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Team Dromomania

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Posts posted by Team Dromomania

  1. I thought all the ticks in the state hitched hiked out with me on my last trip there.

    I did an island cache with my niece in tow. She had HUNDREDS of tiny ticks on her when we got back on the boat. The ticks are bad but I really hate the chiggers.

    There are no chiggers out here in California but I do usually end up with a tick or two whenever I do one of my frequent caching hikes. This summer I got one tick in the belly hole and couldn't get it out. A doctor, knife and 2 stiches later we showed that tick who was boss! :D

  2. I've searched the internet and these forums and didn't find any info on the best way to deal with stickers when hiking for a cache. Sometimes my pants and socks look really furry! A few times I threw away my socks. Is there some sort of socks or pants which resist stickers? Or, do you have any hints how to deal with this problem?

  3. I really enjoy caches which require lots of hiking. When I'm with one or more other cachers we almost always note who drew "first blood." This year I had no Poison Oak (it pretty much leaves me alone) and I did reach deep and grab hold of a 6 button rattlesnake (and let go faster than he could strike - it was cold) but I've had many, many cuts and scrapes and had several ticks take hold including one in my belly hole that took a doctor, knife and 2 stiches to remove. Yet, I can stll say - I really enjoy caches which require lots of hiking.

  4. ... Liability can include lots of things besides injury, such as reimbursement for the costs of responding to a bomb scare.

     

    I can think of two cases in my local area of road crews thinking a cache container was a bomb and the CO was sent a LARGE bill for the reimbursement of the bomb squad responding. One got out of paying but I think the other is still pending. I don't like large bills so I pulled most of my roadside hides after the second bomb scare (A pill bottle hidden in the bore hold of a road sign).

  5. I visited the cache page and it looks like the cache hide is back up and going.

     

    I know several officers who cache and have cached with them. Once an off duty officer was searching for one of my "evil" hides in front of a business. An employee saw him and went out to give the cacher a hint or two. About then a fire engine parked in front for a routine inspection and reconized the officer and asked him what was up. This is when I drove into the driveway and saw the fire engine with all those people milling around my hide. "Could a bison hidden inside a rock cause a bomb scare?" was going through my head. The officer made the find but with a muggle or two watching <G>.

     

    Just a few months ago on a back road two CHP stopped where I had pulled over to search for a cache. They made sure I wasn't having in problems and I told them about geocaching. I didn't have time to find it yet and they join me in the hunt for several minutes. I had to DNF it that day. The next day I stopped again and found the hide about 5 feet where we had been standing. It was an ammo can covered with dayglow paints. I still don't know how in the world we missed the find on the first attempt.

     

    Of the more than dozen times I've interacted with officers on my hunts I've never had a bad experience.

  6. If you must have a "fuzzy" location for your cache then hide it at the exact coords but at a cliff. Is it on top, bottom or on the cliff? Trees and storm drains will work to a lesser degree. There are several hides like that in my area. It makes the hide hard to find but the coords are right on.

  7. I don't keep a running list of my FTF's and if a new cache appears near me I usually give it a week or two before attempting to allow the FTF to go to those who care about them. A few years ago I took a road trip and a couple of thousand miles away (much to my surprise) I made a FTF. I had no internet access so it was 2 weeks later after I returned home before I could log it. Otherwise I do try and log my finds as soon as possible. I like to tell stories of the interesting finds and I want to get that story out while it's fresh in my mind.

     

    Many of my hides take a rather long hike or requires some climbing, wading, ect. so finds are not common. This last week I had a couple of new logs on my hides. They waited over 2 years to log the finds. None of this brothers me. This is a fun activity and we each enjoy it in our own ways.

  8. I might suggest the Rockville Hills Community Park in Fairfield. You could park and start at Potential Survivor's first stage (GC11Q0W) and hike in to find one or two dozen others in the park. The trails are mostly easy to follow with some steepness here and there. Take plenty of water. Most of the containers are small or regular. There is a $2 per person fee to enter the park payable at the trailheads - cash and credit cards accepted.

