This checkin to GLE0YM1G Talking trees nature trail #1 reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
Found with fleeblewidget while out hunting for the new Star Wars series. Bit muddy around! TFTC.
This checkin to GLE0YM1G Talking trees nature trail #1 reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
Found with fleeblewidget while out hunting for the new Star Wars series. Bit muddy around! TFTC.
This checkin to GLE0YKCQ Hinksey Woods Star Wars: Darth Vader reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
Found with fleeblewidget after a little prickly scrambling. TFTC.
This link was originally posted to /r/RedditThroughHistory. See
more things from Dan's Reddit account.
The original link was: http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2014/04/17/article-2606950-1D2901CF00000578-199_634x753.jpg
I recently finished reading a novel called Ice & Lemon, which was given to me by my mother for Christmas (my reading list is quite long at the moment; I’m only just getting close to catching up!). I could tell you about what I liked about the book – and I will, in a moment – but before that I’d like to mention what makes this book personally so spooky to me, as a reader.
My mother got it for me because the coincidences apparent on the front and back cover appealed to her:
Okay, so – that’s a handful of quirky coincidences, certainly, but I’m sure if you looked at every volume in a bookshop – in the right frame of mind – you’d find a dozen other novels that seemed similarly fortuitous. But as I began to read the story, I discovered that I shared a lot more in common with the story’s Daniel than I could have possibly predicted. It was almost as if I were reading an alternate-history version of my own life – it’s incredibly easy to see how believable choices made in the early 2000s could have lead to a reality that even-more closely paralleled with my own:
There are about a hundred smaller coincidences in Daniel’s story, too, but after a few of them you stop looking objectively and you can’t help but see them, so I’ll spare you the list. If I wanted to, I’m sure I could find plenty of things that definitely didn’t fit me: for example, Daniel’s significantly older than me. That sort of blows the alternate history idea out of the water. But nonetheless, it was a disturbing and eerie experience to be reading about a protagonist so much like myself, travelling around a post-disaster area that I personally know so very well. I feel like I ought to reach out to the author and check that he’s not just pranking me, somehow. His son features in the book, but somehow the coincidences that naturally occur as a result of this are less-impressive because they’re pre-informed.
The book itself is pretty good: a soft science fiction story full of a thorougly-explored post-apocalyptic grief. Very human, and very British, it exemplifies that curious sense of humour that we as a nation exhibit in the face of a disaster, while still being emotionally-scarring in the sheer scope of the tragedy it depicts. The science of the science-fiction is… questionable, but it’s not explored in detail (and it’s only treated as being speculative by the characters discussing it anyway, who aren’t scientists): this is a story about people, suffering, and survival, not about technology nor futurism. There are a handful of points at which it feels like it could have done with an additional pass by a proofreader; while occasionally distracting, these typos are not problematic. Plus: the book contains the most literal deus ex machina I’ve ever encountered (and thankfully, it doesn’t come across as lazy writing so much as general wasteland craziness).
It’sunder £3 in ebook format, and if I didn’t already own a paperback copy, I’d be happy to pay that for it. Even if it didn’t make me feel like I was looking at an alternate version of myself.
This checkin to GLDZQ6Y3 The Cutteslowe Walls reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
A nice easy find on a diversion from my cycle home from work. Looks like I’ve been following trampingkiwi everywhere, these last few days.
This checkin to GLDZMFHN Kinkering Congs Their Titles Take reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
Fanatic cache and a wonderfully fun puzzle. Was unclear to begin which bit of the numbers I should have been using, but a little trial and error sussed it. TNLN, TFTC!
(I did keep worrying that I could be seen from a nearby flock of bats, so I took care as I rustled around in the cache’s nosey little cook)
This checkin to GLDZMN2R Oxford Snark Hunt (Fit the 2nd) - Botanic Gardens reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
Stopped by on my way back from lunch. Thankfully this morning’s foul weather has kept the tourists away, so I didn’t have to contend with too many muggles as I undertook my brief search. Thanks!
This checkin to geohash 2014-04-21 51 -1 reflects a geohashing expedition. See more of Dan's hash logs.
A gap in a hedge just to the side of a lane running from Kidlington to North Yarnton, near the level crossing on the line that connects Oxford to Banbury.
A Easter Bank Holiday weekend: what a perfect time for geohashing: and not just because of the warm weather and the fact that you can plan your expedition an extra
day in advance, thanks to the exchange closures! No, it’s a great time especially because today’s hashpoint was a mere 300 metres from my house, as the crow flies (though the crow, at
least, didn’t have to work his way down to to the bridge over the canal in order to get there).
The hashpoint turned out to be in a gap in the hedge, half-way between down the road connecting a canal bridge to a level crossing. We saw a squirrel.
On the way back, Dan insisted that Ruth (and Annabel, who didn’t get much say in the matter) came with him to find nearby geocaches GC3P0QK and GC3P0RJ on the way back home, before they spent the day out in the sunshine exploring Oxfordshire in general.
This checkin to GLDZ1JC1 Toy Story reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
Found with fleeblewidget and her baby after a trip to the Arboretum. Lovely day for it! Spent did tune looking in the wrong place, but as soon as we switched to the other side of the path we found the cache very easily. TFTC.
This checkin to GLDZ1P1C BIKERZ - Baldon Lane reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
Found with fleeblewidget and her baby after a trip to the Arboretum. Great work with a clever (if easy!) hiding place: I’m gonna learn from that. Saw some motorcyclists, but none of them stopped, but as we drove away (after picking up the car from across the road) we saw two other cachers hunting for it. We waved from the car but I’m not sure if they heard/understood what I was saying! TFTC
This checkin to GLDYYY6M Route Canal - Bridge View reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
After an extended search, it was my partner fleeblewidget who, despite being encumbered by the baby-carrier harness, first spotted this well-concealed little cache. Feels like the difficulty should be 2 stars to me, but maybe I’m just going soft. TFTC.
This checkin to GLDYYYZ9 Route Canal - 227 not out reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
Nice cache! Dropped off a Scottish travel bug and picked up the hiker.
This checkin to GLDYAZQV Church Micro 3420…Kidlington reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
Out for a walk with fleeblewidget and her baby, took a look for this cache on the way past. Nice little cache! Took the Scottish Football 2 travel bug; see if I can find it a new home somewhere…
This checkin to GLDXE83R Sandford Lock reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
After lunch in the pub on the other side, came over to hunt for this. Search was expedited by another geocacher walking by and saying “you’re getting warm…”
Nice cache. Thanks!