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Coach Steve

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Posts posted by Coach Steve

  1. Apparently in Southern Utah geocaches are now called "Jeeks". Has anyone else adopted this name is there a pet name for geocaches in your area?

     

    This all started with one cacher here in So. Utah. (BillionJ) When he took his young kids caching, his youngest daughter couldn't pronounce the word 'geocache', so she shortened it to "jeek". Actually, there are very few of us around here that use the word. "Cache" and "cacher" are much more common. We are pretty open around here and you would be welcome to come find some of our great hides, whether they be called "caches" or "jeeks". It's all good because it's just a game and a lot of fun without all the drama.

  2. you're going to have to put them into an image. using photoshop or any lowly alternative (MS paint) you put the "letters" together into a single image and then upload that to the cache listing. then you use an HTML description to embed the picture into the listing.

     

    Thanks a lot.

  3. Interesting how the anti power trail bunch want to read this as having to do with power trails. For now it looks more like a permission issue with attaching items to power company infrastructure than anything having to do with the number of caches.

     

    I tend to go with the homeland security theory. The transmission lines from Hoover dam to Southern California are critical infrastructure. The power company is probably not interested in trying to figure out if the person stopping at each tower is there looking for a geocache or if they have more nefarious plans. Move the caches away from the towers and you don't have this problem.

     

    Having been there, and knowing the folks who put this trail out, I agree with the security issue. It seems that someone (who sleeps with a night light) got concerned that too many people were using the roads and visiting the towers, and contacted the power company and the BLM. BTW, you did not have to drive off-road anywhere on the trail. The maintenance roads went right to every tower. It's really too bad. It was a surreal experience doing that many caches (421) in one day. It got to be rather tedious, but the company was good and we actually smiled a lot.

     

    I actually think Glenn Beck mentioned the Trail of the Gods as a liberal plot to destroy American society, so his minions took appropriate action.

  4. i received a very nice message from one of the team members that found 436 of the caches. here is his note:

     

    >>We averaged about 20//hour ... 1 hour sleep along the way.

    We were getting some cache signed in only 20 seconds since you

    could park within 1 foot of the cache. Most all the caches were

    Altoids on a metal power pole. There were a few that could be reached

    FROM THE CAR and you did not even need to get out of the car....

    There was one section that we nearly did 40 in an hour....

     

    We HEARD that someone else did nearly 500 of them a day after we did.

    I know another family (mom, dad and 2 young kids) that did over 250 in 12 hours.

    Two guys went out on Monday and got over 150 FTF's in about 8 hours.

     

    It's was a lot of work and planning. We had Google maps to help us anticipate the

    path to each of the caches. The hardest part was the FEW caches on trails where the

    U-turns took 20 steps to complete.

     

    If someone wanted to REALLY kill these, if they take a dirt dike or one of those

    Mule/side by sides ATV's and I'll bet they can do all 600 in less than 24 hours.....<<

     

    rsg

     

    Having spent all day Saturday doing 464 caches along his trail, I have a few observations.

     

    Don't do this from May to October. You will end up on the lower end of Death Valley, and the temps will get 130 on the desert floor.

     

    Parts of this road are 60 MPH, and parts are crawl and look out for rocks. You cane walk to the steep ones if you don't have clearance, but it sure makes it quicker and easier with 4X4 and clearance.

     

    The vehicle is not as important as good tires. Those desert rocks can tear marginal tires out.

     

    Take much more water than you think you will need. This desert will suck it out of you, even in March. Take enough food to keep you going.

     

    It was routine at times, but then you would find a "Nevada Nano". You'll have to see those. Mostly it was actually fun. There were six of us and we were actually smiling most of the time. We started in Primm and ended at the Death Valley road. About 10 to 11 hours all together. It almost took me almost as long to log them as to find them. No blackberry coverage out here, and very little cell phone either. Take all the usually precautions on this one. And if you go in May, watch for the rattlers!

  5. Here's mine. I was driving up a fairly well-traveled road in the middle of the afternoon. As I came around a bend, there was a guy, naked from the waist down standing in the road looking down. As he saw me, he hurried and put his shorts on, then bent over to pick up his camera. The only thing I could figure was that he was taking pictures of his naked genitals. Why? Your guess is as good as mine. I had a hard time finding the cache I was after because I was laughing out loud.

     

    Why couldn't it have been a female?

  6. My Garmin 60csx seems to have lost its accuracy. At first I thought it was others making a slight mistake but after a couple dozen you start looking in a mirror. Any suggestions on how to fix it, if that's even possible. Makes Geocaching that much harder if your off by about 20 ft.

     

    Try turning off the compass. Just press and hold down the "page" button. Worked for me.