     

    I'm planning a trip to that area in October. Any cache recommendations for that area especially hiking/nature trails? I will probably have kids with me that like to trade so any non-micro cache recommendations would also be appreciated.

     

    Thanks in advance,

    Bluesman63

  9. Are you using Windows? If so bring up the Task Master (CTRL/ALT/DEL) for a list of running files. If you see one named wcescomm.exe then end that process (it is used for sync. devices). That should free up your com port. At least that works for me with my little yellow e-trex.

  10. I have the Garmin Oregon 400t (got as a gift from my work place for 30 years of service - WOW!!) and I matched it up with the Garmin Heart Rate Monitor (010-10997-00). The heart rate can be viewed in real time but I don't know how to view the data collected so I can view how I did on hills and climbs. The Oregon nor the Monitor came with any software. I do have MapSource from my old 60CS and I read where one could view the data by viewing the track properties. But I haven't been able to get that to work either. Have any Oregon owners figured out how to view the heart rate data? It would be nice to see how fast the heart rate goes up when the cache is finally spotted. :blink: Thanks in advance.

  11. Great stuff! I have seen just about every one. Like the fake grass the best... it took me forever to find one like that in a monkey-grass border.

     

    Totally dislike the fake fire emergency pull box, can't stress enough how bad an idea that is, the rest are cool.

     

    On the other hand that pull box might be a hoot to place inside a rock boulder "cave". :lol:

  12. The problem is that the geocaching.com pages now provide several methods to obtain the GZ coordinates, but they do not all give the same result, even for a single town/zip-code. So it's possible to get the same GZ coords that you got last year or the year before -- if you use the same method to get them. But if you try one of the other methods, you don't always get the same result.

     

    edit: also, one of the original methods for obtaining GZ coords has been removed from the gc.com pages. I'm not sure if that method produced the coords matching any of the current methods, or if that method produced yet a different set.

     

    Interesting. If I enter Ithaca, NY into the "Address" search on the Hide and Seek a Cache page I get:

     

    42.444586, -076.4999259

     

    If I enter "Ithaca, NY 14850" I get:

     

    42.406709, -076.518425

     

    That's no where near the center of town.

     

    If I enter 14850 in the zipcode field, the coordinates are not displayed in the url so I don't know

    exactly what coordinate is used as the center point for the search.

     

    finally, if I go to any cache and click on "other conversions", the select list includes "Geocode Address", apparently a geocoding web service by Yahoo, which gives me still another location.

     

    I just did a zip code search on 14850 and it returned 42.4471 -76.4957. That's a third set of numbers for you to use. :lol:

  13. I have recently seen a rather disturbing trend in hints. Rather than helping one actually find a troublesome cache, they are like puzzles.

     

    For me the hint is meant to nug you into the find. Puzzles are ok - easy or hard. For example, I have a difficult hide under a small rock and my hint is, "Capital of Arkansas".

    However, I've recently seen one hint that says: "Not my typical hide." That's nice, except, I've never looked for or found one of your caches and have no clue what your "typical hide" might be.

     

    And, one was: "This is a <name of local cacher> type hide." That's fine, except, I've never heard of that cacher and have no idea what his/her hides are like.

     

    Another was "Have you scene it?" ... It turns out that "Scene" is the name of a local newspaper and once you know that, you would think to look at a nearby newspaper machine. ... Well and good for a local, but useless to a visitor.

     

    You can't make hints work for everybody. A visitor from Germany might be clueless with my Arkansas hint just as I'd be clueless about a (insert geocacher) hide hint when I'm out of my area.

     

    Of course, there are any number of hints which are lyrics from songs. All you need to do is figure out the song or album. (These frequently refer to either bridges or trees.) If you don't know the song or album, and don't have internet access while out hunting, you may as well not have the hint.

     

    I have returned home many times to look up the clues given in hints. I don't consider this a problem when caching in my normal travel areas. But if I'm on a road trip and need to make my stops timely I do check the hints BEFORE leaving to help with the time issue. If needed I can look up more info for the hint and be ready when I arrive at the search site.

