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Did you have pet rocks as a kid?
Believe it or not, painted rocks are the must-have item for children these school holidays.
Tas Rocks is part of an international phenomenon in which people decorate rocks and hide them in public parks and spaces.
Kids then look for them and rehide them in a new spot to keep the game going.
The Tasmanian group was set up by Greta John as a way of dealing with the pain of losing her father.
"I actually started it in late May after the tragic murder of my father," Ms John said.
"I was at a real loss, feeling very upset about everything; all my family are in South Africa.
"Being so low I thought I really needed to do something for people and also for myself to pick myself back up."
Ms John had come across WA Rocks on social media and the idea appealed to her as something simple families could do together.
The way it works is people decorate rocks, take a photo of them and alert a dedicated Facebook group that the rocks have been "dropped" in a location.
The hunt is then on, photos of the finds are taken, and then the rocks are dropped elsewhere for others to find.
Kaz Whyte helps Ms John run the Tas Rocks Facebook group, with the pair screening and approving each post and member request, which can take up hours a day.
"It does take up a lot of our time," Ms Whyte said.
"We've got five kids between us and I work as a teacher and Greta's studying business."
The Facebook group has grown to more than 15,000 in five months.
"It's a very busy job," Ms John said.
"We have to be very careful of who we approve, we do actually screen members because we're a child-friendly group.
"We do get a lot of trolls, we do get people trying to cause trouble in the group and destabilise the group.
"[But] what really motivates me and what excites me about Tas Rocks is we get quite a lot of messages saying, 'thank you, you don't realise how much good you're doing for us personally'."
Ms Whyte said seeing her kids enjoy decorating and hiding rocks and spreading that joy through social media made the hours of admin work worthwhile.
"We're not in it for recognition," she said.
"We're just in it to just facilitate something for families to have fun, get outside, get off devices and explore different parks.
"Sometimes my kids and I will hit up six or seven parks on a weekend now looking for rocks and dropping rocks. It's just amazing."
Details and tips on how to play the Tas Rocks game are on Facebook.
Topics: family-and-children, craft, social-media, human-interest, hobart-7000