cash
Though thou hath no need to try and step through it
Envision it with thy mind, for though ye be not blind
Thou shalt find thyself unable to see to chew it.
Johnny Cash had a very famous song called “Burning Ring of Fire” which in turn should make you think of a fire ring. There is a fire ring in Newell, but the treasure is not really near there. As for “unable to see to chew it”, if you remove the “c” from “chew it”, that leads you to Hewitt, another street that touches Newell.
Clue #8
Tis surely a curious thing that Americans have no king.
Who shall lead thee in the future is most anyone's guess.
What a crazy condition when there's an open position.
And yet thou must fill one more or perhaps fill one less.
This clue is pretty clearly talking about Presidents for the first three lines. With that in mind, the last line makes you think of President Fillmore. But once you have that, then you have to think of one more and one less, the Presidents before and after Fillmore, Taylor and Pierce. Taylor and the Pierce Butler Route and two more streets that touch on Newell.
Clue #9
Under the national tree is where thou shalt be
If thou wishest to recover thy Lord's lost treasure.
Find thee a gnomon tall, seek where the shadow doth fall
As if to say two hours past high noon were the measure
The national tree is the Oak, of which there are many in Newell, including the tree the treasure is hidden under. A gnomon is the part of a sundial that casts a shadow. The obvious choice for a gnomon in Newell would be the smokestack. If you then look at a map of the area, and draw a line from the smokestack, through Newell Park such that the line would be in the same position as the hour hand would be at 2pm if it were a clock, that line would then go through almost exactly where the treasure is.
Clue #10
Play not the fool, look for the jewel
In a park that fitteth this little rhyme.
At the right plot, thou mightst not see a lot
But ye shall be dry above the water and slime
This clue is just saying to look for a park that rhymes with “jewel” such as, Oh, I don’t know, maybe Newell! And then you’ll want to look at the far end from the parking lot where you can’t really see the parking lot (or not a lot of it anyway).
Clue #11
No sign of the jewel? Then get thee to Newell
Thou hast little time left to fritter.
And if thou pauseth to eat, then find thee a seat
Then search around as far as thou can throw thy litter.
This clue is finally stating to go to Newell and that the treasure is within a litter toss’s distance from a picnic table.
Clue #12
Art thou having displeasure finding thy treasure?
Then thou shalt mark fifty three paces southwest
Starting on ground made holy by the find of John Davoli
And there ye shall find the tree that hath been blessed.
Thou shalt see most stark a split in the bark
Or perchance more like a woodchucks first meal
Down in the shadowy black, deep in a baseline crack
Thou shalt bring forth the jewel to seal thy deal.
This clue starts at the spot where the person who found the Winter Carnival Medallion in 2000 actually found it. It’s a bit west of the bench swing. The directions then lead you to a damaged tree and in a crevice at the very bottom of the tree, the diamond was tucked.
they could have changed addresses over the years - someone could check through google earth I suppose if they really wanted to.
I didnt get my acreage from a web-site but from some info from the parks and rec files donated a while back- I didnt even pull the Mounds file thats just from a parks listing - 100 sounds more acurrate though when thinking about the park as a long stretch- maybe the acreage I have is from before johnson parkway or housing took some of it or before it was merged with battle creek-mounds regional -I have no idea
confused on the white house thing
supposed assession years
swede hollow in 1915
college in 1907
newell in 1908
palace 1906-1909
Horton 1907
Cherokee - 1903-1916
I don't have a date on Boyd but the Cathedral near by was built by 1915
"Is to a park in which ye can find a door."
Best guess I'm making is it's in Como. But please, feel free to shoot my theory down.
and thats a hint
heading out there this afternoon instead of this morning
sarah is taking her 1st behind the wheel course right now- gotta hit the library to pick up some books on R. Frost and then out to the park.
If you call me about my park I'm gonna haveta kill ya - I need to walk it and get the caches that are in it first -than I'll tell yah where I am -
Good Luck out there-
but close enough to one of my favorites
and I'm glad to get the opportunity to hunt it once again
If it hasn't been found by Sunday, we'll be back out looking.
In the time between - good luck to anyone hunting!
we want clue!
we want clue!
I hope he's okay.
Maybe he has amnesia and forgot about the hunt?
Maybe that rabbit met up with Elmer Fudd?
