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.

By the numbers

Wow.  That is all i can say... wow....

I was rolling through the numbers and statistics of Utah caches, and all the work I have been doing.  I have not updated my stats page yet, but here is what I have.

In Oct 09-March 10 I looked at about 1950 caches 11 day

In Sept 10-April 11 I looked at 2500 caches 11 day

What is surprising is this year is with a second reviewer.  My first year I averaged about 14/day, this year 13/day.  But once again, two reviewers since last fall, and a busy May is still to go that I would guess will push that number up.

Since September (8 months) We have seen

  • 2,000 more traditional caches in the state
  • 300 more Mystery caches
  • 50 more letterboxes
  • 25 more multi caches
  • A drop of 9 in the number of Earthcaches to 141
  • A drop of 1 in wherigo caches to 4

The total is a total of 2400 new caches in the state, we are approaching 21500 now.   So many so fast.  I think we are seeing an increase in all types, back country, desert, city, and trails.  A mix of them all.

I remember starting and thinking, man there are a lot, and that was then.

Another idea of how much work we do is the number of notes we leave on caches.  My first year I  listed 1200 notes, I am at 1100 now.  Those are almost all caches that we are working on.  Caches that we respond to issues with, not counting emails, that i don't track.

In all, it is busy and fun, and only getting busier.  

I will update my stats soon. Enjoy all.

Red Hills Hike

I went down to my parents this last weekend for Easter.  It was a great trip, but the nicest part was a hike that my wife and I took.

There was a lot of rain this last weekend, but on Saturday everything cleared up for a little while. 

My family had a big get together, and an Easter egg hunt.

Of course after everything and after the cold weather I decided to head after a cache.  There was a cache up the canyon near my home that had not been found often.  In fact I had looked for it another time and the coords had placed me up a steep rocky slope and scrambling to keep from falling to my death.

Well this time he had updated his coords and we decided to head up and check things out.

So my wife and I took some free time and broke away from the family that were mostly just relaxing and eating candy.  We headed up to the mouth of the canyon.

Like many of the canyons the mouth of this one is full of a lot of trash.  A lot of trash, targets, and many other items that people have dumped.

I grew up near here and had hiked the canyon many times, but for my wife this was a first time up this canyon.  It is really impressive and I love the rock formations.  There are a few old lime kilns from 80 years ago, one at the mouth of the canyon, and another that is ways up the canyon. 

We hiked up the canyon and we looked for a while for the cache. The cache had been placed right under a small gully.  It had a small crack in the lid so the entire thing was full of slimy nasty stuff.  I could not even get the log out, and when I got water on my hands they stank for some time.  It was vile.Hike 5/23/11

In the end I moved it about six feet out of the gully and into a sagebrush.  I put a rock on top of it and hopefully that will help keep the water out when things finally dry out.

Hike 5/23/11

After that we started to walk up the canyon.  We headed up another quarter of a mile before we reached a small box canyon where I found a place to hide a new one.

These canyons do not get visited much, and the caches do not get visited much either.  They are kind of off the beaten path.

There is not much growth and many parts of the canyon are scoured clean of rocks and dirt.  The rains tend to clean all the waist out of the canyon and dump them on the roads below.

In all we spent a few hours up here.  I hope to go back and visit more, someday. 

There are more to find, and more caches to place.

Leave no Trace and Geocaching

We are in the time of the Cache in and Cache out, and Earth day.  It has given me time to reflect on geocaching and how we can be friendly with our caching hobby.

 A few years ago I participated in a scout training that was two days long and dealt with Leave No Trace.  Coming from a small rural community, we used the environment to help us, rarely did anyone want to destroy it, it ruined what we know and love.  How can we use the environment around us and still play our game in the forests that we live in. Many people frown on us and our game, many of those complaints are well founded with the destruction that we can cause. 

Leave no trace consists of seven principles that if we look towards we can help minimize the damage that we cause, and hopefully keep from giving our sport a bad name in those around. So after teaching this for seven years to scouts, and looking at it towards caching, I thought I would take some time to review it.

1 - Plan Ahead and Prepare

This is pretty obvious, yet it is so often overlooked.  Think before you place, before you hunt.   The reasons are pretty simple. 

If you are placing a cache, think about what you are doing.  Is the location you are hiding a cache someplace that is prone for damage?  When people travel to your cache will they tear the area up?  Is your cache so hard to find that people will tear things apart?  In some countries in Europe the reviewers and communities do not allow hiding a cache in the old rock walls.  People searching for them tear the wall apart looking for the cache.  We can look for similar situations here.  Places where a search will destroy the area. 