     

    And, what's the idea with hints that say "You don't need a hint"? If I don't need a hint, then don't give one.

     

    This is the one area where I agree with you.

     

    If you are going to give a hint, make it useful or helpful and don't assume I know the local cachers or local jargon. Thanks.

     

    All that being said, My first attempts are usually done without hints. If I'm looking for a difficulty 4 cache and the hint brings it down to a difficulty 2 it just somehow seems to cheapen my find. Yet everybody looking at my finds will see me making a level 4 find.

     

    That hide with the hint, "cheater" might be getting a little too close to the truth. :rolleyes:

  14. I would say that the Nemesis (GCRZBD) in California is a true 5/5 cache/hide. I am one of the finders. It took miles of steep mountain hiking, puzzles, tree climbing and cliff hanging over several trips to nab this one. If anybody has the time and enjoys this type of hide I'd say, "Go for it."

  15. I do a lot of hiking but have yet to find a pot garden. But if I ever do I shall report it! I'm sorry, but growing illegal weed in our public lands is no different than planting it in my own back yard. I should be able to enjoy all the public lands which are open to us the same as I can enjoy my own back yard.

     

    Caching is a family activity. What are you telling your children if you look the other way when somebody is doing something which could harm or kill others (even if it is the drug itself)? What if another family is hurt because you didn't report the illegal site? Here in Northern Califoria are we to allow the Mexican Mafia marijuana gardens to continue their takeover of public lands?

     

    If somebody passes me at 100mph: unless a cop is nearby he's gone and will do it another day until he kills himself (and hopefully not others) then the problem has taken care of itself. Meanwhile, yes, make that phone call. Maybe you can get that nut off the road!

     

    Somebody cheating on taxes: They are hurting themselves and not out to hurt or kill others.

     

    As for the (only) 12 plants....Was that all that were viewed before leaving (more over the hill?)? The owner of those 12 plants should have choosen another non-public place to grow thier stash. Are they the one who may be high on their private stash and doing 100mph on the roads? As far as I know the same laws apply to him and I will report it.

     

    This is a nation of laws. Way too many people look the other way. Let's keep our public lands safe for our families and safe for caching.

  16. I've had a Treo 650 (Palm), 700p (Palm) and 700wx (Windows). I personally HATED the Windows. It was slow and crashed constantly. Only from my experience, stay away from Windows Mobile!!!

     

    I've had my Dell Axim x51v for a couple of years and never had it crash. You must have had another problem with your unit. On the other hand before my Dell I had a Palm Tungsten which worked great but was poorly construction. The off/on switch kept giving problems.

     

    For my Palm I had to convert the data (this takes time) to something that the Palm could read but for the Dell I can just load the GPX file direct which saves a lot of time.

     

    As for the OP, if all you want is going paperless then almost any PDA will do the job. Just pick out what works best for your price range.

  17. I just try to act like I belong there at the GZ.

     

    Once I stopped for lunch at a fast food place and parked right next to a new cache which turned out to be a lampost hide right at the drive through enterance. I had the perfect cover - an electrical company van, an electrician uniform and a tool belt. I got out and made the quick grab and returned to my van to sign the log. At that point a man looking angry knocked on my window and wanted to know what I was up to. His company takes care of those lights! He learned a little about geocaching and left with a smile since I didn't take his work away.

     

    I knew that was too easy.

  18. 60.5 and I just can't understand why them that are below 40 can't seem to come up with the gumption to go after those caches I have way up the hill in the backcountry of CO.

     

    I'm about the same age and wonder the same thing except for my caches in CA. I still enjoy those terrain 3, 4, and 5 hikes.

  19. I haven't run any PQ's since my computer puked on me a few weeks back. I had been receiving PQ's just fine up to that point. Now when I receive a PQ in my email, the extension on the attached file is .ZM9 instead of .GPX. Any ideas on what is going on?

     

    Do you have ZoneAlarm installed? Google .ZM9 for more answers if that is the case.

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