Geocaching in and around Walton

This geocache can be found near a coastal dune lake at Topsail Hill Preserve State Park. Lori Ceier/Walton Outdoors
This geocache can be found near a coastal dune lake at Topsail Hill Preserve State Park. Lori Ceier/Walton Outdoors

Hundreds of hidden treasures can be found in North and South Walton

If you have a Global Positioning System (GPS) enabled device and a little bit of imagination, you don’t need to go far to find hours of great family fun in Walton County. The sport of geocaching has proven itself to be a popular pastime with many, as several hundred treasures are hidden throughout the county.

Geocaching is an outdoor treasure hunting sport in which participants use a GPS to hide and seek containers, called geocaches or caches. A cache is a small waterproof container that stores a logbook and often a trinket. Geocachers (participants) enter their nickname into the logbook and trade the trinket with another of equal or greater value.

Gnomes "protect" a geocache inside of a tree along the Florida Trail near Econfina Creek. Lori Ceier/Walton Outdoors
Gnomes “protect” a geocache inside of a tree along the Florida Trail near Econfina Creek. Lori Ceier/Walton Outdoors

A geocacher finds clues for a search on websites such as www.geocaching.com. Enter your zip code and find posts with clues and coordinates for area hunts. Most all clues give the basic location of a cache along with an additional hint to decipher or perhaps a bit of history or tale about the location. The cache is typically close to the coordinates, however may be cleverly tucked inside of a tree or under a log. The cache containers come in various sizes ranging from a 35 mm film canister to a 5-gallon bucket.

On the geocaching.com website, South Walton has more than 300 caches including area State Parks, the Point Washington State Forest and even several local restaurants. North Walton boasts even more locations from Gaskin to Freeport. Old cemeteries, Lake DeFuniak, a train car are just to name a few scattered across the northern part of Walton. One cache clue at Morrison Springs requires scuba gear to access.

Serious geocachers acquire trackable coins or travel bugs for exchanging in caches. These items can be tracked around the globe from the unique number stamped on it. The item becomes a hitchhiker of sorts that is carried from cache to cache (or person to person) in the real world, and you can follow its progress online. These coins and travel bugs can be purchased online at websites such as cacheboxstore.com.

Learn while you geocache
Aaron Bessant Park in Panama City Beach offers an educational ecocaching trail. The ecocaching trail is like geocaching, however, instead of finding hidden cache with a GPS you will find 6 plants and trees that are located in the park.

This Coontie (Zamia floridana) was a dominant form of flora during the age of dinosaurs, Mesozoic Era 245 million years ago. Once this plant covered much of Florida, but humans in the 1800s used its root as a food source for starch and decimated the population. Coontie is now protected from collection and has made a come back. This is good news for the rare Atala butterfly which coontie is an obligate host plant for the Atala caterpillar. Photo courtesy Dale Colby, Parks Resource Officer, Panama City Beach Parks & Recreation Dept.

A printed hand out can be picked up at the park office with coordinates and photos describing the park’s native plants.
::MAP::

Geocaching is a fun family oriented sport. Head out and explore the great outdoors with your GPS. You never know what you might find. For more information, go to geocaching.com.