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team_goobie

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Posts posted by team_goobie

  1. I haven't seen an iPhone/Pod Touch app as inclusive as Cachemate BUT - you can cover much of the functionality using Groundspeak's app (Geocaching) for real time cache location, the iGeoCacher app for storing custom PQ's, and iGCT (Geocaching Toolkit) for projecting waypoints, decoding, and such.

     

    I'm partial to iGeoCacher but Geocaching is REALLY handy when visiting a new area - no need to download PQ's, it pulls in the local caches live from geocaching.com. Get all three and you're spending a grand total of $25.

     

    Now, if the author of Cachemate released an iPhone version - dadgum dayyum that would be golden. HTH.

  2. king_thunder~0.jpg

     

    This is Thunder - we rescued him shortly after we started Geocaching. He's almost 15 years old but is in great shape.

     

    We didn't name him Thunder, we found out that was his name by calling the vet's tag he was wearing when we found him. Coincidentally both Laura and I wear Mjolnirs (Thor's Hammers), so he's a totem as well as a great friend and companion.

     

    Tony

  3. Do you think Geocaching should record more "statists" about your find and travel bugs, and give more goals for you to aim for?

     

    Isn't this what challenges are all about (DeLorme and other such)? And Geoclubs? Achievement pins and banquets are fun stuff and you get to hang with real life peeps who will share in your achievements!

     

    Play any way you like, though I'd hate to see the Geocaching.com site get any sillier than this comic over at Crispy Gamer.

     

    (ducking WOW flames even as I type)! :D

  4. "... I know many caches that are in dynamite drill holes in some rockface somewhere.

     

    Waypoints, please?

    ~*

     

    Safe1 has made this kind of cache their trademark. Have a look at their cache page.

     

    Safe1 Caches

     

    They're really common out here in mining country. Why they remain after the blast, I don't know - they must drill those suckers pretty deep! Fire in the hole! ;)

  5. The url will look like this http://www.geocaching.com/seek/log.aspx?ID=232624

    then change the "ID=" to "WP=" and replace the number with the GC code of the PMOC in question so you get:

    http://www.geocaching.com/seek/log.aspx?WP=GCNJVY

    go to that link and log the cache.

     

    Except - it does not work. I've tried the hint, from a few different browsers, logged in under our standard account, and it always returns the "Sorry bub you need to upgrade" message.

     

    Like many others we have a premium account for the household and a standard (two actually) for individuals. Any ideas?

  6. At a cache site in Pocatello found a hypo needle and a dumped out kitty litter box. Needless to say I passed after that.

     

    Speaking of hypos found another nearby a cache site here in Reno, on a crappy day for reception. Cache was actually across the street from where I was. Took the hypo and burned it.

     

    This weekend we passed by a homeless camp that had been struck in the parking lot of a closed bank, also close to aforementioned cache. This not a hundred yards from Condos we're considering to buy. :D

  7. I really like being in contact with those that seek my puzzles. It makes it all the better when you meet up with them at an event.

     

    Having Geochecker on the page soitenly (nyuk nyuk) doesn't keep them from getting in touch. My puzzle caches have generated way more mail and inquiries than the regulars. And, it seems the same group around here likes to tackle puzzles, so we tend to hand together anyway. Small town. :unsure:

     

    It's just another resource worth having, like any other tool.

  8. There are two park hides that have eluded and perplexed me.

     

    GC15WPT 15 Minute Parking

     

    and

     

    GCKDN1 Double Diamond Devil

     

    I'd LIKE to say I have a better idea where/what they are now that I've read this thread- time will tell! Thanks for the topic!

     

    Other park hides I've actually found -fake birds nest, keysafe mag on a sign pole, bison tubes disguised as twigs. Here in Reno bushy pine trees are common and the Parks Service (they have an account) likes to just stick 'em in amongst the branches a coupla feet up.

     

    Nicest camo job I've bumped into was this one;

     

    GCW6H1 The Woman with the Bowl

     

    Check out the Find to DNF ratio on that. Awesome!

  9. I love finding puzzle caches, and I love making them. That said, they need to be tested well! I've found that out the hard way - on both ends of the deal (finding and hiding). It's very easy for the cache hider to get all gummed up in the details of clues and miss a glaring mistake - say, a "+" where an equation should have a "-" . It's a good idea to have a fellow cacher vet the page before you post for the reviewer. (Find an out of state buddy - say, someone who found one of your caches while they were on vacation, so no-one feels like they're missing out on a FTF.)

