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.

Scouting Geocoins

Here are the last colors of coins we will have.

There are a limited number available this month with more coming in 30 days.  (many on this batch will be reserved for the scout jamboree in three weeks.

Testing coordinates

Once and a while a cacher comes to me with coordinates that they would like me to check.  My process is to create a cache pages and test those coordinates.  Quite often i will get a number of those every day.

Unfortunately I am getting really busy.  Actually the entire state is getting really busy with new caches.  Sadly that means that I have been getting behind.  If last year is similar things start slowing down in the next few months. As winter kicks in. 

So if you are needing coordinates checked please create your cache page.  Label it clearly and/or place a note in the description saying that you are doing so.  Then your page is partially created, and i can quickly check the location.   This will save me a lot of time, and hopefully speed up the process.  This has been proving to be the most time consuming thing that I do, and hopefully this can solve that.

Difficulty/Terrain

How do we rate?  Though there is an ideas out there on how to rate them  I thought that I would take a moment and give my opinions and a few things that we look for.

Ultimately it is up to you to rate you caches.  It is your responsibility to determine how difficult your cache is and the terrain that it is in. Everyone will have different ideas, and new people in the hobby will find some caches far harder than someone who has played for some time.

Difficulty

  1. Plain Site.  This to me is something like a box sitting on your porch, or something that is really obvious.
  2. There are a few hiding places, it might be one of a few spots.  In my opinion this is the majority of caches.
  3. Much more difficult.  Lots of places to hide. You may be looking for some time.
  4. Kill me now.  You will be spending some time looking for this.  Plan up to an hour.
  5. Nuke em hard.  This is near impossible. Only people with serous defects want to look for this.  It could be an extremely hard puzzle, or something that needs tools to solve.  Plan on extra work, extra needs, and multiple trips.

Terrain

  1. Wheelchair.  This is the flattest and easiest.  Use this if you could get to the cache and get it in a wheelchair.  If it requires a little stretching, or something go to 1.5
  2. Kids.  This would be a cache that you could take small kids to.  It could be a few mile hike on flat ground or something milder.
  3. Not for small kids, but perhaps for older kids.  It might be steeper, or longer hike of 3-4 miles that might be really easy
  4. Off Trail, extremely long, heavy brush, or poisonous plants.  This might be really rough to get to to a steep hill, or even a flat long hike.
  5. Really difficult, and it may require special equipment.  Scuba, rock climbing, boat, or something else needed just to get you to the cache.

Challenge caches

People ask how to rate the cache in the case of a challenge. Officially it should be for that cache not all the challenges that you need to get the cache.   For example if you have a challenge that requires you to find a 5/5 and it is a drive by, seen by all, you should rate it how that cache is.

Wherigo caches

Wherigos are not considered special equipment.  Do not rate them a 5 because you have to have a special player.

Ultimately you decide how to rate things.  You determine how you feel the cache  should be rated.

The Pain

AAAAAAHHHHHHHHH.  PoP!

That is what happened last night. I decided to go hunt for a few caches on my way home.  It is always fun to just spend time looking for them on the way home.  There was a group of 8-10 that I wanted to grab.  there is a lot of construction along the freeway.  So I was not surprised that I could not find one (behind temp fence for construction).

Most of the ones that I found were on the frontage road by Springville and the bay.  After going there I wonder if they will last long with the freeway expansion. A few of them had markers, and may make it through, but others may vanish in 3-4 months

It was the cache at the end that got me.   Toja7's Son's Back in Black.  I had two that I was going for in the area. I was walking on a slope and the shale I was on started to slide.  With my weight on my downhill foot, the shale stopped sliding and I rolled over  my ankle.  With a loud pop, my foot came to a stop. I gave up on the geocaching, though I did consider looking for it, until the pain stopped me.

I hobbled back to my car.. went home.. crawled in bed and put my foot up. 

Today I can get around, but it is really killing me.  I should have kept it up   However the option to make money made me work.  But I do not feel any better.

Tons of work.

The last few days have been nuts.  I have been going through so many emails.  Once and a while I get so busy, or frustrated with the many notices, beggins, growlings, and other things I just stop.  I take a day off doing a few things like I enjoy. Like a good game of Plants -vs- Zombies with my girls giving me advice.

Usually it backfires.  I came back this time with piles of caches sitting and literals tons upon tons of emails. 

To top it all of my work let go a helper. Now I am buried up to my eyeballs.

So I have not had a chance to keep up on this.

Oh.. and sorry about the GPS DrJay.  I drove by again and looked today.

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