The 24th of May is National Scavenger Hunt Day, an annual observance of searching for a list of items or deciphering a series of clues to “win” the game. Whether you’re planning a scavenger search for random items with your friends in a new city or a scavenger hunt for your children in the backyard, both the planner and the participants are likely to have a good time. Did you know that treasure searches can be instructive?
The background of National Scavenger Hunt Day
Elsa Maxwell is credited with the invention and popularisation of the scavenger search in the 1930s, although no one knows the true origin of the first scavenger hunts, which evolved from folk games. Elsa Maxwell, an American author, gossip columnist, actress, songwriter, screenwriter, and radio personality dubbed “the hostess with the mostess,” enjoyed hosting lavish and entertaining parties for New York’s celebrities, political figures, and elite. She frequently organised scavenger expeditions for the guests, which involved searching the city for items on a list. The players were not permitted to purchase the items, but must instead beg, barter, or work for them. Occasionally, scavenger quests included riddles or ‘clues’ on each item, making the game more challenging. The winning team was the one with the most items or the first to complete the list.
It is a popular game today, particularly among children during holidays such as Easter, Christmas, and Halloween, as well as at birthday celebrations. Adults could set up a complex maze of clues and items for their children to discover, which would keep them occupied for hours. At some universities, fraternities and sororities may include a scavenger search as part of a series of challenges for prospective new members, or “pledges.” The activities are an excellent way to promote healthy competition, discover new places, encourage physical activity, and spark the imagination of all participants. Adults and children can both enjoy playing scavenger hunt activities. The activities are entertaining for anyone with an open mind and a childlike sense of play and curiosity.
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5 FACTS ABOUT SCAVENGER HUNTS
In 2009, Levi’s buried $100,000 “somewhere in America” and presented a six-week scavenger search titled “Go Forth” in which objects were hidden in 13 locations across the country and challenges were to be completed.
The largest media scavenger search, according to Guinness World Records, was the “Greatest International Scavenger Hunt The World Has Ever Seen,” or “GISHWHES,” held in 2011 by 14,580 participants and organised by an American named Misha Collins.
Although most scavenger hunts do not involve dead animals, the term is appropriate because of the adrenaline rush that comes with being a scavenger and competing with others.
Each May since 1987, teams representing each University of Chicago dorm disperse across the city and beyond in an endeavour to collect as many items as possible from each year’s list, which must first be discovered.
In 2010, billionaire Forrest Fenn buried a treasure chest full of treasure somewhere between Santa Fe, New Mexico, and the Canadian border. He published a poem hinting at the location of the treasure, and tens of thousands of people have attempted to locate it, but it has not yet been found.
NATIONAL SCAVENGER HUNT DAY DATES
Year | Date | Day |
---|---|---|
2023 | May 24 | Wednesday |
2024 | May 24 | Friday |
2025 | May 24 | Saturday |
2026 | May 24 | Sunday |
2027 | May 24 | Monday |