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Our club's initial community service project was building a Little Free Library in Jacksonville, Oregon.  Proposed and built by Past President Bruce Garrett when the Jacksonville public library was closing due to a funding shortage.  The eClub's Little Free Library has added geocaching to its offerings.  The family next door took up geocaching as a family activity.  Their son wanted a geocache for a birthday present.  One thing thing lead to another and now the Little Free Library is also a geocache.  Follow the clues to solve the mystery of the hidden key that opens a treasure box.

 

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LFL 2014 0816 7A  LFL 2014 0816 32A

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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  To this day, club members delight in encountering these little community gems during their travels!

 

THE FOUNDER OF THE LITTLE FREE LIBRARY HAS DIED

LFLfounderYou may have seen them: Quaint, sturdily built wooden boxes shaped like houses, stuffed with esoteric books about birding and worn novels by Danielle Steel. Todd Bol, the founder who started the vast network of these tiny, volunteer-built book swap boxes, passed away yesterday (Oct. 18).

Bol built the first such box on his property in Hudson, Wisconsin in 2009 and hoped someday there might be 2,000 such boxes installed in the US. Today there are more than 75,000 in 88 countries. He started the nonprofit Little Free Library, which builds and sells boxes to hold books for exchange, provides resources and books to DIY library-builders, and promotes literacy programs. 

Bol was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in early October and died at 62 years old.“We are a ‘book family,’ and we always have a stack of books to pass along,” writes Brett Barry, an audio producer who built one library from reclaimed building supplies in the Catskills region of New York in 2015, in an email to Quartz. His daughter helped paint it. “It’s always fun to see a car pull to the side of the road to discover the library and browse the books inside,” he adds. Seeing—if not actually using—the Little Free Library is a romantic reminder of the simple pleasure of swapping a book with a stranger. A cross between world-weary pages stacked on a shelf in a hostel, and the little thrill of realizing a book you want to read is available for free, it’s a physical manifestation of book-loving neighborliness. The notebooks kept in some libraries—catalogs of people’s borrowings and their notes of enthusiasm—remind one of the pencil-scribbled smiley faces in hiking trail register books, physical mementos of transience and global movement.

Read more about Little Free Libraries...