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Geo-Joe-N-Josh

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Posts posted by Geo-Joe-N-Josh

  1. What would be on it?

     

    I think about this because I wish I could watch geocaching when I wasn't doing it.

     

    These are my ideas:

    1) EXTREME caching

    2) GC history - first event, first cache, first TB type episodes

    3) Where are they now? Trackable stories

    4) Oldest caches - history, geography, interviews with cachers who've found them

    5) Classic Music hour - scenes from in the field, beautiful cache sites, set to classical music

     

    Any ideas out there? What would you want to watch?

    Extreme caching! that could work. plenty of people are watching those survival shows. Why wouldn't they watch some guy climb Mt. Everest for a cache, or dive down in the Carrebbean.

  2. This cache:

     

    101 Dalmations # 2

     

    is, by far, the very best indoor cache you will ever experience!

    That sound like a great idea to get people to help one another!

    ... and that's an "Agenda." If that cache were submitted to me today, I would send the owner to Groundspeak to obtain special permission.

     

    Ditto for the commercial cache location examples higher up in the thread, like the IKEA store.

     

    With all due respect, I fail to see how going inside a nursing home and sharing compassion and time is an "agenda."

     

    It seems to me that the caching world could use a few random acts of kindness these days.

    I agree. People need to help eachother.

  3. We have an indoor cache in the Hubbard Library. GCQY9T Very creative. The cache was a mag keyholder on the INSIDE of the door to a little patio. The coordinates accurately took you to the door outside. The key holder was well placed and looked like part of the door so we didn't pick up on it right away. We went in and I went upstairs while my teammate went down, but it was on the main floor on the door.

     

    The final was behind the check out desk and you had to ask for it to get it. Altogether one of my favorites!

    sounds like a cache at the Field Musiem in Chicago. I did not find it but the coordinates took you to an area with balconies and such.

  4. Or is it, as someone else has said, better that they have a place to play all day so they'll leave all our other threads alone? :laughing:

    You have hit it on the head! There exists a handful of otherwise-fine-and-lovable-and-fun geocachers on this forum who love to argue, to nit-pick, to engage in lengthy and repetitious and never-ending (and insane...) arguments over how many angels will fit on the head of a pin, and over the flaws in the arguments posted by the previous poster. Far better that the one thread that you have referenced act as a fly-trap, rather than having them (and the guy with the weird and irritating icon who hasta/musta send a troll post to every thread) infest the rest of the forum threads! :laughing:

     

    Inquiring minds want to know? Who has the irritating icon? In the other thread, that's like saying, the user with the keyboard.

     

    Vinny is talking about me. He has sent me numerous e-mails asking me to change my "weird and irritating" avatar. He said it makes him physically ill when he sees it.

     

    Hmm... I thought my avatar was the most irritating.

    I like Brainsnat's icon.

  5. Websites are turning GeoCaching into a business. I thought it was just supposed to be a fun game.

    (No offence Geocaching.com)

     

    How about replacing "are turning" with "have turned" since Geocaching.com has been in business for the better part of a decade.

    Geocaching has not turned into a business. It is still a game. There is just a line of geocaching products. The two are completly seperate.

  6. This is the way I look at it:

     

    TBs are not a core component of geocaching. Before they existed, geocaching was plenty of fun. They are just a fun add-on.

     

    As such, why do I care if they charge a few bucks for TB tags? Good for them.

    sbell111 is right and he's been around long enough to know. Hitchhikers started when some people would attach a note to a trade item asking people who traded for it to leave it in another cache. They either asked that people email them when they moved their hitchhiker or they set up their own website to track them. Groundspeak, who was looking for way to turn geocaching into a business, saw the popularity of hitchhikers and decided to sell travel bug tags that could be attached to items and be tracked on Geocaching.com. Later they added the ability to track coins. Never have they said you couldn't continue to have your own hitchhiker and track it on your own website. Of course, Groundspeak was able to integrate the tracking of their travel bugs with the online logging of geocaches so that makes them more likely to be tracked and thus more popular.

     

    The idea that travel bug tracking should be free is one more example of people who confuse geocaching with the online services provided by Geocaching.com.

    1. ability to list caches - free (or $3 to list caches as premium members only)
    2. ability to log caches online - free
    3. ability to search online for caches - free
    4. ability to download coordinates of caches - free (or $3 to get coordinates for PMOC)
    5. ability to download additional cache information - $3/month
    6. ability to list a trackable item - varies around $4.25 per item
    7. ability to log a trackable item listed on Geocaching.com - free

     

    sbell111 is right and he's been around long enough to know. Hitchhikers started when some people would attach a note to a trade item asking people who traded for it to leave it in another cache. They either asked that people email them when they moved their hitchhiker or they set up their own website to track them. Groundspeak, who was looking for way to turn geocaching into a business, saw the popularity of hitchhikers and decided to sell travel bug tags that could be attached to items and be tracked on Geocaching.com. Later they added the ability to track coins. Never have they said you couldn't continue to have your own hitchhiker and track it on your own website. Of course, Groundspeak was able to integrate the tracking of their travel bugs with the online logging of geocaches so that makes them more likely to be tracked and thus more popular.

     

    The idea that travel bug tracking should be free is one more example of people who confuse geocaching with the online services provided by Geocaching.com.

    1. ability to list caches - free (or $3 to list caches as premium members only)
    2. ability to log caches online - free
    3. ability to search online for caches - free
    4. ability to download coordinates of caches - free (or $3 to get coordinates for PMOC)
    5. ability to download additional cache information - $3/month
    6. ability to list a trackable item - varies around $4.25 per item
    7. ability to log a trackable item listed on Geocaching.com - free

    what turned Geocaching into a business?!?

    Jeremy's desire to feed his family.

     

    O.K. good point

  7. Groundspeak, who was looking for way to turn geocaching into a business, saw the popularity of hitchhikers and decided to sell travel bug tags that could be attached to items and be tracked on Geocaching.com.

     

    what turned Geocaching into a business?!? It's supposed to be a game!

  8. I hid a cache a few years back and listed that it contained 10 bucks as a first finders prize.....the first finder was delighted. Here is the picture she posted after finding the cache.

     

    356395_200.jpg

     

    moneymoney.jpg

     

    $500.00 dollars would be cool.

     

    (real cost about $4.00)

     

    Feh.

     

    I have put a million dollars for FTF in a couple of caches...

     

    traditional_new_fronta.jpg

     

    One of these days I'm going to order a bunch more and get a stamp so that I can use them as signature swag. I had a bunch of these bills from an event a long time ago. We gave one to all attendees. Each bill was wrapped with a ribbon which read "Thanks a Million".

     

    I've dropped a bunch into caches that logged them with something like "Took hot wheels car, Left a million dollars".

    The question is...which is closer to true? A million dollars, ten bucks, or 500 dollars? :lol:

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