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.

Favorite Caches in Utah

Not wanting to play a computer game tonight.. I decided to sit down and calculate the favorite caches in Utah.  I played in the Data, and was going to go with 5 votes and up, but there was just way to many with five votes so I cut them out.  As it is the list had 170 with seven votes and up.

The favorites by votes is a quick and easy look up on GC.com, so no surprises there.   Well I was surprised that the favorites was Bryce Canyon.  I would have guessed Arches or Zions.

Favorite Caches - By Votes
50 VirtualBryce Canyon National Park- Inspiration Point by Team Family Affair (GCHQMX)

48 Traditional Tour of Duty (TBs) by CoolCache (GCR206)
37 Virtual Cache Angel's Landing by Iskander De Toquerville, Pipeline & Percible (GCG2ZP)
33 Earthcache Delicate Arch by Lord Mot, Baby Girl and Littlefoot (GC177KB)
32 Virtual Arches National Park- Balanced Rock by Team Family Affair (GCHQFJ)

 

Favorite Votes by % was a huge surprise.  Well I went from 6 votes and up.  I was going to go from 5 votes and up, but there were way too many votes in those categories.  What was a surprise was that four of the top five were all mystery caches, and one multi caches.  All with few visitors but they were all favorites of those that voted. 

Favorite Caches - By %  - Minimum 6 votes
86% Unknown Cache Soup in my Thermos by uintahiker (Adopted by himilecyclist) (GCYYGV)
78% Unknown Cache Pining for Evergreens by MOCKBA (GCJVJY)
75% Unknown Cache Brave Mountaineers by himilecyclist (GC260CZ)
60% Multi-cache Liar's Multi by Baad Daata (GC1M451)
55% Unknown Cache One Cache To Rule Them All - Middle Earth Cache by firennice (GC1EQK7)

 

Traditionals was also simple.  you can look them up on GC.com

Favorite Traditional by Votes
48 Traditional Tour of Duty (TBs) by CoolCache (GCR206)
22 Traditional Cache Salt Lake City Travel Bug Hotel by Lefty624 (GCQF8F)
21 Traditional Cache Potters Pond by leaper64 & dirk88 (GC3B)
17 Traditional Cache Turn your Head and Cough by sorensenØ (GCXPPE)
17 Traditional Cache Mexican Hat by magura (GCH83R)

 

% favored was also interesting.  The Wreck of the Hesperis was really high on the list. The stories of those that go out to it is truly interesting and unique.

Favorite Traditional by %
47% Traditional Cache Wreck of the Hesperis by Streight Arrow (GCQ8VR)
40% Traditional Cache It's All Monkey Business To Me! by Ho'okele (GC28XWA)
39% Traditional Cache HOLLOW TREE by ruger44 (GCPY97)
32% Traditional Cache The Wickiup by DeViDe (GCG60X)
29% Traditional Cache Galileo 400 by lesdubois and son (GC1TYC9)

 

Utah has 170 caches with six and more votes. 

30 Earthcaches

1 Letterbox

5 Multi-caches

58 Traditionals

28 Unknown

50 virtuals

It was surprising that most of the virtuals had less than 10% favorites.  With none over 20%.

Most of the Unknown caches were over 20% and except for the Multi-cache from Baad Daata they had the only caches over 50%

 

See all the data on this page  

Broken down by type and by votes/% 

The page is pretty long with a lot of info.. so pan down.

 

opencaching vs opencaching

Well we are over two months in, and I have my predictions.  I have written a few times about opencaching.com but not the opencaching.us site.

.com or .us what opencaching site has the longest legs?

Let me jump back to a few months ago.  The opencaching.com site was launched.  I thought this was a horrible name first of all.  Using one that belonged to someone else.  I had heard a while before that it was coming out and had been watching its home screen.  Though I do not do much of anything with the other sites I was, like many of you, curious to see what it was like.

I was nervous.  There was a large company whose profit is in the Billions, with thousands of employees, that could come after geocaching full boar.  With resources that would dwarf that of the little 40 person (just a guess there) groundspeak.  What would the future hold, how would it evolve.  I thought the original Opencaching sites were doomed.

Birth of .com

Well the first week of December it exploded onto the scene.  It was in the news, all the blogs, podcasts, and other sites rushed to find out what the new and most interesting thing.  Many went over right away and cross listed some or all of their caches on the other site. 

But in all that there were issues. Few cache types, nothing really new, the site was riddled with bugs. People seemed to jump on, look around and leave.  Many tried to reserve names, only to find out they were taken, or Opencaching.com would not allow some characters, or spaces in names.

I was randomly assigned a different name., even though i asked for a specific name.  Apparently the original was taken in the Garmin system.   Then in the forums it defaulted to my real name.  Oooops.

January

by the end of December 7ish thousand caches were listed.  A good number, a number showing real growth and real potential.  Except for one thing.

There were no new caches.  Well there were.  A friend going through the caches located only showed a small percentage of original caches.  And that number has not changed.

I am betting that you are not aware that apparently there are more caches on Opencaching.us (500+) than there are original caches on all of Garmin's site (about 400ish).  It is tricky how Garmin numbers its caches, but caches that are imported are given similar numbers, and if I just enter a cache, I get a unique number.  I do not know how many opencaching.us caches are unique (flaw in my system).

that would mean they are about even, except many of Garmin's unique caches, were caches that were just entered in, without a corresponding GC code, which there is.  So there are actually fewer than their numbering system shows.

Growing?

Both sites are growing.  Still the Garmin site is getting more unique caches each week than the .us site.  But there are more than just that site.   Skimming over all the caching sites I am seeing some 300ish new caches this month on opencaching sites.  Garmin's site? about 40-50 new unique caches.

