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Fishing - Geo Caching - Camping - Links - Your Tales MoosenoseBrothers Geo-Caching Intel Room Welcome to our Geo-caching Intel Room, here you will find articles and other types of useful and sometimes necessary information that will be of great help toward making your hobby a Fun & Successful one!
Here we all are! Can't wait for our next Geocaching Adventure together.
Finding the Cache With Your GPSr Unit By Peter Willman BigMooseNoseBrother In the beginning, folks just wandered around trying to locate new places such as new worlds for that matter. Hey what’s over there, if I get there wherever there is, can I find my way back? Possibly with a lot of hmmm… does this tree look right or is that rock familiar, what about that big wave? For instance take a sailing ship, no road signs there, no Rand McNalley for that matter. If I sail this many degrees West with one degree having 60 minutes of arc (latitude), with so many minutes; (one minute has 60 seconds of arc and seconds, then do the same with North (Longitude). I should basically be consistent in finding this exact spot continuously, right….right. Does this mean an engineering degree with linear math as a basic starting point for Caching?? Nope!!! I went to Garmin and purchased their unit which is a GPSr V and I’m off running down the road, water, air you name it, this puppy works great everywhere, anywhere (except in tall Red Woods it gets confused but that’s a whole different story not shared here today). GPS For Dummies Even though the purchase of the unit pays for someone’s engineering degree it’s worth it. I’m just kidding, there are a lot of economical units available but hey if I’m in a area where getting lost is a possibility, do I want to jeopardize my life & that of my Family to low bid, I don’t think so but that’s me. So now we have GPS yes..yes..yes..Global Positioning Satellites open to the general public (you & me) when??? Around the year 2000 coincides with the birth of Geo-Caching. Hmmmm. Now we’re off with our unit for High adventure….sound bite here…think of a Fedora Hat & Leather Whip. You got it… now hum a few bars and we’re off. Now that you understand a tiny bit about the history of the coordinates it’ll make it a bit more fun. If you’re like us in the Southwest then I’m sure you prefer the Ante Meridian time frame with Green Mountain Coffee in a hurricane cup. We use our Garmin once the coordinates are in place, by selecting the Off road feature which draws a straight line directly to the cache site. Once we get within lets say 20 feet we change fields and I start to read just the coordinates themselves in lieu of arrows or map views and I read the coordinate of where we are currently standing. Now you can hone in (fine tune) on the cache location. My wife Karen, brings out her handy dandy compass to make sure we are orientated to the location properly, meaning which way is North, South, East & West. We do this because our GPSr tends to have attitude hence (issues) when up close…I don’t want to have to walk a block to have it register which way is North, so we purchase the compass and believe me life became sweet once again. Once we’ve matched up our coordinates with what was given, just take into consideration the type of cache you’re looking for. Say if it is a micro cache, forget about it, jump back into your truck and …no no..just kidding, you’ll be on your hands and knees, muttering to yourself for a few moments…but ammo cans no problema….standard Tupperware love it…so there you go my friend. Well hopefully this has been entertaining and helps enlighten your future experiences in the whole virtual new world of Geo-Caching. Happy Hunting… Adios Amigos Peter Willman Aka BigMooseNoseBrother
CACHE TALK (No1 of series) By Karen Willman AKA LilSis Whether you have just heard people talking about their treasure hunting or you have found your first hide and are already hooked, there is a unique language associated with caching. And this is the right place to come when trying to learn just exactly what these people are saying. Notice the acronyms in the logbooks or log entries in the web-sites? This is a type of shorthand used by cachers to relay a lot of information quickly or in a very small space. Here are a few examples: SL: signed log, TN: took nothing, LN: left nothing. These are the acronyms used most often and helpful when trying to hide your treasure hunt activities from the "muggles." Muggles are people (made famous by the boy wizard book series) who have absolutely no idea what you are up to. It is very hard to find a cache without compromising its location especially if it is in a high traffic location. So the key is to find it fast, exchange "treasures", sign the logbook and hide the find again before getting discovered. Most muggles are nice and very interested but there are also muggles who were known to follow cachers, wait for them to leave and steal or destroy the cache. What is a logbook? It depends on the size of the cache. Most logbooks are the size of a pocket-size spiral notebook with enough room to write the date and time of your find. It is a good idea to identify your team with a name. On a very active day it is fun to see just how close the last person was to finding the cache. I have seen logbooks signed with a personalized stamp depicting a team logo. If the cache is small or micro, the log sheet could be nothing but a tiny rolled up piece of paper. This is when it is good practice to always carry a writing utensil with you. Nothing is more frustrating than to work hard at finding a cache and not being able to sign the log. Before I end this chapter let’s address another one of the cachers shorthand acronyms. FTF: first to find – this is a title sought after by teams. When a brand new cache is placed by a cache owner, they post their page on one of the many geo-caching web-sites available. Once posted, it’s a mad rush to be the first one to locate the new hidden treasure. There is more than just the title of being the first to find – many cache owners starting a new find will place a very special prize for the winner. A story circulated a year or so back that the special prize in some of the new caches were $100 bills. What an incentive to be the first! With the growing numbers of teams looking for treasure (and believe me, there are quite a few) it takes a sharp eye to catch a newly posted cache. I receive notification from one of the more recognized geo-caching web-sites about newly posted caches. By the time the notification comes through, it’s already too late. But every cache is an adventure and a story waiting to happen. Later we will explore the different types of caches hidden, explain the terrain and difficulty ratings, and reveal more of the cachers shorthand.