Maybe he forgot to tell us he'd be late tonight? (See amnesia)
To find thy secret stash, think of a ring of cash
Though thou hath no need to try and step through it
Envision it with thy mind, for though ye be not blind
Thou shalt find thyself unable to see to chew it.
And the previous clues:
Clue #6
As thou moveth to and fro, inscribing arcs as ye go
Near where a medallion was found in days of yore,
Thou shalt surely know that the place to go
Is to a park in which ye can find a door.
Clue #5
Bid thee search high and low, over hills and under snow
Search every cranny where the lowly worm sneaks.
In the depths shall thee dwell, whilst the heights they do tell
The right park in which ye shalt find the twin peaks.
Clue #4
Thy lord doth state, that ye best not wait.
This clue shant lead thee easily to thy destination.
Yet at the end of thy jaunt, thou shalt find what ye want
Where 100 and 96 doth meet in conjunctive combination.
Clue #3
Don't be defensive friend, tis all but a game in the end.
Tis the goal to have wintry fun, not to prove ye be hardcore.
Thou art well likely to howl, if thou likes to stay foul.
But it's not how well ye boast, but how well ye keep score.
Clue #2
Ten times ten, squared, a hundred then
Is how many chains thou shalt need
Core to thy hysteria, use them to cover the area
Ruts in thy thinking are a danger indeed.
Clue #1
Signal ye the start of fun for ye old Mock Hunt has begun
Thou shalt go out and seek thee the Crown Jewel
Tis hidden in St. Paul, nestled before snow did fall
And before Mother Nature decided to be so cruel
This wintry hunt of 07 may not strike thee as pleasant
But doth it not represent all that hunters stand for?
Perhaps ye can satiate by dwelling instead on 08
Or hunt like a Tiger and ye shall have riches galore.
Thanks rabbit.
HALF NOTE
The ring of cash is music that matters
Jawahar Wattal
Money, money, money
Must be funny
In the rich man's world.
Money, money, money
Always sunny
In the rich man's world.
Aha aha
All the things I could do
If I had a little money
It's a rich man's world.
It's a rich man's world.
THIS ABBA song, which went on to become one of the biggest hits of all times, is an apt descriptor of the phase the Indian music industry is passing through at present. Ironically enough, the only thing that is music to the industry's ear these days is the ring of the cash registers.
Cwazy wabbit.
Or silver
Or brass
Or copper
Or nickle
And why would you chew it?
Don't ask me how the "chew it" fits in there...I didn't get that far yet :chagrin:
It's a ball diamond that is within the park, but not in view of the Crown Jewel.
there. that's the most sense I can make out of this...
Main Entry: chew
Part of Speech: verb 1
Definition: grind
Synonyms: bite, champ, chaw, chomp, crunch, dispatch, feast upon, gnaw, gulp, gum, manducate, masticate, munch, nibble, rend, ruminate
Source: Roget's New Millennium™ Thesaurus, First Edition (v 1.3.1)
Copyright © 2007 by Lexico Publishing Group, LLC. All rights reserved.
Roget's New Millennium™ Thesaurus - Cite This Source
Main Entry: chew
Part of Speech: verb 2
Definition: think about
Synonyms: consider, deliberate, meditate, mull, mull over, muse on, ponder, reflect upon, ruminate, weigh
Antonyms: dismiss, forget, ignore
Source: Roget's New Millennium™ Thesaurus, First Edition (v 1.3.1)
Copyright © 2007 by Lexico Publishing Group, LLC. All rights reserved.
Roget's New Millennium™ Thesaurus - Cite This Source
Main Entry: chew out
Part of Speech: verb
Definition: scold
Synonyms: bawl out, carpet*, criticize, jaw, revile, tell off, tongue-lash*, vituperate, wig, yell at
Antonyms: compliment, flatter, praise
Source: Roget's New Millennium™ Thesaurus, First Edition (v 1.3.1)
Copyright © 2007 by Lexico Publishing Group, LLC. All rights reserved.
Main Entry: chew the cud
Part of Speech: verb
Definition: to ruminate
Synonyms: chew the fat, converse, digest, meditate, mull something over, muse, ponder over, ruminate, think about, think over
Source: Roget's New Millennium™ Thesaurus, First Edition (v 1.3.1)
Copyright © 2007 by Lexico Publishing Group, LLC. All rights reserved.
Pagination