If you are hunting for a cache try and not tear the area apart.  Pick stones up and replace them.  In getting into an area you may find the way that tears the area up the least. I think of traveling deep into a wilderness area once, and seeing a motorcycle trail that tore up a hill where it tried to climb.  The action of one person causing damage to the reputation of hundreds of others.   Look at your maps and examine the area before you start, and think like the hider.  Where would you hide it.

Travel and Camp on Durable Surfaces

Try and not tear the area up.  Along some trail systems the caches that are places are required to be placed withing so many feet of a trail.  Why?  I think of the many fall caching trips I made.  You can follow the path to the cache.  In Utah most of the plants are grown in spring.  Then everything goes dormant as the temperature rises.  Except in a few locations there is little growth once summer hits. So as people tramp through the underbrush we destroy the dead grass and create a path. 

Staying near a trail keeps all the damage on a "sacrificial surface"  We allow damage to be caused in a location to protect others.  A trail.  The trail is destroyed, and not the area around them.  We also look at planning your route to stay on them.  In the desert we try and avoid the crytobiotic soil the black soil that grows on the ground in the sands.  It grows slow, and once disturbed takes years to repair.  So in many sandy environments we look for the trails through the sand or on the sandstone to avoid damaging the ground.

Dispose of Waste Properly

some look at this a number of ways. Many people say that the caches themselves are waste.  Simply put, clean your trash.  Avoid leaving trash as you go about your caching.  At some point you may find a cache that is scattered, the container gone or destroyed.  At that point we may want to just pick up the trash at the location, and post a needs archived.  This last week I wonder if I should have done that.

The cache was destroyed, the owner long gone.  Many people carry replacement caches, you can clean up the garbage, and place out a new container that will allow the cache to live on.  Yet a cache that is long abandoned may need to go away.  It is a constant balancing act, when should a cache go away, and how should it be done.

Leave what you find

Some caches are placed on locations of interest to the placer, ruins, old buildings, fossils, petrified wood.  All of them tend to lead people to want to collect items and go home.  As a cache placer we try and avoid places that we may cause that, or people may be tempted.  Placing a cache in an indian ruin we find may bring people to see it, and cause people to take the artifacts home.

Leave the things there so people can see them later.  Leave it for others to enjoy

Minimize campfire impacts

This means simply trying to use existing fire pits, keeping fires small, etc.  It most likely has the least to do with us as geocachers.

Respect Wildlife

This is something we run across periodically.  Caches placed in bird houses, or too near a birds nest. Near nesting grounds, places where animals are borne. Scattering animals or chasing them.  Those may be the largest impacts we see.

Be Considerate of Other Visitors

Leave it like you found it, or better. 

 

 

Thoughts on my polls.

A week of sickness has made me really not take much time for anything other than sleeping and hoping I can feel better. 

I decided to take a moment to look at  a few of the polls that I have thrown up.

What are People favorite cache size?

Regular of course.  That is really no surprise.  It had 50% of the votes cast. with another 17% going to small caches.  Micro, Virtuals and Events brought in the tail end.

What geocaching sites do you use regularly?

Every person selected geocaching.com, a few others selected garmincaching, opencaching sites, dgpstats, and gsak.net.  As a surprise no one selected Terracaching, or Navacaching.

Thoughts on the ET Highway going away?

14% of people had done the trail, but a whopping 40% were planning to do it.  That was surprising to me.  That 40% were planning or hoping to go and do the trail at some point.

What was your favorite addition to Geocaching.com in the last year?

Nearly half said the change in pocket queries to 1000 was their favorite addition. An addition to the stats was second with 17 percent.  It was interesting to note that the Latitude 47 blog and the new maps were the least favorites.

How many geocaches have you placed?

Wow. Most of the people that have visited my site.  43% of them have placed 50-150 caches. 29% of people have place less than 50 caches.   The single biggest group was the 17% that have placed 100-150 caches.

How many favorite points have you used?

40% of people have said that they have only placed a few of their points.   That is a shame to me.  I really like to see what caches are peoples favorites.  I am starting to look more and more at those.On the other end 40% of people have used 80-100% of their favorite points.  So it appears people love them, or ignore them altogether.

What made your best cache day ever?

This was a litte of a surprise to me.  People could select a number of things, not just one.  And the biggest selection was that it was who they were with, that made the day great.  Second behind that was a tie for Where you were caching and the Journey to the cache.  No one selected the size of the cache, one person selected that it was because they found a 7 year old FTF.

So there are my thoughts .. I thought I would wing them out.

 

Illness time off.

Sorry I have not posted much. I have been home in bed due to a nasty fight with some illness.  I have been dragging and hope to be back to writing and reviewing soon.

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