Two successive injuries have prevented me from setting the Buster Spring Cache, until now. I rated it a 4/4, because there is no regular trail to the cache. I tried more than 6 approaches, claiming, ³There must be an easier way.² each time. Consequently, you may find that you must navigate to the cache nearly 100%. Finally, I am satisfied that I have found the easiest way. The Catalina State Park rangers werenıt much help, as they claimed the original ranch owner (Romero) ran a still at the spring, and didnıt leave any trails for the revenuers to follow. But there are vestiges of a trail much of the way. I have left maps in the cache that show the route back to the beginning, so that you might find an easier way down if you took one of the harder ways up. The starting point is at the trailhead, which is at the east end of the road into Catalina State Park. All but one of my approaches were accessible from that point, and the easiest route is also. It took me 2 hours 20 minutes to climb to the cache, making notes, and checking navigation. The return was 1 hour and 40 minutes. The cache is less than 2 miles from the trailhead, but the total hiking distance will be a little more. There is an elevation difference of a little less than 1500 feet. The only impoundment at the spring is a small USFS wildlife reservoir, and the cache is located 8 meters east of that concrete ³pool,² under a rock ledge, behind a rusted 3 gallon can filled with dirt. There are a number of other ³artifacts² at the spring, which we would call litter, but the park rangers indicated to me that the Forest Service did not want anyone cleaning up the place. Now to get the cache approved... -Jim