A reasonably easy find – GPSr was off my a few metres but I thought to myself, “well I know where I’D hide it…”, and sure enough there it was. Took a while to stealthily re-hide as for
a while I was being watched with curiosity both by a shirtless gentleman on a balcony and by three skateboarding kids; managed in the end, though. TFTC.
An appropriate difficulty level for this hard-to-find cache! I spent some time hunting on the wrong side of the path before I checked the hint, then EVEN LONGER searching afterwards!
TFTC!
I’ve been working my way through the Boundary Brook series from North to South by bicycle, this evening, and while I’ve struggled a little to get my bike through the various obstacles
so far, it was only at this cache that I realised that bringing my bike might have been a mistake. Was it the marsh I got bogged down in or the fallen tree I had to circumnavigate? I
don’t know. But by the time I got to this cache, I was exhausted from pushing and carrying my heavy, muddy, designed-for-roads vehicle!
Nice spot for a walk, but it looks like the hiding spot gets used as a litter bin sometimes. :-(
Can’t believe it took me so long to get around to finding this one, given that the starting point is just around the corner from my work. Had my suspicions about the final location
after a friend of mine had a cache of hers, near that point, rejected earlier this year. Thanks for the cache and the delightful reminder of Oxford’s history.
An easy find, although I had to stand around a bit as lots of muggles passed before I could hide it again. Log close to completely full and rubber seal on cache starting to degrade;
might enjoy some TLC. TFTC!
Urgently needs a new lid (or ideally a new container). Hiding place has something quite gross in it, suggest not putting it back in quite the same place (also: be careful about putting
your hands in there…)
Lovely place, but after the recent rain, I’m glad I wasn’t driving here! Some colleagues and I from a voluntary organisation are having a
couple of “away days” in a house up the road, so I thought I’d spend my lunch break coming out and finding this cache. Glad I did! TFTC.
As the days get longer and the weather gets better, woodland trails and city alleyways alike begin to more-frequently see a particular brand of explorer. Clutching GPS devices (or,
increasingly, mid- to high-end mobile phones), these satellite-guided adventurers shy away from normal people, whom they call “muggles”. Outwardly, this is out of concern for the
continuity of their tiny treasure, but as often as not, it’s because geocachers – and
especially urban geocachers, who often don’t even have the excuse of “getting some fresh air” to justify their hobby – are likely to be seen as a little odd., “You do what
for a hobby? Find lost lunchboxes?”
There’s a “hidden in plain sight” urban geocache in this picture. Can you spot it? (probably not, at this resolution)
I’ve written plenty about geocaching already, but the only important thing to know for this particular anecdote is
how geocaches are rated to indicate how hard they are. There are two scales, each scored from one to five “stars”. The first scale is difficulty, which is
about how challenging the geocache is to find – a 1-star rating means that it’s in plain sight, not camouflaged, etc., while higher ratings might mean that it’s
well-concealed, tiny, disguised as something else, or requires that you solve a puzzle in order to determine where it is. The second scale is terrain, which is about how
challenging the geocache is to get to. A 1-star rating is typically accessible by wheelchair – you certainly don’t need to leave paved roads and footpaths to get it;
higher ratings might mean steep gradients, tree climbing, long hikes, and so on. The highest terrain ratings often mean that specialised skills or equipment are required (for example,
rock climbing gear or a scuba tank).
There it is: that capsule, magnetically-attached to the girder that supports the bridge, is the geocache.
As you can imagine, caches with a 5-star “terrain” rating are rarer, and are especially uncommon in built-up areas. Half-way up cliffs… deep inside caves… miles out to sea: these are
the places you’d expect to see geocaches with the highest level of “terrain” score. So imagine my surprise when I discover GC13WZQ (“Swing Lower”), a geocache with a 1-star “difficulty” rating but a 5-star “terrain” rating, just
a few minutes walk from Oxford City Centre. In the seven years this cache has been in place, it had seen fewer than 110 successful visitors: contrast to its neighbour, GCK57Z (“Swing Low”) – a virtual cache less than 10 metres away – which has seen about six
times as many visits in only 3 years longer. This, I thought, was a cache I had to see.
OxfordLad (who took this photo), and other geocachers claimed that, since early 2014, the cache was made entirely inaccessible by the boarding-up of the sides of the bridge.
Folks recently attempting to find the geocache had reported (OxfordLad, izybuzyfingers, twitcher50) that it had been made inaccessible by the recent addition of boards and barbed wire
to the edges of the bridge. Counter-arguments were raised (sandvika, Mad H@ter) to show that this didn’t make the cache inaccessible; it merely made it
accessible only by boat, which had already been suggested in the “attributes” for the cache.
Only an idiot would attempt a ‘requires boat’ geocache without a boat. Right?
I’m not a believer in the idea that any particular geocache can only be found one particular way. Also: I don’t have a boat. So I decided to make an expedition to
“Swing Lower” my own damn way. Approaching the bridge under which the cache is located, I immediately saw the boards and barbed wire that had been reported by those that had attempted
it earlier in the year. But as I would soon discover, anybody who was put off by a little bit of plywood and the risk of damp feet really wasn’t built of the right stuff to be able to
do what was required next. Put simply: boards and barbed wire are the least of your problems when you’re hunting for GC13WZQ.
It’s not the most conventional way to cross a bridge, I’ll admit.
The bigger challenge was getting to the cache once underneath the bridge. I discovered (perhaps with a little
inspiration from “Jackhuber”) that it was possible to brace myself against a pair of the beams that run the length of the bridge and – facing down – shuffle sideways to get to the
centre of the bridge. I felt acutely aware of the fact that until I got over the central channel, the depth of the water might not be enough to break my fall (especially if I slipped
and fell head-first), but was reassured by the fact that I’d brought fellow ‘cacher and coworker kateevery and she was ready, perhaps not to swim out and get me but at least to call 999, should
the need arise.
This is how Freddie Mercury holds a geocache.
So there you go. To all of you wusses for whom “there are boards and barbed wire in the way” was an excuse: you hadn’t even begun to face the challenge of “Swing Lower”.
I’ve written up a Batman-themed
description of the expedition as part of my log report.
Can you make out the coordinates in this image? No? Maybe it’d help if you looked at geo.danq.me.
This conveniently coincides with the week that I launched my new collection of puzzle geocaches, the Oxford
Steganography Series – four geocaches (GC54F78,
GC54F7B, GC54F7J, GC54F7N) whose coordinates are concealed within images or text, each of which contains a transparency film
that can be used (I made a video showing how) to
determine the coordinates of a fifth, bonus cache.
I’m reasonably pleased with the series, and I’ve been enjoying reading the reports of the ‘cachers who’ve been out hunting for them, so far.
Congratulations to mbtkz on FTF (haven’t seen your logs on the other four yet, but I
assume that you wanted to get this one onto the site promptly so that other knew you’d made it!). Well done!