Friday, November 23, 2012

Thanksgiving and Geocaching - 11/22/2012

Unlike previous years, I found it difficult to get excited about hunting geocaches on the first day of a three-day holiday weekend.  I did make a half-hearted effort to map out some to find on my trip to Tipton County for Thanksgiving.   There were plenty of caches on my route, but as I checked the cache pages for them, some were in areas I didn't want to visit.  Some easy ones had multiple DNFs suggesting that perhaps they were missing.

The weather was too nice, to not hunt at least a few.  One cache I was interested in hunting was OOH RAH Creager by TheCommonColt (GC3GE28).  I enjoy hunting military tribute caches as a rule and was happy to get a quiet day to visit a small memorial with an easy cache find.


I didn't set enough time aside to hunt many more, but I did pick up Adrian Chevy by Rapmaster2000 |(GC3YPAJ) at a park just to the north of my previous find.  The weather is cooling off now, so I hope to visit a couple of big parks in the next month or so.

Sunday, September 30, 2012

Caching in the Strawberry Mountain Wilderness - 8/10/2012


[ Story not completed, yet.  Feel free to read about Strawberry Mountain at the below link. ]

I had been waiting to return to Strawberry Mountain since my previous trip just over one year before.  That year we were stopped from approaching the cache at the top of the mountain by snow cover.  This year, I would be starting a month later during a summer that was warmer than the previous one.

My Mom and I met up with my Aunt at a parking lot in Island City in order to carpool to our destination.  Even  though we left early, it was a long drive to Prairie City, so I hadn't planned to hunt caches along the drive.  Once in the area, however we decided to get a few caches that were placed a few weeks before, but had not been logged.

Our first stop was WHERE IS THE FISH  by BAD DOGS (GC3PD9C).  It was located on the far side of a roadside park with a fishing lake and picnic facilities (and mosquitoes).  The coords were good and the container was big enough for me to easily find.  We walked around the lake and tried out the restroom facilities before moving on.


The second find of the morning was crescent by BAD DOGS (GC3PD97) at another roadside area just a little ways up the road from the last.  It was near a neat little waterfall that somehow I was the only one of our party to notice.


Our last find before our long hike was WHERE'S THE SNOW by BAD DOGS (GC3PD9) located in a snowmobile park that doesn't get visitors during the summer.  Three quick finds that were also FTFs made for a great start to the day.  Shortly after this point, we turned onto a gravel road for the remainder of the drive.  This kept us at a low speed and allowed those of us who weren't driving an opportunity to look around at the beauty of the wilderness.

We arrived at the parking area around 10:30 am, joining two other vehicles that had parked there.  Roads End Trail had once upon a time allowed vehicles to drive further up the mountainside.  I'm not sure how much closing the road here added to our trip, but we sure felt it coming back.

 [ Parking area for our hike ] 



 

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Caching in the Eagle Cap Mountains - 8/3/2012


I was excited to be geocaching with my youngest brother and my Dad while on vacation in Eastern Oregon.  On this particular day, I had plans for the evening, so I wanted to hunt a few geocaches relatively close to home.  I'm caching low-tech these days, because the Palm Pilot that I stored cache data on bit the dust not too long ago.  My brother had recently acquired a Garmin Montana, so I loaded our cache data on it.   It's a nice piece of equipment that has everything you need on it except a phone.

We started the morning with a nice breakfast in North Powder, OR.  We got the breakfast special, which was a 1 pound slab of ham, two eggs, hashbrowns, and toast.  It gave us p[lenty of energy for what was ahead.

First cache of the day was in Haines, OR and was called Coyote Peak Panorama by The Proebstels |(GC1RVMF).  It is high on a hill overlooking the town.

 [ Haines, OR - "The Biggest Little City in Oregon" ]

There used to be a silver mine up there, but we saw no traces of it.  There was also a large pit up there where they mined rocks, possibly granite.  My Dad and I tried to hunt this one before, but didn't take the right road.  This time I had better intel and a good 4-wheel drive truck to make the fairly steep climb.  Once at the top, the cache was a quick find and we paused to survey the valley before leaving.

We headed East along the Medical Springs Highway and along the Powder River to hunt our next cache - April Fools by littleredscout (GC2RD2).  I had looked at the area on Google Maps, but didn't realize the terrain changes.  I guess the terrain rating should have clued me in better.  It was a rough ride. 

We parked at what my GPSr told me was the closest parking and headed down a steep hill to find the cache.  Once at the cache, of course, we realized the "April Fool" part was another road nearby.  We took that one up, and I  was clobbered by exhaustion and an inability to catch my breath.  I took longer and longer breaks until my brother went up alone and came back for me in the truck.  I was only a few hundred feet away from where we had parked when they got to me.

