Exploring Life

Geocaching, geocoins and the many roads of life.

This is made up of stories from my caching and my reviewing.  It is a collection of those along with comments and thoughts.  Photos, and maps of some adventures and lists of some of the oldest caches.

Android App waiting almost over.

I have been waiting anxiously for a few months for the arrival of the android forum.  I tried to get on the beta test group but they were full by the time I bought my android phone (an HTC Hero from Sprint). 

Well I volunteered with Skippermark to help moderate the Android forums on Geocaching.com.  Unfortunately there has not been any good news.  Everyone just grumbles and waits.

Well Bryan announced last Friday that they are done testing and barring some major problem that pops up it should be released this week.  Jeremy had said a while ago to expect the pricing to be the same as the iphone 9.99.  They have not said so but I would expect hobbled free apps.

On the moderating side I am expecting to stop getting the "when is it going to some out" thread with those that complain about the app.  Jeremy has said it will not arrive with all the abilities of the iphone app, but they plan on adding them in the future.

Diamonds, Events, and Caches

Caching run

There has been a bit of news this week, and a bit of fun.

I was busy most of the week.  Scouts, church activities, and family took up most of my free evenings that I had.  Things were going pretty well, even though they were very hectic.

Then Thursday night my family was off playing when I got off work.

Jacob and I decided to head out.  With no particular place in mind, and with no specific goal.  We headed up spanish fork canyon.  Jacob wanted to look for a benchmark that someone had supposedly found and yet no one else could. 

We were digging through the grass looking for a benchmark that was on the front steps of an old building that was torn down.  (Yes we pretty much guessed it was not there and the person logged it anyway, but we wanted to check.)

We dug through the bushes when we heard a voice call out.  Dorkteam6 was on his way back from central Utah and just happened to see Jacobs jeep on the side of the road. 

Well we decided to head up Diamond Fork Canyon. Jacob had a cache that he wanted to place.  We did get to that location and decided to follow the road up.    So up we went.  Higher and higher up the hill.  I was impressed with how high it actually went.  I have not been on  many roads that gain that much altitude that fast.

Well all the way up we knew we were going to hide a cache or two.  So much of the discussion was where, and what to name them.

Dorkteam6 at his finest. He does look better with a mask.We decided to place thee. I wanted to have a clue in each one that leads to a final, but they wanted to part of it.  That was just as well we did not have many containers of size.  And hiding a micro in the woods seems counterproductive.

We ended up with a name.  Damn Barking Spiders.  It was tricky and there was a lot of discussion on route.  But that was the only thing that we could agree on.  And only because we were hearing them in our travels.  So it seemed to fit .

Events

Fridat was the events.  I got off a little early and headed over the the hot dog event.  There were a few that were still there hanging around and talking.  I talked for a while before heading off home to gather things for the campout.  I had decided not to campout but I had decided to cook while I was there.

The group on the hike.. at least the start.

I grabbed everything too make a few cobblers (Peach and a Raspberry).  Everyone asks for peach, but after I make the raspberry no one finishes the peach (it happened again here).  We had a pretty good crowd that wandered in and out of the event most of the evening.  From the new cacher and his mom (he was 9 if i remember right) to the older of us that still make it out.

The Route up.I stayed for quite a while.  A number of people had scheduled campsites and were staying over.  Slowly they filtered off as we discussed cacheing and the different people, caches, and things that everyone had seen or done.

They made fun of me. I am getting used to it.  More than I used to. Slowly developing a thicker skin about it all.  I had another reviewer state that he though some gave up because they could not develop a thick skin and toss aside all the garbage that is tossed at them, or not able to filter out the attacks from the honest critique. Hopefully I am gbetting better.

The next morning was the hike to Maple Mountain.  I knew that I was not going to make it all the way.  It was a given already.  I knew time wise that I was not going to get that far before I had to be home.

In order to claim the hike you had to go 1/4 mile up the trail and get to the trailhead.  Well we had a group of about 12 that made it to the trailhead.  We talked for a bit and six of us started the hike up the mountain. LV2WV, the new cacher (9 years old) and his mother, and DrJay and I. 

We worked our way up the mountain, going slow helping everyone find caches that needed them, and I placed one in a stretch that seemed very empty.  Eventually Mr lv2wv stopped.  They had been told it was a easy hike, (it was not).  Though it was not very long it is rocky, uneven and really steep in a number of spots.An our new cacher and his mom stopped as well.

So then there were three.

 

Dr Jay in all his glory.We continued up the trail working our way through the heavy undergrowth.  It gets to about four feet high and fills the trail. so we had to wade, and snake our way through.