CACHE TALK (No2 of Series) By: Karen Willman AKA LilSis Hopefully by now you have put a few notches in your GPSr unit. The fun has just begun. I’m going to start by explaining many of the different and inventive types of containers used by geo-cachers for hiding their treasures. Physical containers listed as "Traditional" come in three basic sizes: micro, small and regular. The regular size container will usually be a casserole size Tupperware, a plastic bread box, and the very popular ammo can. These are easier to find (harder to hide) and have many great treasures inside. Since the size is bigger, most travel bugs fit comfortably. The small containers get a little trickier. I have found small Tupperware containers, altoids tins, snuff cans, a cactus and a rat. Although the rat was very large, the cavity to hold items was small so it fell under the classification of small. You will find a small sheet used as a log book and room to squeeze in a few small treasures. It is a good idea to bring your own writing utensil when looking for these – just in case. The micro cache was put on this earth to test our patience. Mine disappeared long ago. I included a picture of my son finding his first micro and the look on his face says it all. (Look closely – the micro is in his hand) I have seen them as big as a medicine bottle or a 35mm film canister (hopefully I am not the last of the older generation that actually remembers what those are) Most are just plain tiny! A tiny scrap of paper for a log sheet and no pencil. I would like at this time to make a suggestion. Take pictures of your finds. We started to record the finds and some area location shots from the very first cache and have never regretted it. I place them in a three-ring binder (which is now several binders) attached to the original "seek sheet" used to hunt with. These binders are taken to Geo-Events to share with other geo-cachers or to show to friendly muggles. It helps when trying to explain treasure hunting because "pictures say a thousand words." We use these pictures for personal use only and would never think to post them on an official geo-caching web-site since that would spoil the hunt for everyone else. Are you ready for some more shorthand (or Geo-language)? I’ve mentioned a few words in this Chapter that might need explaining. Travel bugs - TB (or hitchhikers): an official "bug" will have a metal tag attached to it. Just finding a plastic bug in the cache does not mean it is a travel bug – it has to have the official metal tag. Take time to read what their mission is. If the bug is requesting to travel to the East coast and you are heading West; leave it. I know how exciting it is to find an official TB but respect the mission wishes. The word "bug" is used loosely since I have helped little blue men in spacesuits on their way, a jeep racing another jeep to a certain city, and a water gel pack looking to visit as many seas as possible. Seek Sheet – this is a term to identify the description sheet printed from an official geo-caching web-site. We take this sheet along to keep the coordinates at hand and to also read the log files from past cachers. If you’re out for a day of caching, I will use this paper to record any treasure exchanges and additional information I might need for later when I am logging in my finds. (More notches for the GPSr) Spoilers - Not only pictures, but hints that give away the location of a cache done while logging a find on an official geo-caching web-site. When sites suspect a possible spoiler, they will post a warning. A true hard-core treasure hunter will not use spoilers – no matter how many times it sometimes takes to find a really good hide. Enough for now. I promise (honest) the next chapter will cover the terrain and difficulty rating explanations. Be sure to visit our Geo-Photos section to see examples of the containers I talked about. The more popular geo-caching web-sites would call these pictures spoilers if posted at the same time you log your find. Our site will use these pictures for educational purposes and to also recognize the creative minds the world’s cache owners have.
