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OEnavigators

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Posts posted by OEnavigators

  1. If you're as lucky as we are, wondering around with your family acting like tourists works great.

     

    Acting official works great too. Most people don't want to know what you're up to. They're absorbed in whatever they themselves are doing and want to steer clear. Just don't look suspicious! :ninja:

     

    Be sure to carry brochures just in case someone does approach you.

  2. Being new I have a question about the proper etiquette for claiming first to find.

    My son and I often cache together and are occasionally lucky enough to be able to be the first to a cache. We usually take turns on being FTF but can we both claim it?

    That would be neat if we could and would put an end to the inevitable rock, paper, scissors battle that ensues.

  3. We don't hunt micros all that often because the majority do seem to be rather dull. Lift a skirt lately? We have found some really creative ones attached to fake flowers and such.

    I do understand that sometimes you just can't get that creative with a container so I thought that making the hunt more entertaining would be preferable. GC1454P and GC13YZJ

  4. I've read through about three pages of this thread and I'm completely overwhelmed. Are all threads this negative?

    I by no means claim to have learned all there is to know about playing this game but I do know that I have children. As a father of four I can sympathize, for some of you that means to understand the feelings of others.

    I applaud Jeep Dog for taking his kids to enjoy the outdoors even with such allergies. I don't think it a problem at all to list what sort of container you used on a listing.

    An adult cacher can care for themselves just fine but children can't. I know the minute my kids think a cache may be located somewhere they almost run me over to get it :blink:

    If I ever use a PB&J jar for a hide I'll be sure to note it in my description. Although the bears around here would probably log the FTF! :P

  5. Hard to go wrong with NimH rechargeables - 25maH or so. Cheap when used as much as I do.Keep an extra set charged and ready.

     

    Can't go wrong with rechargeable batteries. Unless like me you've been known to leave the spares back home. :blink:

  6. Sometime though we come across a cache that has problems. For instance a vitamin bottle that has been chewed through. We take a picture and report to the owner as this is something that we would like to know if a cache of ours is failing.

     

    I have emailed numerous active cachers for different reasons. One being the above example. Although about half of the time we fail to get a response.

     

    The emails are not negative in nature.

     

    I always contact through the web site so no mail would get inadvertently placed in a bulk folder.

     

    If someone emailed you about something- would you ignore it or reply?

     

    It just seems to me that a simple reply would be kind. Do you find the same thing when emailing other local cachers?

     

    Of course we live in an time when people rarely send thank you cards. Some would rather send a thank you email. My sister got lots of gifts at her wedding and thought a simple thank you verbally was enough. :D These are all a different topic- but it kind of relates.

     

    All the time. :D

  7. You can't beat experience. Or reading the logs of the caches you are going to be seeking. Go forth, have fun.

     

    That's your best bet when first beginning to hike after caches. You could start with going after caches on established trails that will not require any bushwhacking. That will allow you to test how comfortable you are with any given distance.

    My family and I were hiking before we ever started to go geocaching. It is too much fun to go off in the woods.My four year old twins can hike two miles without a complaint, and that's without any trail.

    Peterson publishes some really good guides on a variety of topics. They are also very user friendly.

    Be sure to read the posts about what you need to carry along with you. Two things you will have to have are plenty of water and a trusty hiking stick.(not one of those poles).

    You'll find that once you have found some caches hidden in the woods that those urban micros can be a little dull. Enjoy! :D

  8. For me though the biggest thrill/prize is a fresh unsigned log book.

     

    Ah. The fresh dry paper. Crisp and not crumpled up from all the cachers before you. The empty log.

    That's the best part. It wouldn't hurt my feelings if I found a GPSr though ^_^

  9. One solution to greedy types, especially if they are FTF hogs is to provide a certificate that can be send in for the FTF prize. Make it only good to new FTF's. Sure the hog may come along and be the FTF but the second to find is the first qualifying FTF and the one that gets the prize. More work on your part, but a more equitable outcome and it keeps the pigs out of the shared trough if they can't share.

     

    Good Idea!

  10. I've only placed a few caches and have been just as frustrated with being too close to another cache. I recently had one refused because it violated the guideline by 33ft.

    I don't blame the reviewer though. They play the game just the same as we do. I don't know a cacher one who doesn't like to see new caches! They WORK for no pay and an often thankless job. They are only human and entitled to make a few mistakes.

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