We grabbed a few caches and a challenge cache and Mrs. LV2WV headed back down to get her husband, and head down the mountain.

DrJay and I continued on. Braving the heavy growth, flies, steep hills, rocks, stinging nettle, and any other number of hardships until we found his cache half way to the peak.

At that point we turned and headed back down the mountain.  I would have gone up a little higher, but another steep spot chased me back.

On the way down we met goblincamper2004.  We had not realized that he was heading up as well, and he was working up to a few of the caches that were on the way up.  We pointed out that the next 1-2 were not very tricky to get to and he continued up while we headed down.

I have been up here a few times, and ruined a pair of boots, and a pair of sneakers.  Well add another pair of sneakers to this trail.  The holes finally got big enough, and a stitching blew that I had to go get another pair.

This has always been a fun hike, wether I had scouts, JedimasterAshlie, or DrJay and others this year. 

Thanks everyone for helping me enjoy myself.  I felt really good upon getting home.  I did go to bed early, and now my legs are stiff, but I still feel good and had a good time.

Addition of Stats Page

For those of you who are stats Junkies I added the stats for Utah, and for myself.  They are under the Title Navigation on the column to the left.  These will give you an idea of  how things are changing for me and the state. Or just be a great bunch of stats to pass the time staring at.

A few notes from the Utah Stats Section

  • Increase of 3,600 active caches in the last 12 months.
  • Events are averaging +10 from a year ago
  • Wherigo, Earthcaches, are pretty much unchanged
  • Webcams -1
  • Virtuals -9
  • Multis +10%
  • Puzzles +14%
  • Letterboxes are +45%

A few notes from my stats

  • I am publishing 21 per day this year. Last year I was around 12 per day. 
  • I have unarchived a lot of caches this year.

August and September were  my heaviest months last year. Perhaps in July people were busy but not placing.

The archived # includes unpublished as well.

 

Upcoming events

I have been looking forward to two events all year.  I was afraid with them being back to back that I was not going to make it. But it looks like I will.  They are some of the longer running events in Utah.

The Maple Mountain Hike has been held 5 times.  The first in 2002.  Jac0b has ran it 4 years straight since 2007.  That one is saturday morning.

The night before is the Whiting Campground Event.  This one has been held for the last 4 years as well.  In conjunction with the hike the next day.

The granddaddy of them all is the Potters Ponds Event. This is the 8th time this event has been held. Bunkerdave has hosted most of them.  This is a few feet away from the first cache placed in Utah.  The first Potters Ponds event was the first overnight camping event. 

there are a few others coming up the next few weekends.

Salt Lake Valley has the Splash Mob. This is his water park, water fight.  that is now twice a year.  So if you are in the area you should go.

 

The Weekend

This last week I headed south to my families stomping grounds, Fishlake.  My grandparents had a cabin here long ago, and it was time for our annual family reunion. 

Not much happened of interest.  I wanted to take a hike around the lake but did not have the chance.  I did look for a few caches. I had pretty mixed luck that day about 50-50  but I did get the final info for a Earthcache I was working on.  I have a few more but I have to get permission from the Forest Service.  I just need to stop by the office in Spanish Fork and talk to them about it before I actually finalize it.  That has always been the biggest pain getting the permission part done.

There were a ton of caches listed this weekend.  I did a few from my phone.  I have to be a little selective.  If there appears to be problem then I have to wait and do it at home.  It takes far to long to write the notes on my phone. 

I did get to place about 6 caches in all. A few I made members only.  Mostly because I feel like they might vanish, so that might help them stay put just a little bit more.  I was shocked at the number of caches that are in that area that are gone.  It appears that a number of cachers have archived their caches that used to be in the area.  I used to have a number of caches in Richfield, and I had about 1/3 now I have about all of them, and i archived a few that have gone away.

I have tried to figure out why some areas are so successful with the number of cachers.  I think each area needs 2-3 people that actively place caches. or people find all in their neighborhood and they give up.  Vernal, St George, Weber County, Utah County, all seem to have so many caches being placed that it keeps people going.  Other places like Davis, and Salt Lake counties, seem to have enough cachers that they keep people going.  They get enough interest to travel to look for caches.

 

 

On another note, Geocaching Podcast mentioned the Kokapelli in southern Utah.  Billion put in a ton of work on those caches, and getting the it up.  What is really amazing is that he had to plan the caches before going and haul them all there.  Regardless of wether it was a hard place to get to or not.  Congrats Billion.

So many caches.. so little time.... talk to you later.

 

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