See also: en cache hoard stage ((n.)) (def. 4)
- Such caches may be in the form of holes in the ground, ice, or snow, marked or protected by cairns; they may be enclosed platforms set high in trees or merely the upper fork of a tree; or they may be well-built hutch-like contrivances raised off the ground on posts.
- 1578  (1889)  [Going on shoare [we] found where the people of the Countrie had bene, and had hid their prouision in great heapes of stones, being both fleshe and fishe, which they had killed.]
- 1797  (1964)  [He] had a large Cash of Provisions at . . . that river. . . .
- 1808  (1889)  Here we put three bales of salmon into cache and carried the rest through a very rugged country.
- 1824  (1955)  Here we see a specimine of a Thloadinni cache made in one of the Pine Trees. . . .
- 1898  (1952)  At the mouth of the "Pelly" . . . were hundreds of men building "Caches" up on the trees, to store their outfits while they went up river prospecting.
- 1908  [The Eskimos] always made . . . provision for their return . . . by placing in one or more caches (built on and formed of large blocks of thick ice, well protected from wolves or wolverines. . . .
- 1929  The only circumstances in which they [grizzlies] will attack is when they have a dead animal "in cache". . . .
- 1963  The Mounties established a cache at Bernard Harbor for their colleagues on the trail from Coppermine. . . .
3 n. a supply of provisions, gasoline, and equipment stockpiled for future use.
See also: gas cache
- 1921  Two or three times in the winter he will be visited by bands of hungry Siwash, who . . . will beg everything he has and eat him out of cache and cabin.
- 1937  Beyond them on shore a cache of gasolene (two hundred barrels) assures them of much winter flying.
- 1966  . . . Rod Henderson . . . established the smaller caches [on Baffin I.] with the ski-wheel equipped Cessna 185. . . .
4 n. a hut, tent, lean-to or other structure used as a storehouse.