[ Parking area - the cache is downhill. ]

Next, we drove up into the Eagle Cap Mountains.  There were five caches grouped pretty close together, but it still was a long drive on gravel roads.  By the time we got to the first cache - Taylor Green
by Pstip (GC1WFNH), I was rested and ready to go.  This cache is in an area for snowmobilers to hang out.  The cache was a tough find, but my brother has learned well!

 [ Glad to be on better roads. ]

The next cache was called On Top by Mr. Picks (GC1WFP4) and was rated a 1 / 5. Some cachers are more generous on rating terrains, because we drove straight to this one with no trouble.  The cache also qualified for the Forest Fire Lookout Tower series I'm trying to complete.


 [ Nice, peaceful view from where a lookout tower once stood. ]

Next up was summer, winter , view by justus2, Brad & Friends (GC312E) which was basically a roadside ammo can.  Finally, we hunted Eagle Meadows, Ore. by Justus2 & Friends (GCGK0Y) which involved a short hike down a trail.  The cache was an easy find and the view across the meadow was beautiful.  There was another cache across the meadow, but the ground was swampy and I had to be back home to get ready for a party I was going to that night.


Thursday, August 23, 2012

Geocaching on Amtrak - 7/26/2012

On a recent train trip from Chicago, IL to Pasco, WA, I tried hunting geocaches at various stops along the way.  It's not easy to do as time spent at each station varies, and some caches are literally on the wrong side of the tracks.  One cache that I have hunted on at least three separate occasions was Steaming away by Rainnstar (GC1C627), located in a small park adjacent to the station in Havre, MT.  This cache is relatively close to the station, so there is the added complication of other train passengers and crew hanging around the cache site.

[ My train is in the background. ]

On my previous stop here, I was questioned by a U.S. Border Patrol agent about what I was doing.  He told me that pot smokers were commonly found around here.  The park, itself, has a monument to the cooperation between the U.S. and Canadian Border Patrols (Havre is less than 50 miles south of the Canadian border).

{
[ Picture taken during a January trip in 2009 ]

For this trip, I located the coords on a satellite image before leaving Memphis, and when I got here, I just walked up and found the cache.  I got lucky in that the people hanging around disappeared during the time I had the cache in hand.

I spotted two other cache spots on this trip - one in Minot, ND, and the other in Spokane, WA.  Both, however, were right across the tracks and we were told by Amtrak employees not to cross the tracks.

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Secret Egypt - Part III

I haven't been doing any geocaching for the last month because I don't really care for the heat (and bugs).  In the meantime, I've been reading about the further adventures of a travel bug that I had the privilege of releasing back in early 2011.  Egyptian Explorer 01 was one of around thirty travel bugs released by the Herbert Art Gallery and Museum back in the Fall of 2010 and whose goals were to visit specific Egyptian-themed sites around the world.  I was asked by a lady who works for the museum if I could start a bug on its journey to visit sites in Memphis before making it's way back to the museum in England.


It took much longer than expected to arrive, but I was able to visit all of the requested Memphis sites and take pictures with the TB.  Afterwards, I put it in a TB Motel near the airport - Aerotropolis TB Hotel and hoped it could make the jump across the ocean and on it's way home.  It was reported as missing soon afterwards, but it turned out that it was picked up by a cacher who dropped it off near another TB motel near an airport 1,046 miles away in Connecticut.  It went from Connecticut to Rhode Island and off to the Netherlands.   I have been monitoring other Egyptian Explorer bugs that seemed to get stuck in the Netherlands, but mine made it out and into Germany, where is has been slowly moving south.

The final goal of this bug and the other Eqyptian Explorer bugs, was to complete their missions and make it back to the museum by June 2011 to be displayed as part of their Egyptian exhibit.  Some made it back in time, mine (and others) is more than a year late.

As of this date, the bug has traveled 5078 miles and is in Germany headed south towards Switzerland.

Monday, May 28, 2012

A Sendoff Before Geowoodstock X - 5/19/2012

If my blog posts seem a little slow as of late, I am blaming it on the changes to Google's Blogger software. :-/

[ pictures and a few more details are coming soon]

At this time of the year, I am loath to do any geocaching out in the woods, because I don't like the heat and the bugs.  I was happy on the this weekend to get out with my friend jbgreer and attend a pre-Geowoodstock event after doing a much needed recycling chore.

We met up at the usual time and had a nice breakfast before heading out to e-recycle some old televisions I had.  The recycling was being done at the University of Memphis and since a similar event had been held only a month before, we easily got in and out of the lot where the collection was taking place.

We had a little over three hours to kill, and I didn't have my usual set of detailed plans for caches to go after.  I blame this, in part, on my inability to adapt to the changes that geocaching.com has recently made to their mapping software.

