Washington Treasure Hunt
Scavenger Hunt Anywhere can help organize one or more successful Washington treasure hunts for your company. When you contact us, we will help you envision your event and help you plan a memorable team building corporate treasure hunt or scavenger hunt. Our clients often ask us about the difference between treasure hunts and scavenger hunts. The difference is as follows: Our Washington corporate treasure hunts are comprised of a number of clues that lead teams along a set route, past various checkpoints where they collect additional clues which guide teams toward their final destination. Because we don't want to exclude group members that may be less physically fit than others, we ensure that the activity is designed such that the team with the best planning and problem-solving skills will win, rather than the fastest team. As a result our Washington corporate treasure hunts are less "race-like", so that everyone has an equal chance of winning. By comparison, our scavenger hunts are based on lists of information and objects to be collected. The tasks are presented in no particular order which means that teams set their own routes and prioritize the tasks that they will try to complete in the allotted time. When we refer to our programs, we call them "scavenger hunts". They inherently have some characteristics of Washington corporate treasure hunts and if you like the idea of a treasure hunt better, then please let us know and we will show you how your program can be designed in a way that best exactly meets your needs. Here are some more details about our Washington treasure hunts: What better way to experience Washington, D.C. than a scavenger hunt along the National Mall! The Mall is replete with monuments, sculptures, fountains, galleries and museums. Your group will learn more about the history of this great country as the scavenger hunt leads them to the Lincoln Memorial, the Washington Monument, the Smithsonian, the National Gallery of Art, the National Archives, the Holocaust Museum, the Botanic Gardens and the White House, just to name a few. |
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