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Almost One Tenth As Old As America

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Almost One Tenth As Old As America

Geocaching

A Mystery Cache

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Hats Off To Caching SC We went for a hike in Hitchcock Woods this evening and checked on two of our caches and scouted a spot for our next hide, Hats Off to Caching in SC. It is inspired by the fellow who was also responsible for my Geocaching License, Renzo Tobias.

It is going to be a mystery cache and we found the perfect place to put it, a place in the Woods that is called Mystery Field. It is more of a thinned out piece of woods than an actual field and it doesn’t have a sign, but it is a spot of the woods that is little used and all up hill on the way out, so heading back to the start is a pleasant walk down. If someone wanted to get this one and the other two we checked on tonight it will be a nice little 3 mile loop.

Started down, went up, back down, still down.
Miata Top Transitions since 10/24/08: 308
Tagged: Geocaching, Hiking

That Was Quick

Monday, July 27, 2009

I ordered some stuff from CacheAdvance last Thursday and it was on my doorstep today. Four days from Spokane, WA to Aiken, SC, two thousand six hundred miles to the southeast. That is because they sent it via the USPS not UPS. The minions of the Postal Service keep on chugging over the weekend unlike the United Parcel Service, which seems to stop everything and take a couple days off.

Over the weekend we found 9 caches, three Saturday and six on Sunday which is about what we consider just right for the amount of time we want to invest on this “hobby” during the summer. The trouble with that total was that it left us sitting at 149, an oh so uneven mark. Tonight after dinner we went out to get just one. Now things are better balanced here at the Bogardus Manor.

We hit Wally World on the way back to peruse the Clearance Aisle to find swag for placing in caches found or to put in the new Lock and Lock from Spokane. I also picked up some flat olive and tan paint in spray cans for cammoing my fireman’s hat for another hide I’m working on.

I think I’m going to have to get a Geocaching category for sidebar and search some linkage to put over there. I’ve already got ton of bookmarks on the subject, but now I need to go out and find a bunch of Geobloggers…

Started down, went up, back down, up again, down once more, still down.
Miata Top Transitions since 10/24/08: 306
Tagged: Geocaching

Oh Deer

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Oh DeerAbout 4:30 this afternoon we looked at each other and said, “Let’s go.” We loaded up the Miata with knapsacks, walking sticks, hiking boots, some ice water, a cut up apple and headed into Hitchcock Woods to find “SECTION”. I had pretty much given up on finding this one, we had the Stage 1 coordinates, but in three attempts could not locate the small cache with the coords for Stage 2. A fellow cacher who was one of the half dozen or so to have found this one had offered a hint after our second try, but I was reluctant. Call it a function of the gene that makes us males incapable of asking for directions, I didn’t want the hint, but Donna with Marisa Tomei’s help convinced me to take it.

Mona Lisa Vito: So what’s your problem?
Vincent Gambini: My problem is, I wanted to win my first case without any help from anybody.
Mona Lisa Vito: Well, I guess that plan’s moot.
Vinny Gambini: Yeah.
Mona Lisa Vito: You know, this could be a sign of things to come. You win all your cases, but with somebody else’s help, right? you win case after case, and then afterwards you have to go up to somebody and you have to say, “thank you.”
[pause]
Mona Lisa Vito: Oh my God, what a f**king nightmare!

With the hint we found the Stage 1 container within minutes of arriving at GZ. The coordinates for Stage 2 were loaded up and off we went. A few minutes into the trip a big rustling sound came off from our right. We had spooked a deer. She circled through the woods a bit and came back out on the trail 25 yards ahead of us, eyeballed us for a minute or so, then danced away. When we started it said the cache was .25 miles away right straight down the Palmetto Ride trail where the Stage 1 was hidden off of. The distance steadily decreased to about half that before the trail headed off in a perpendicular direction. The distance to the cache grew and grew until it was over a third of mile off, before the trail turned back and the distance started to came down again. When it got down to around 300 feet the trail again turned 90 degrees away from the cache.

Knowing the trail eventually looped back again, but not for a long while, when went off-trail and made a beeline for our goal (well, as much a beeline as possible through the thick brush and brambles, dang, the scratches from last weekend’s bushwhacking expedition were just starting to disappear.) The GPSr led us straight to a small dam that we had been to long before when we were just hiking in here and not looking for ammo cans well integrated into the environment. To the left was an algae covered pond, to the right was a 30 foot drop and the direction indicator said 60′ straight across the two foot wide concrete dam. Neither of us were foolhardy enough to try the balancing act, so we weighed the steep wooded drop to the small stream below the dam or the long trail to the other side.

The long walk won out because we knew that was easier to get to the dam from the Low Country Ride trail from previous experience. When we got around to the other side of the dam the GPSr did it again, pointed straight across the dam the other way and read sixty feet. Niiice, now what?

We fight the only slightly less steep downhill on this side through thick underbrush to the very bottom of the ravine about 90′ downstream from the dam. The GPSr was now pointing right at the dam. Damn. We daintily hop a very murky looking stream and fight more thick vines with thorny sides until we are at the base of the dam. There inside the three foot square opening of a water gate was an ammo can. FOUND IT! (For some reason it was totally unnecessarily hidden behind a couple pieces of broken clay pipe, like there would ever be any foot traffic down here and they might accidentally spot it…)

We signed the log, climbed the hill back to the trail and headed out of the woods. Total miles walked, 3.0; total time spent in the woods, 1:55:30; average speed, 2 mph; total bleeding scratches on my legs and arms, 5.

