This checkin to GL3DV2KG Nearly Washed Away Mark 2! reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
Wonderful little spot: walked right past it twice (GPS was playing up) before I got a good fix on it. TFTC.
This checkin to GL3DV2KG Nearly Washed Away Mark 2! reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
Wonderful little spot: walked right past it twice (GPS was playing up) before I got a good fix on it. TFTC.
This checkin to GL3DV1XF Y Gelli Ddu reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
Great little cache after a very wet hike. Picked up the jeep TB, dropped off Bubbo the Dog TB (apparently he likes animals, so I’m sure he’ll enjoy watching the sheep in the nearby field from here). TFTC.
Last weekend, I found myself in Macclesfield to celebrate the engagement of Liz and Simon. Highlights in brief included:
A big thanks due to Liz and Simon for a fantastic party!
This checkin to GL3DP4Q7 Penglais Park Cache reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
Like others have said: trust your GPSr and you’ll almost trip over this one. TNLN.
This checkin to GC23WKZ Alpha reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
Failed again. but that’s probably my fault, going after dark – new coordinates look promising, even if I didn’t manage to find it. Also, met RedKite for the first time, so not all bad.
This checkin to GL3DMBG4 Beta reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
Wow, what a great cache. FTF!!! reat hiding place; I walked around for about 20 mins before I found it (not helped by the GPS-scattering effect of the nearby trees!). TFTC.
Also, there was no pencil in the cache, so I’ve left one (cut down to a tiny size to fit, obviously).
This checkin to GL3DFY43 Alphabet Series - A reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
Found this after a short search. Took Bubbo The Dog TB: time to move on, little fella. Quite a bit of litter at this site: somebody feel like coming for a CITO round here? TFTC.
This checkin to GC23WKZ Alpha reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
Yet another failed-to-find. =o(
This checkin to GC1J9XJ Middlewood Circular - Bridge 34 reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
Log is soaked; unusable – needs replacement.
This checkin to GL3DFKWG Middlewood Circular - Bridge 33 reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
Almost didn’t find this – looked in all of the obvious hiding places several times before we actually looked in the right one (hampered a little by the morning’s snowfall)! Log damp, but usable. TFTC.
This checkin to GL3DFKZC BVW #1 reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
Great little cache in a lovely area; quite a bit out of our way, but wanted some first-time cachers amongst us to see a non-micro cache (we’d previously been getting a few along the canal). Signed the log, left a toy robot, took nothing (cache contents were kinda sparse, so thought it needed a little extra in it). TFTH.
This checkin to GL3DFKPE Middlewood Circular - Bridge 34 reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
Took some friends, local to the area, out for their first caching expedition: this was our first find of the day. One of the new ‘uns was the first to spot where this little cache was hidden. Log completely soaked – added a little more paper from a scrapbook but this is only a short-term fix: needs some fresh rolls.
This checkin to GL3DFKRK Macclesfield Canal - Bridge 35 reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
Great hiding place! TFTC.
Kit and Fiona came down to Aberystwyth to visit the other week for the first time in ages, and – as Paul already wrote – they made the mistake of introducing everybody down here to the phenomenon known as geocaching.
For those who’ve not heard about it before, geocaching is often described as “a global game of hide & seek played using GPS technology”. Personally, I prefer Kit’s explanation, which is “using military satellites to find lost Tupperware”. Put simply, participants hide caches (often plastic stay-fresh containers) in interesting places around the globe, and publish the GPS co-ordinates online on websites like Geocaching.com, then other participants try to find them.
I suppose one could also describe the activity in the context of the pastimes it is most similar to. It could be described as being a little like rambling (although some caches are in urban locations and many are reachable by car), orienteering (but generally with less need to be able to triangulate points and read a map and more ability to use a GPS effectively and understand its limitations), hide & seek (finding things that have been hidden rather than people, of course), and one of any number of hobbies ending with “-spotting” (each geocache has a unique number, and many participants are trying to visit as many as possible, or to visit particular subsets of them).
I suppose another way of describing it might be in the context of the hot cold game, which you probably played as a kid: where while looking for something hidden, the hider calls out “warmer, warmer, colder, warmer again, hot!” as an indication to the seeker as to whether or not they’re on the right track. This analogy is particularly apt when one gets within a few metres of the cache, at which point GPS devices become almost useless at telling you which direction to go in (and of uncertain value at telling you how far away you are – when in a wooded area or surrounded by tall buildings, GPS can be thrown off by tens or even hundreds of metres).
Since Kit and Fiona’s visit, a number of us have jumped right in to geocaching. Paul, Ruth, Jimmy, Claire and I are all now represented on the site: as pacifist_049 (Paul), fleeblewidget (Ruth), JimEsk (Jimmy & Claire), and avapoet (me).
I can’t speak for all of these people, but there’s something about geocaching that’s really grabbed my interest. Since their visit, I’ve been out and found a number of the caches in and around Aberystwyth, and I’ve even hidden the first of my own. At the very least, I’ve been glad of the excuse to make better use of my bike, but more than that: I’ve been pleased to get around and see parts of the town and countryside that I don’t normally visit or look that closely at. Yes, even when I’ve ended up stuck up on a hill in the dark (that’ll teach me to go ‘caching after work in the short days of winter!).
Perhaps strangest, though, is my (so-far limited) experience of the local geocaching community. After you’ve visited a few sites around here you begin to notice patterns in the names of the people who’ve been there before you, and you start seeing the same aliases appearing again and again. And in a town the size of Aberystwyth, it’s invariably only a matter of time before you make contact with, well, everybody.
At the weekend I was in Morrisons, buying plastic tubs and other supplies with which to make caches – I suppose that in itself might have made me stand out: who goes to Morrisons to buy a stack of small Tupperware boxes and notepads small enough to fit inside them? – when a man come over to me. He looked at me, as if trying to work out where he knew me from, and then looked down at my hands and saw what I was carrying. “Avapoet?” he asked. “Treedoctor2000?” I replied. So there we have it, I’m officially part of the local geocaching community, and I didn’t even mean to.
So there we have it, a glowing review for a fun new activity that if you haven’t tried, you ought to. If you own a GPS or even a modern mobile phone or even just a portable SatNav system, you’ve probably got all you need to get started, and with almost a million caches around the globe, there are sure to be a few near you. So if you were waiting for my approval before you went and did so, here it is.
Now get away from the computer and go do something outdoors!
Further Reading
This checkin to GL3C41ZC Alphabet Series - C reflects a geocaching.com log entry. See more of Dan's cache logs.
Changed my mind about waiting until the morning and set out just after midnight, as one can get away with when looking for urban caches. FTF! Found it without even pulling out my GPS, but did have to look inconspicuous for the passing muggles (although they looked too drunk to be paying attention anyway). Took the compass (thanks!), left a candle. TFTC!