Jump to content

NotThePainter

+Premium Members
  • Posts

    559
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by NotThePainter

  1. Speaking personally, I like puzzle caches but around here they only lead to the same old guard rails or lamp posts. It's not worth the effort. If there was a promise of finding a nice hide with something to see, I would solve more of them. Just an opinion, and in general, I don't have anything against micros either, it's just we have become over-run with them. Thanks. :ph34r:

     

    I've recently moved to an area that is surrounded by both water and National Park land, not quite geo-caching hell but you get the picture. It isn't impossible to place a cache here but it isn't easy.

     

    My plan is to start placing puzzle caches in the National Park land. No container, but I'll have you find something that is already there, hopefully after a decent hike, count so number of things, and then hike out. The puzzle will be super easy. Not like my usual hard ones.

     

    Near the parking area, outside of the National Park, I'll find a guardrail or stop sign and do the obvious.

     

    It is like a decent traditional without the ammo can.

  2. I have some hides where I grew up in NC and I have placed caches here to pay back people for helping me maintain them. They have ownership of them but I maintain them for them. They are not "mine", do not show up as "mine" but show up as not found caches in my home territory which irks me. But no way I'd even think of claiming a find on them, I hid them!

    I was in a similar situation and back when I hated having them as my nearest "unfound" cache (before the ignore option was available) I just marked them as found, noted that I was doing this, and then found other caches and marked them as "Notes."

     

    This way they were gone from my "nearest" list and my numbers weren't padded.

  3. It sounds interesting, plus you just gave me an idea to leave a Rubic's cube in the 1st stage of a puzzle cache with the final coords written on the squares. (with a few decoy numbers) Years ago I used to be able to do it in 5 minutes, but recently I attempted it and could not even remember how to unscramble the last 4 blocks. Cool ideas, thanks!!

     

    Great idea!

     

    : - )

  4. I was given 8 green ones to seed NH caches. To avoid the "gimme attitude" and the gotta grab it first. I went out and placed them all...

     

    ... and didn't log them into the caches!

     

    So we had 8 surprised and happy geocachers.

     

    Of course they've probably all disappeared by now... Just checked, 2 of them have been logged in 2008! Not too bad...

  5. One of my caches, Cherokee Rose, says that there is a coin in it. If you go to that coin's page, it thinks it is in the cache even though the last log doesn't place it there.

     

    I've tried marking it as "missing" many times.

     

    Can some admin take care of this for me?

     

    Thanks.

  6. When I place a cache I stock it full of good stuff from the Dollar Store, kids stuff, grownup stuff and so on.

     

    And that's it.

     

    I don't consider necessary to restock the caches.

     

    For me, it is about the hike or the hide or the puzzle, not about the contents. I'm became disenchanted about trading about my 20th cache or so.

     

    We say "trade up, trade even, or don't trade at all" but we all know that that isn't followed, if it was, all our caches would be stuffed with jewels and gold.

  7. Yes! I've hunted a few of these in pine trees, some with many many of their own real cones hanging there. Of course, after a few have searched for it, there aren't any real ones left on the tree!

    In my opinion putting in the oak tree is what transforms it from tedious into hard.

     

    I have a hollowed out white birch branch as one of my caches. It is hanging from a tree and there isn't a white birch for hundreds of feet. Yet I've watched a group of about half a dozen cachers stare right at it and move on.

  8. Also, I thought I heard that there was a problem with SLgeocaching - the boxes kept being returned by the owners of the land.

    Imagine that, cache hides placing caches on land without getting permision from the owners? :- )

     

    BTW, I can host a cache on my land, email me if you want to set it up.

     

    Paul

  9. "I went through 2 bikes and 2 locks there!," tells me that thefts were common. i am not a bicycle thief and i don't care to look like one.
    I did not have the MIT sticker on either bike and Facilities removed them, bikes get abandoned on campus all the time.

     

    Sadly, once I placed the cache I moved about 50 miles away (instead of 5 miles) and maintenance was a problem. I was thinking of archiving it then but I got such positive comments on it that I decided not to. Once construction on the site started, however, I had no option but to pull it. Bike parking had been plentiful and it became scarce, I didn't want to take a spot from a real bike commuter.

     

    And ironically, I start a new job in a week or so about a mile from that location!

  10. Not sure where I saw it but...

    I saw a picture of a cache that was in the water bottle of an old bike loked up to a bike rack. Could have been in Pictures - Cool Cache Containers.

     

    That would have been my cache, now archived.

     

    Here's the photo where you can see the cache if you know what you are looking for...

    4eceaba3-53bf-41d7-b244-6cc6fedd401e.jpg

     

    and here is the close up.

    0260cb2b-7abb-48e8-bcdf-42b6cadc7ab3.jpg

     

    The cache was a 1 liter water bottle that was cable tied to the bike, so it clearly was usable as a water bottle. It was brightly colored with the Groundspeak colors and had a typed label on it, facing up that said www.geocaching.com

     

    The original cache was 80 Feet of Waterline, Nicely Making Way which was a hard puzzle. Before I archived it I turned it into a traditional 79 Feet of Waterline, Nicely Making Way just so non-puzzle solvers could have their fun.

     

    And yes, I went through 2 bikes and 2 locks there!

     

    Paul

     

    PS: And to those who say you have to find some before hiding, this was my second hide and I think I only had about 20 finds at the time, but that's another topic.

  11. man, maybe I shouldn't join it but here goes...

     

    Until recently, my wife and I hosted an event that was very popular. We had between 50 and 80 people show up on a "school" night at a local restaurant pub and talk geocaching. Tons of fun.

     

    We got a corporate sponsor, it was a lot of working getting one to sign on but we did.

     

    We started giving away stuff, good stuff. $80 backpacks, $50 gift certificates. At the hey-day we were probably giving out $200, maybe $250 worth of stuff to local cachers.

     

    But the sponsor needed a link to their website. The big vinyl sign we hung up at the event wasn't good enough. That was all they asked.

     

    Eventually we were asked to take the link down, and obviously, we lost the sponsor.

     

    So yes, I have tried to host an event and run afoul of the guidelines. I can understand Groundspeak's position, they certainly don't my my sponsor's link appearing on a cache page that has an ad from a competitor to the sponsor. Right?

     

    But, the fact remains, there are cachers in my area who don't get free stuff anymore from my sponsor.

     

    Oh well...

×
×
  • Create New...