Many that were disgruntled, banned, or otherwise annoyed seemed to have found a home there.  I know some that are annoyed that their forums are a never ending geocaching.com bashing session.  I drop on in and read once and a while.  Being a moderator in geocaching.com forums I see a some abusive behavior.  It can get ugly at times.

 

The chart above shows the Google Insight chart for the past 90 days.   One is sorted with three of the Opencaching sites lumped together, (US, Germany, and Poland).  The other line is the one for Garmins opencaching.com.  You can see the spike when it came out.  Then it fades away.  Why is that significant?  Well no one is searching for it.

Loss of Sales

Another interesting thought. Looking at Its Not About the Numbers Blog he mentioned that 90% of those taking his survey are Garmin users. Of those nearly half expect say they will not be buying garmin next time.  That is horrific for Garmin. 

Garmin makes a lot of money on GPS units. Sales have been dropping, that means profits as well.  Are they loosing money?  Nope, but that does not bolster confidence that they are alienating their customer base.

Future

What does the future hold?  Wow. My prediction?

Well Garmins mess.

Garmin is a publicly held company.  They never put their heart into it or they would not have released a product that was still deep in Alpha testing.  Make no mistake, it was not in Beta testing.  I have been a part of Beta testing over the years, this was not ready to be seen the first few weeks.

They have to show a profit, and a market. They appear to not have either, and in fact have alienated their market.  Do I think that 50% of Garmin users will leave?  Nope.  but 25% is a big blow. 

When someone goes to geocaching they need to see something new.  They want the new caches. Not going to another site to see the same thing. Navicache, Terracache, and Opencaching sites all have something special, rugged caches, unique types of caches, scoring methods, or something.  Garmin has created a poor window with 1 in 20 being unique, and you cannot tell what caches are unique, unless you decode their numbering system in GSAK and wade through the numbers.

So Garmin will trudge along.  The war was lost in December.  I think if a finished product had came out many would have jumped ship.  It may just sit as a side project to keep some Garmin VP from loosing face, just pushing along, but it is in all essence doomed. Garmin has to pay for it, advertisers may not appear in force (why would competitors spend money there instead of Garmin).

opencaching sites.

They are pulling along.  I think they are far more successful than the other sites Navicache, Terracache, and their future is brighter.  The cache owners of those sites will hang on.  The costs are not high there, no overwhelming programming costs.  You many not see a lot of new widgets on the cache pages, but the sites run, and they experiment with cache types.  Drawing people in.  They are devoted and keep the sites alive.

Winner - the original opencaching sites

Looser - Garmin

Travel bug in the News

I thought I would throw this out.  Many cachers listen to Podcacher, the weekly podcast that is over 300 episodes online.

This week they highlighted a Travel bug from Utah that made it to the Superbowl.  It was started by KC Bradey  and the Travel bug Ben Roethlisberger 2005.  There is also an add in the paper in Beaver County News.

It was a neat idea, and I it is a great story.  Cachers worked to get the trackable on its way to the Superbowl.

Daily Caching

This was a busy week in many ways.  I think there were five or six events in the area, pretty much every day this week seemed to have one. I dont know how many I actually made it to.  Three or four I think.  

I had some scout activities, I worked late a few times.  Went to a few events.  I have started to try a streak.  I did it some time ago and hit one hundred days, before it became a chore.  This time I just want to grab one every day. 

I  am starting to grab a few here and there, the events have helped a lot.  I have had to scramble two days, but I did make it.  I started on February 1st, and the reason was simple.  when i was looking at my stats I was missing a few. I was missing caches on a number of days, how to fill them in, well grab them of course.  Well, then I was not sure what days, without a list with me, so I grabbed one every day. Some at lunch, some on the way home.

I am impressed with a few cachers that have reached a few years of getting one every day.  Hats off to DrJay that is at 4 years (if I remember right), with over 1600 FTF's.  An impressive feat.

This afternoon I went for a drive up to where my scouts are going camping this week.  I though i would take a moment to check things out at the campsite, and of course to grab a few caches.

My daughter and I grabbed one while we were going around. 

I stopped at thistle where I was told one of my caches had been missing.   So I braved the horrible hop, skip and jump over to Tetanus shot.  Only to see it right where I had left it hanging last summer.

I replaced my corner view up in Orem on Saturday, and grabbed another. 

I plan on going through many of my caches this year and making sure they are ok.  It has been a few years since some of them were put out.  A few have been replaced, but I need to get out and look at many others.

 

 

 

 

 

Midway the land of ice

This last weekend my family and I headed up to Midway Utah. 

We went up for a drive and had a good afternoon. We drove past Bridal Veil Falls.  In the winter time it really looks cool.

The ice seeps through the rocks in many places and in the wintertime this looks fantastic. 

One of the guys that I work with goes up here a few times a year or more to go ice climbing.  It is in the shade (it faces north) and so when the temperature drops it is ideal for climbing.

I have never gone myself.  The crippling fear of falling and killing myself tends to be a negative when it comes to actually climbing.

I had hopes of looking for some geocaches.  I have found many of them through the canyon so I really did not intend to do much looking.  But heading up the canyon I quickly realized that I was in trouble.

The snow was deeper and deeper. So unless something was going to be hanging in a tree there was not much of a chance that I would be able to find any of it.

When we got to midway we went to see the ice.  someone had made an ice sculpture at the city hall.  It took up a portion of the city block.  It was really impressive, and there was a lot of ice.. I mean a lot of ice.  We spent the better part of an hour walking around and seeing things.

No caches.. but a cool experience.

 

 

 

Midway Ice Castle Feb 11Midway Ice Castle Feb 11Midway Ice Castle Feb 11Midway Ice Castle Feb 11Midway Ice Castle Feb 11Midway Ice Castle Feb 11

Midway Ice Castle Feb 11

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