  7. I just won't do them. If the coords are off just a little bit, you end up on the wrong side of the fence and in another person's private space. I usually pass them by. Just as a matter of course, I dislike city caches and micros even more. Exercise and scenery are the two things that brought me to caching. Getting out of the car to hunt anither lamp-skirt micro is a waste of time. Give me some open space!

  8. 1. How did you hear . . .

    I was surfing the net and came across GC.com

    2. First cache?

    I had the cache page and wandered around until the coords linked up. Lucky I found it at all. I was hooked!

    3. Bad or scary experience?

    I was doing a cache in front of the Excalibur Hotel in Vegas. My old GPS took me out in the landscaping, so being the dedicated cacher that I was, I stepped out there and started going through the bushes and stuff. I heard someone clear his throat and turned around to see two secruity guards--you know the kind--guys with no neck. The kind that dream about being security guards, or go to bars after work and talk about being security guards. Anyway, they asked them to come with them and they took me in a back room at the hotel. I had pictures in my head of broken legs, smashed fingers, etc. They weren't smiling, but accepted my explanation and let me keep my GPS, but kept the cache page. Pretty scary for awhile.

     

    There are also several encounters with snakes, Black Widows, a Gila Monster, and an apparently rabid coyote. But those are other stories.

    4. #1 reason for caching?

    I am like a dog that needs to mark territory. If it is there, I want to find it!

    5. Hunt or hide?

    I enjoy the hunt more than the hide because I am a man who lacks imagination.

    6. Favorite Cache?

    "It was a Dynamite Place" (now archived). The cache was in the dynamite cache of an old mining operation, but what made it great was the remoteness (70 miles from the nearest highway) and the FTF prize. When I saw what it was, I left my house, drove to the cache at night and retrieved the prize--a brand new Orvis fly rod, worth at least $150!

    7. The worst cache?

    Any silly lamppost micro!

    8. Any cache events?

    Have been to several and hosted several.

    9. Best cache story?

    I don't know if it's the best, but it's the funniest. I was driving up a pretty deserted, but not very remote, dirt road. I came around a bend to see a guy standing outside his car stark naked looking at the ground. When he saw me, he hustled and put on his shorts and then picked up his camera from the ground. The only thing I could figure out is that he had the camera between his legs and was taking nude pictures of himself. As I drove by him and on to the cache, I started to laugh and couldn't concentrate on finding the cache because I was laughing so much. I still think it's funny.

  9. I keep score because my numbers DO matter to me.

     

    I don't mind that some people log differently than I do because I don't care about their numbers.

     

    If a team profile gets finds from all over the world on the same day, it doesn't keep me from having fun.

     

    If a person never logs any of her finds online, it doesn't keep me from having fun.

     

    Team categories might help the teams, but it's not something that would help this non-team member.

     

    I agree 100%! I compare myself to other cachers the same way Chevy Chase did in "Caddy Shack". Judge Smails asked him what he shot on the course that day, to which Chevy replied: "Ah, Judge, I don't keep score" Then the Judge asked him: "But how do you compare yourself to other golfers?" Chevy makes the great reply "By height" So that's how I compare myself--by height. Any other way just doesn't matter much.

  10. I just got back from the Czech Republic, Vienna, Budapest, and all over Romania (not a cache rich country) and had no trouble at all. The only thing you have to do when you get there is let your GPS catch up to where you are. Sometimes takes a minute or two. The only place that restricts the use of GPS is Russia--I guess they are still paranoid. By the way--best place I went was Ceske Krumlov in Southern Czech Rep.

  11. Mark where your car is.

     

    Exception if still in your driveway.

     

    My dog and I always mark where our truck is. That way, he can find his way back if my batteries fail. I can't smell my mark very well, but he can!

  12. I wouldn't want my stats to be listed, if I had the option, but there a number of cachers who do want to be able to compare themselves to others. I don't understand it, or agree with it, but that doesn't mean we should ignore it.

     

     

    Reminds me of Chevy Chase's line in Caddy Shack When asked by the judge what he had shot on the golf course that day, he replied: "Oh, I never keep score" To which the judge asked, "Then how do you measure yourself against other men?" His reply--"By height". Being 6'5, I guess that gives me the right to think I am better than the next man. Makes about as much sense as keeping cache stats . . .

  13. If you live in a remote area, you're just screwed. The only thing you can do, is hide a bunch of caches so your area will become a destination, and encourage new cachers and try to recruit people into the game... :)

     

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    This is the solution for us here in Southern Utah. If there was a picture under rural in the dictionary under rural, it would show our area. To get people to my outermost caches, I give them a reason to go that far--I put them in a series leading farther and farther out. People will find them if they have a reason to go there

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