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oakenwood

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Posts posted by oakenwood

  1. Someday when they make the geocaching movie, there'll be a scene where the FTF hounds spring into action. Email alerts will draw them from their beds into the cold night air, pulling hats and gloves over their pajamas, jumping on snowmobiles, jet skis, ultralights, roller blades, and Segways. They'll be parachuting, hitch-hiking, and hopping freight trains. They'll all be converging on ground zero, offering fake hints and staking out search areas. Some clown will cry "I've found it!", but it's just a ruse to drive the others away in frustration. Finally, one cacher checks some place for the third time and notices something a little out of the ordinary. They furtively sign the log and head out with a look of deep satisfaction.

  2. 1. That I could download cache locations directly to my GPSr. (When I first started, I'd write the coordinates in a notepad, go to the cache area, turn the GPSr on, and move the pointer to the cache location. What a noob!)

     

    2. It's no fun looking for caches under wet leaves.

     

    3. To avoid wearing spiderwebs, wave a long twig in front of you while you walk. (Lots of webbage here in the east.)

     

    4. Don't give up the search. My favorite caches are the ones that were hardest to find.

     

    5. Use a high-sensitivity, WAAS-enabled GPSr. The added accuracy helps.

     

    6. Don't be so focused on the cache that you fail to enjoy your environment.

  3. It's not unusual for GPS receivers to be as many as 50 feet off. If your unit has WAAS, enable it-- it will improve the accuracy.

     

    Some caches, especially older ones, can be off as well. If the cache is off by 50 feet and you're off by 50 feet, it could be 100 feet away.

  4. Those directions, or something close, should work with your units. You might not be able to go all the way to the last of your steps, though. The Tides page might be as far as you can go, if the unit won't recall which station you've selected. It'll still save you a few steps.

     

    I don't have either of your units, so I can't check it. I'm describing a shortcut that works for Garmin handhelds in general.

  5. As a newbie, does anyone have a list of all the code words for the logs on the web site. (PAF, TFTH, THFC, etc.)

     

    Try here. Geocaching dot com has lots of other useful info, too. All kinds of stuff.

  6. Thanks for the info and the email.

     

    I was kind of joking about the cliff thing, though. Really, there aren't many geographical hazards arund here at all. The hazards are biological: skeeters, ticks, spiders, poison ivy.

     

    Someday GPS devices will give topo directions like they do with streets. It'd be like orienteering with the computer figuring out the best route instead of figuring it out yourself. That's when I'd be worried about going over a cliff.

     

    "Turn left. Walk two hundred yards."

    "Okay, turn left, and walk... aaaaaaaaaaahhhh!!!!"

  7. I'm cheap. I didn't want to pay a hundred bucks for a map disk just to use a little bit in central Maryland.

     

    So I went online. I used a set of maps cobbled together from mapcenter, using Mapwel to put them on my Garmin.

     

    Then just recently I found gpsfiledepot, in particular this map. Much better. I installed it, picked the parts I wanted in MapSource, and clicked "send". Easy as that. Free, too.

     

    I just hope there isn't some hidden flaw that sends me walking over a cliff.

  8. And what's with the caches that someone says the log is completely full and needs a new one. However, only one side of the pages are used and the back of every page is blank?

     

    Found a cache once that had logs indicating the log was full. Then when I go to log it, found, not only was the back side of all the sheets clean and unsigned, the last couple of signatures where squeezed in very tightly on the front! :D:(:)

    That's when it's time to flip the log over, turn it around, and pretend that's the front. Writing the name of the cache on the new "front" cover helps.

  9. Power69 beat me to one point: a dedicated GPSr is usually more accurate than a GPS-enabled phone. They typically have high-sensitivity chipsets that allow them to see more satellites and usually also have WAAS. It's the difference between ten feet and 30-50 feet.

     

    You can get geocaching apps for a phone, but it's often a built-in feature for a GPSr. Many times, the phone apps aren't free. For instance, the geocaching app for my Motorola phone costs $6.99/month. Using a phone also requires connecting while you use the app. You need an unlimited plan, or you'll pay a lot of money.

     

    Speaking of money, not everybody can afford both gadgets. If they've paid $400 for a phone, they may not want to shell out another $150 for a GPSr that they consider redundant.

  10. Caching through the snow...

     

    I wouldn't even try. I know it's an antidote to cabin fever, but I can't think of a better way for mother nature to increase the difficulty than to put a heap snow on everything. I'd bring a metal detector and maybe a flame thrower.

     

    Right now we're expecting twenty to twenty-four inches by Sunday morning. That's just a light dusting for yoopers, but here it's the apocalypse.

     

    Best of luck. I'm staying inside and watching the ski races on Universal Sports.

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