Find A Stamp - Stamping Your Logbook
Nicely done!
Looks good! The next step is to sign the letterbox logbook. Click on your logbook to put it away and go to the virtual logbook of the box.
Clues
Letterboxing began in Dartmoor, England, in 1854, when a guide named James Perrott left his calling card in a bottle at Cranmere Pool. To begin, pretend you’re James Perrott leading a group of hikers through the moors and find the trailhead at the easternmost point in the parking lot. Follow the trail until you come to a T intersection. Turn your compass South and continue on the trail marked with blue blazes.
The original Cranmere Pool calling card bottle was later replaced with a tin box, and later, a notebook was added for visitors to sign. Eventually, a rubber stamp was added and it became what we now know of as a traditional letterbox. Pass a vernal pool on your left and a glacial erratic on your right. When you reach a Y intersection, go west 55 steps to a snag on your left. Look behind the snag for a triple-trunked tree. Behind this tree you’ll see the telltale signs of the letterbox: Cranmere Pool. Please use green ink. Please re-hide well!