You paint smooth rocks and hide them in plain site for someone else to find. The rocks can have pictures or quotes on them. The person who finds the rock is suppose to take it and rehide it for someone else to find. It is becoming very popular in North Carolina.
You paint smooth rocks and hide them in plain site for someone else to find. The rocks can have pictures or quotes on them. The person who finds the rock is suppose to take it and rehide it for someone else to find. It is becoming very popular in North Carolina.
Sounds a lot like geocaching. Something that Disney doesn't really permit. I imagine, now that that it's been "outed" on the boards, rocks may disappear.
The re-hide isn't part of it here. Rather the rocks have a hashtag of the local group so you post a pic to that page. What you do with it is up to you.
But the key is that you're doing it on public property, not private. You wouldn't hide a rock at the grocery store, so don't hide one at Disney.
My daughter has left quarters in various locations for her friends to find with clues on their next visit. We prefer to take pictures of things at Disney (lots of locations and theming that are not easy to identify) and send them out to family members who did not come with us. It becomes quite a competition to be the first to respond with the correct answer.
When my sister and my nieces stayed at the Beach Club a few weeks before we arrived, they hid (just a few) little rubber bouncing balls around the resort for us to find- they gave us clues. It was fun! Like they left a piece of them behind. We found them all!
The painted message rocks are trending in my corner of New England. I've seen them at the beach, and yes, even the village post office. The rocks I've stumbled upon have an uplifting message, and some are little works of art. I would not go on a rock hunt at Disney, I'm too busy hunting for my favorite snacks; Mickey bar, dole whip float, cinnamon bun, citrus swirl, cream cheese pretzel, popcorn, etc , etc, etc.
The re-hide isn't part of it here. Rather the rocks have a hashtag of the local group so you post a pic to that page. What you do with it is up to you.
But the key is that you're doing it on public property, not private. You wouldn't hide a rock at the grocery store, so don't hide one at Disney.
You paint smooth rocks and hide them in plain site for someone else to find. The rocks can have pictures or quotes on them. The person who finds the rock is suppose to take it and rehide it for someone else to find. It is becoming very popular in North Carolina.