Anyways,because we were close to the Memphis Botanic Gardens, we decided to grab the two caches on that property.  I had never been there before, so I wanted to take some time to tour the majority of the gardens after, of course, first beelining our way to the two caches.

 [ The entrance to the Botanic Gardens Visitor Center ]

 


After finding the caches, I cleaned up a bit in the Visitor's Center before we headed onward to Shelby Farms.  There are a handfull of caches in that park, but we decided to just get the one that didn't involve getting too far off of the trail.  GC MB 8C by CacheDroidz-H M Murdoch (GC39Z1E) was a nice find even though it was a bit of a walk for such a hot day.  It was good to visit the park, though, and we will definitely be back for other caches when the cool sets in.


At this point, we only had time for one more cache on the way to the event, so we chose
The Secret Lane by tiger130 (GC2NRB5).  It was a nice cache that was not too deep in the woods, so we were on our way quickly.


A Sendoff Before GeoWoodstock X by Team SpiderMonkey (GC3J917) was being held on a section of the boardwalk at W.C Johnson Park in Collierville, TN.  We arrived at the same time as nelms3 and soon others followed.  I got a few pictures of the swampy area off of the boardwalk.




There was a lot of talk of the plans people had for Geowoodstock weekend, as well as puzzle challenges in various states.  It is obvious at this point, that there are a lot of locals far more into geocaching than I am these days.  We left the event at 2pm and headed back into Memphis and out of the heat.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Arlington, TN - 4/14/2012

Rarely do I get a chance to hunt a bunch of geocaches all placed by the same person.  I noticed a while back a cluster of new geocaches in the Arlington, TN area.  I had thought about hunting them earlier than this particular weekend, but I could tell from the cache descriptions that they would be ones that my friend jbgreer would like, so I saved them until this trip.

The first cache of the morning was Another Road to Nowhere! by CacheDroidz (GC3BQGF).  We had found a cache on this particular long dead end road before, so we knew exactly how to get to it.  The coordinates were maybe 40 feet off, but we eventually found the container and got a feel for what we were in for on this day.

[ located on a hill across the road from the cache ]

The next find of the morning was STOP! This road goes Nowhere! by CacheDroidz  (GC3G055).  Again, this cache was considerably off of the mark, but in an easily recognizable spot.  It did, however, take some effort to retrieve.

[ This area has a lot of old abandoned roads. ]

The third cache of the morning was Micro Airport by CacheDroidz (GC3G084).  This cache was across the street from where Memphis Propbusters has a fields for flying RC airplanes.  The field was blocked off today - maybe it wasn't flying season, yet.  The cache coordinates were right on this time and we spent a little time checking out the field afterwards.


[ Nice area to relax. ]

Next on the list was Sumac Road Cache by CacheDroidz (GC3FAAX).  This geocache was cleverly hidden and took a while to find even with good coordinates.  The stench of the nearby dead dog, however, was not hard to find.


This was the last of the four caches that were just outside of Arlington.  In hindsight, it would have been better to do them last because they were fairly isolated away from people.


The next cache was on another abandoned road and was called The Bridge to Nowhere by CacheDroidz (GC3BQD4).  Well, there was a bridge nearby, but the cache was at least 200 feet out in the woods.  On this day, the terrain wasn't too bad, but I can imagine times where it might be a nightmare getting to the cache area.  This was a great cache and I wish that the owner hadn't hinted at the hide technique in the cache description.


[ There is a bridge out there somewhere...]


Next was The Road to Nowhere by CacheDroidz (GC3ARZJ).  This was a hide, not unlike the previous one.  The difference was that the terrain was much easier.  There were interesting sights on the ground around the cache area, though - they may have been Easter-related.


[ Three crosses just laying around...]


Turtle Fountains Pond TB Birdhouse by CacheDroidz (GC3G06M) was an interesting cache to get to.  It was in a park behind some houses that had an almost covert entrance.  The park had a walking track and it the narrow set of woods behind it - a nice cache.




As we were about to leave, I stopped at a bench to get a rock out of my shoe and saw that some visiting Memphian had carved a little gang graffiti into it.  It's always nice to see a touch of home in an otherwise fairly pristine area.


We made one more quick find near the side of a building.  That cache was called We have FAITH in Arlington by CacheDroidz (GC3G04B) and we had to have faith that the cache was placed with permission.

The last find of the morning was a little out of the way, but since it had 11 favorite points, I figured it would be a good cache.  Birdhouse TB Hotel by dan5240 (GC2D1XG) had plenty of pictures on the cache page as well as instructions for getting into it.  I was surprised, though, that it wasn't painted up, Still it was a nice cache for my 3900th find.


[ tucked away near the end of someone's driveway ]