Sure hope they never have to open that overflow gate, they’ll no one will ever see that ammo can again.

Oh, and OddAngles, “Thank you.”

Started down, still down.
Miata Top Transitions since 10/24/08: 302
Tagged: Geocaching, Hiking

Historic 1940 Tour de France Picture

Friday, July 24, 2009

Historic 1940 Tour de France PictureBecause folks know I bicycle and that my wife and go out of our way to get the cable upgrade just so we can watch the Tour de France every year, I have received this picture via email from co-workers 3 times in the last two days. Ha, ha, ha.

We toke a hike in Hitchcock Woods this evening and hid our third geocache. This one is called “No Horses Allowed” because it is placed along one of the two trails we know of that are closed to horses due to erosion concerns and or steepness. We have got a couple more planned for placing in the woods and then we are going to have to find some other locations. Not that the we are getting anywhere close to having caches too near each other, within 500′ is the limit, but when we are done with those two there will be an even dozen in the Woods and that is probably plenty.

Started up, went down, still down.
Miata Top Transitions since 10/24/08: 302
Tagged: Bicycling, Geocaching

Really Awsome Stuff Found On The Web

Thursday, July 23, 2009

In case any one every asks if I have a license to geocache, I can now say yes thanks to Renzo Tobias. I took his idea, added a little color, printed one out, signed and laminated it then tucked it in my wallet:
Geocacher's License

io9 has a post today that digs up 201 different Star Wars T-shirts. If you owned all of these and started on the first of the year you might just be starting to wear repeats about now. My favorite, #149:
Jedi Boob Trick

From the Download Squad, behold The Most Amazing Website On The Internet:
My Cat Carl

Started down, went up, still up.
Miata Top Transitions since 10/24/08: 301
Tagged: Geocaching

What the Heck Happened?

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Ugly WallThe FRS started the “second half” of the season with a three game lead over the MFY in the AL East. Both teams have played four games since then, and after last night they are in a first place tie. Tonight the Sox are losing to the Texas Rangers and the Yankees are beating Baltimore, if everything stays as it is they will find themselves looking up in the standings to the Yanks.

We attempted a nifty puzzle cache that took us to the Aiken County Veterans Memorial Park the other night. We had a list of names to look for in the brinks in the walkway surrounding a fountain, they were a mixture of individual donors, companies and tributes to the fallen. To facilitate finding individual bricks they were arranged in a grid with letters for columns and numbers for rows. We quickly realized we needed the numbers to arrange them into the next set of coordinates. Didn’t have time right then, so we finished the juggling at home with the intentions of going back.

Yesterday we headed back over there with our new GZ to look for the cache. The GPSr led us right to a big crape myrtle surrounded by lots of low bushes and seemed tailor made for hiding a cache. It must have been hidden real good because we didn’t find it after 10 minutes of crawling around there. When we got home I emailed the cache owner and asked for confirmation of our coordinates.

This morning the reply came to the effect that there were no bushes anywhere near the cache. Dang we have the wrong coordinates. Rechecking all the possibilities it turns out we missed one and it was only 137 feet due west from where we were looking yesterday. After dinner tonight we went back to this set of coords and there were no bushes and there was a cache.

Started down, still down.
Miata Top Transitions since 10/24/08: 300
Tagged: FRS, Geocaching

Around The Block

Monday, July 20, 2009

Rollerblading TrackWent for a neighborhood blading session this evening and put the GPSr in my pocket. What you see here is my path. One big loop around the ‘hood is a little more than 3/4 of a mile, but I include several back and forth passes through the side streets to make it longer. This is route resulted in 2 miles. If I want to go further than that I can just leave the safety of my neighborhood and head out into one of several nearby places that are just as flat and traffic free.

Tonight’s obligatory geocaching content: While regaling my co-workers with tales of my weekend’s worth of geocaching, one (Hi Mark) asked me if I was planned on visiting all of the geocaches in South Carolina like I did for the Post Offices. I said I doubt it, there are probably a lot more caches than POs. This got me wondering, how many are there in South Carolina. Turns out it was easier to find out than I though. If you click on the SEEK link on Geocaching dot com it takes you to a page where you can find caches using all kinds of criteria, with by state being one of them. Turns out there are over 3,700! (there are almost 68,000 in CA.)

Started down, still down.
Miata Top Transitions since 10/24/08: 300
Tagged: Geocaching
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sturgeon’s law

"Ninety Percent Of Everything Is Crap"
Derived from a quote by science fiction author Theodore Sturgeon, who once said, "Sure, 90% of science fiction is crud. That's because 90% of everything is crud." Oddly, when Sturgeon's Law is cited, the final word is almost invariably changed to 'crap'.

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1) You will never find a more wretched hive of scu 1) You will never find a more wretched hive of scum and villainy. 2) Who is this guy? I don't remember him at all. Maybe the puzzle's artist?

#moseisley #cantina #starwars #jigsaw #jigsawpuzzle #jigsawpuzzlesofinstagram #jigsawpuzzleanonymous

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