     

    BTW I bet a lot of cache hiders aren't aware that a cache page can be held back from review after it is published. That's a great little checkbox - "Yes this cache is currently active", on the edit page. It's especially helpful when constructing a puzzle cache because the page could time out while you're filling in details. Unchecking the box lets you "save" your description from time to time without actually submitting it for review. And, it gives you as much time as you need to let your helper cacher vet the puzzle.

     

    Geochecker, I think should just be a standard for puzzle caches.

     

    And... even though I have done this, puzzles should be a small or regular, preferably regular, not a micro, the harder, the larger, IMHO! :unsure:

     

    Thanks for starting this thread!

  10. I think the questions was some thing like who based on previous experience now ignores certain cache hiders?

     

    Not about who was caching the longest, what types of caches are crappy, or even a crappy hider's motives for placing a cache.

     

    Yup, we do. Nice people, boring (if not missing) caches. Pretty much normal I'm sure for most locales.

     

    Truth to tell, this thread has me thinking back over our cache hides. Time to archive! We can't all be Michelangelo! :)

  11.  

    Am I alone here?

     

    Maybe not alone, outnumbered, yes. But your sense of entitlement is certainly widespread enough out in RL. :)

     

    I have another hobby, crossword solving (and construction). I joined the Cruciverb website many years ago, which has a two tier membership system. Non-paying gets you links to popular daily crosswords, a nice forum and crossword resources. Subscribers ($35 a year) get access to a word and clue database, and links to other crosswords, etc.

     

    If you're an aspiring constructor, those subscriber resources are great, but not anything you could live without. If you just like to solve crosswords, they're probably overkill. Either way, you get a choice, and there's no "stigma" to being a member (non-subscriber). You just get what you pay for, and being a paying subscriber helps support the site. Period.

     

    That being said, I'm no longer a subscriber to Cruciverb. I still do crosswords but I've compiled my own database and don't need to access Cruciverb's any longer. And, I took up Geocaching, which has been eating up my crossword solving time. Still there are similarities between the hobbies (and the websites) and becoming a paying member when I started geocaching was a no-brainer, and certainly not elitist. $3 a month means elitist? I don't think so. Maybe spending $5 a DAY on a Venti Caramel non-fat no-foam Macchiatto with ginger sprinkles, yes (and pretentious to boot), but $3 a month to get pocket queries et al? No way. :)

     

    There's way too much worrying about this kind of stuff. There ain't no such thing as a free lunch kiddos! That's life!

     

    T

  12. Thanks - some notes- first the bad

     

    1) Like many others, I found that saving more than a few (say, ten) caches locally crashes the program.

    2) Because you can't log in to gc.com on the app, Member Only caches do not download and are not searchable.

    3) There's no way to load queries.

    4) There's no way to add and save a waypoint.

    5) Searching trackables is cool, but really, why is that a priority before implementing saving waypoints?

    6) Does not show all logs.

    7) Doesn't link directly to Safari so you can log a find (or look at other cache info). You have to find the cache manually in Safari. Big time waster. Again, why trackables before this?

    8) The only filter is basic (traditional) or Advanced (everything else). You can't even filter out your own finds, again, because the app doesn't log you in to gc.com.

    9) If you haven't saved caches (or hit bug #1) you cannot use it offline (no cell or wifi), as there is no way to access the navigation screen except from a cache page - and if you can't view a cache page, you're done. Plus, the navigation screen does not show current coordinates? Did I miss something?

    10) Wifi location (I have an iPod Touch) is iffy at best. 50% of the time it dumps me in Portland, Oregon. Getting really tired of seeing "Goat Mountain Cache" popping up in the cache list!

     

    Now the good-

    1) The search function is great when traveling. I downloaded it on vacation in Cody, Wyoming and was able to grab four caches in minutes around our hotel without having to break out the laptop or even fire up safari on the iPod. Mucho nice.

    2) Lists cache inventory.

    3) $5 cheaper than the competition. :rolleyes:

    4) It's released.

     

    Thanks for putting up the thread, I appreciate it!

     

    Tony

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