CACHE TALK #3 BY Karen Willman aka little sister www.moosenosebrothers.com Face it. By now you are hooked. You’ve walked the walk and talked the talk. Every time you go somewhere the thought is about making time to "park and grab" another cache. Good! It’s natural, at this point, to want to share your enjoyment with others. Summer vacation is coming up and you’re hungry for a few out-of-state finds. Uncle Fred and Aunt Bertha are certainly in for a treat this year. But wait a minute – Uncle Fred uses a walker. He will never make it to some of the caches you are used to. To make matters worse, you really don’t know the area around their farm. How are you going to introduce the relatives to your favorite hobby and make a good impression? That’s where the Geocache Rating System comes in. Most official geo-cache web-sites have a rating system for each submitted hide. The rating will show the potential seeker how easy it is to find the cache and the type of terrain you are expected to encounter. Now scroll through the listings until you find a very easy hide and one that will take in account Uncle Fred’s walker and Cousin Emma’s 2-year old. Nothing is more embarrassing than NOT to find their first cache. So make it an easy one and save the juicy ones for later. The most popular geo-caching web-site uses stars for a rating indicator. But what do those stars actually mean? Of the 5 stars listed – 1 is the easiest and 5 is the hardest. Do you need special equipment to get to the cache hide (like a boat, 4-wheel drive or maybe even scuba gear)? That is a definite 5 for a terrain rating! Maybe you only have to walk on a paved pathway (1), well packed dirt (1 ½), or a sand and mud animal trail (2 ½). What about if there is no trail at all and you need to set off cross country or up a river bed? Try a 3 – 4. Now let’s add the trail extras like bushes (low or high), thorns or poisonous plants (PI) or animals. What about the elevation? Is it flat or steep? How steep? Do you need to climb up the side of a hill or down into a ravine? Let’s put a few of these scenarios together and come up with possible ratings. Take the paved pathway (which could be a 1) and pair it with a slight incline – that 1 has now been elevated (no pun intended) to a 1 ½ or possibility a 2. Take a sand animal trail at 2 ½ that crosses a dry river bed and up a semi-steep incline to get out at the other side – it now could be rated a 3 to 3 ½. Add poisonous plants (PI) or animals and a warning should be issued. Finding a cache has ratings as well. If it is obvious then a rating of 1 is in order. Do you have to gather clues to find missing coordinates – try a 2? Do you have to solve puzzles to move forward on a multi-cache hide – try 3? What about signal strength – tall buildings and dense forests will not allow you to pinpoint a hide. This would make the find rating go higher. Whew! Enough already, you get the picture. Just remember that ratings are based on the opinions of others. A marathon runner will think their hide could be found with "just a stretch of the legs" while the weekend seeker will think otherwise. It is important to read the log entries of past seekers – and not just the top 5. I once set my sights on a real easy cache to use as an introduction to friends that were interested in seeing what this caching was all about. The ratings showed the hide was a difficulty 1 and the terrain was a 1 ½. This was going to be such a cute little grab, listed as one that their 80-year old, wheel-chair bound Grandmother hid. I was lucky enough to open more of the logs and read the comments of several past cachers. The comment I liked best was that they must have air lifted Grandma with a helicopter to get to the hide since that was the only way a wheel-chair could have gotten there. Naturally I picked a different cache for my friend’s first find but did visit the site hid by old Granny and found the comments of past cachers to be accurate. I tend to use the terrain rating to help determine possible locations that the cache could be hidden. While in Edinburgh, Scotland a few weeks back I sought a cache that had a 1 ½ terrain rating. At 1 ½, I had narrowed my search to a certain type of area. Unable to find the cache, I proceeded to enlarge my search field which included a 4-foot climb up a vertical rock. Bingo, there is was! It did not seem right to rate a 4-foot climb up a rock as 1 ½ and although it did not hinder the find it did taint the mind-set as to where the search area could be. Two quick Geo-language words used in this article: Park and Grab: just what it means – close to parking and easy to find. PI: Poison Ivy, poison oak, poison sumac, or just about any bad thing that can ruin a day of caching. Next time we will get into cache common sense, travel bugs and treasures.
CraigMillar Castle, Scotland
View from battle walls
Our Lil Sis and Clint and his wife looking at found cache
Clint having a good Ol' time in the castle tower stairwell, little folks back then? I will post more as soon as I get them, Peter & Karen took loads of picture at all their caches, some are in London and other interesting British point of interests.
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