Welcome to the Letterboxing Webpage
of Dagonell the Pirate
So, What's Letterboxing?
Letterboxing began in 1854 in Dartmouth, England when James Perrott left his
calling card in a bottle in a remote corner of Dartmouth Park and challenged
his friends to find it and leave their cards there as well. In April 1998,
Smithsonian magazine published a brief one-page article about letterboxing.
Several people started hiding boxes for their friends to find. An Eastern
Mountain Sports store in Waterford Connecticut started listing the letterboxes
hidden by their customers in Connecticut and Rhode Island. American
Letterboxing took off from there.
Letterboxing of North America (LBNA) and
Atlas Quest
list over 10,000 sets of letterbox clues on their web sites.
There are over 50 letterboxes currently hidden in Western New York. To get
started, go to webpage listed above, and click on the appropriate links
for your area. Find the letterbox that's closest to you and print out its
clues. Solving the clues may involve working out puzzles with pencil and
paper, or learning how to use a map and compass. When you think you have it
solved, go hiking.
You will need to bring with you a blank book, a rubber stamp and an inkpad.
Most letterboxers adopt a 'trail name' and carve their own stamp from craft
materials to match it. My trail name is
Dagonell the Pirate, hence the pirate theme to this webpage.
When you find the letterbox, it will be a plastic food storage container with
sealed baggies inside containing another rubber stamp and another blank book.
Stamp your stamp into its blank book so the letterbox has a record of all of
its finders. Stamp its stamp into your blank book so you have a record of all
the letterboxes you've found. Letterboxes are generally hidden along scenic
trails. You may want to bring a camera or a bird identification book as well.
Letterboxing Websites
Letterboxing North America
-- The LBNA homepage
Atlas Quest
-- A Useful Database for Letterboxers
Pete and Wanda's Hitchhiker List
-- Another Useful Database for Letterboxers
Letterboxes I've Planted
Seaway Trail
Little Fishie
-- Lake Erie State Park
[confirmed missing!]
Little Bluebird
-- Roger Tory Peterson Institute
[confirmed missing!]
True Blue Rose
-- Brant Park
Seaway Trail Hiker
-- Hitchhiker
Miscellaneous
Every Day is Earth Day
-- Buffalo's South Park Botanical Gardens
[reported missing, not confirmed]
Lobo the Hobo
-- East Aurora
Knight's Tour
-- Chautauqua County
[reported replaced, not confirmed]
Yo Ho Ho!
-- Personal Traveller
Pieces of Eight
-- Personal Traveller
Life is Like a Box of Chocolates
-- Personal Traveller
Chautauqua Railroad
The Chautauqua Railroad Letterbox Series
-- Chautauqua County
Letterboxes I've Adopted
In Search of Charles Burchfield
R.I.P.
MoNY #1 The Cemetary Dog
R.I.P.
(Vandalized)
MoNY #5 The Phantom Cat
R.I.P.
(Replacement)
Buffalo Wings
-- Amherst, NY
Sinking Ponds
-- East Aurora, NY
[reported missing, not confirmed]
The Eternal Flame
-- Orchard Park, NY
Dunkirk View
-- Luensman Park
[reported missing, not confirmed]
Lake Erie Picnic
-- Luensman Park
[reported missing, not confirmed]
Luensman Overlook
-- Luensman Park
Letterboxes I've Found
Dagonell's Logbook on
AtlasQuest
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