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worldtraveler

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Posts posted by worldtraveler

  1. Hello all,

     

    Thank you very much for all your replies, I have found someone to send my TB to.

     

    Thank you, BlueDeuce, for the suggestion to start at one of the coasts. It will be on its way to New Jersey soon.

     

    Muppet78

     

    PS topic can be closed.

    If you want to skip the postage, and if your TB can legally travel in carry-on luggage, I can take it to the US this Thursday. I'm staying in a hotel at AMS airport, but I hope to find a few caches around the central part of town tomorrow. You could hide it in a cache and post the name or number here so I can try to find it, or we can arrange to meet somewhere if you prefer.

  2. ...I would be flabbergasted...

    Yeah, but I suspect it wouldn't be the first time. :D

    BTW - I've never ask before, but do you perchance have red hair, and could Jeremy possibly be your stepfather? That would explain a lot about the priority of Wherigo to Groundspeak. B)

  3. GOOD NEWS from Bryan ( Groundspeak) on the FADs Event in Sweden 2011 nov 5th.

    We had a information meeting and could put questions to him and his colleague Jeremy

    I put the question about the future of Wherigo and an update of the official builder and he informed us that they just the other day had a board meeting and made an action plan with 50 items and sayed that a new Wherigo editor are due in 2012 (he said that I should contact him if they did´nt!)...

     

    ...Jeremy gave a talk at the recent Annual UK Mega Event, and he said Wherigo is back on his radar with something coming before the end of the year.

    I think he said Groundspeak want to make the whole process of creating and playing much more staightforward, with a greater emphasis on playing on Smartphones, as they've realised Wherigo has lost ground to other smartphone GPS games (or words to those affect).

     

    I've been patiently waiting for more than a year now, and 2012 is rapidly drawing to a close; so I thought I should probably go ahead and download Groundspeak's new Wherigo builder that was on their "to do" list for this year. Does anybody have a link to it? My search thus far has been unsuccessful.

    Thanks. <_<

  4. Unfortunately, this is a known issue, JeanJensen. I would guess TerraServer updated its service and the web service call the Builder makes needs to be modified.

    Thanks for the update, Ranger Fox. Does this mean what I think it does - that the aforementioned fixes/patches/workarounds are not going to work now on any 64-bit (Vista and Windows 7) system?

  5. Since feature requests are considered based partly on responses in this forum, please consider this one more request for some way to download maps for offline use for anywhere in the world. My current workaround when outside the U.S. is to use the MotionX GPS app to download maps for offline use while I'm connected via wifi and then toggle between that app and the Geocaching app while I'm offline navigating to within close proximity to the cache GZ before switching exclusively to the Geocaching app once the map is no longer needed. The MotionX maps are not nearly as up to date as Bing or Google; but they are a whole lot better than no maps at all, and the options to select zoom levels and download maps either within a certain radius or along a route are nice.

  6. I downloaded the Groundspeak Wherigo app and successfully used it on the Wherigo Player Tutorial. I enjoyed the experience; however, am I the only person who can't get Pinch and Zoom to work when viewing the Wherigo website from within the app? I haven't read any other complaints about this limitation, but I find it difficult to search, download cartridges, etc. Turning the screen to landscape helps, but functional pinch and zoom would be much better.

     

    Thanks.

  7. What is your definition of a lame cache?

    Here's the answer I gave to the same question in 2003 and again in 2005. Nothing I've seen or read since then has altered my opinion.

     

    Characteristics of caches that I considered lame:

     

    Containers inadequate for their environment. If they can't protect the logbook & contents from the elements, they are trash-in-the-making. I've NEVER found a Gladware cache that wasn't ready for the trashbin.

     

    Lack of a decent logbook. Loose sheets (or scraps) of paper, or poorly bound logbooks are shoddy, IMO. Geocaching.com sells decent, durable logbooks. Buy them or something at least as good. If it's a microcache, consider using the letter & logsheet appropriate for the size.

     

    Trashy location. I'm up for a good challenge, and I don't mind getting dirty; but I don't like wading through heaps of trash and other refuse while searching for a cache. Even if the purpose of the cache is CITO, try to find a nice place for the cache.

    When I find a cache with these characteristics, I get the impression (right or wrong) that the owner doesn't really care much about the sport or its participants, but has placed it primarily for his own ego gratification.

     

    Some of the other cache characteristics mentioned here such as needle-in-haystack micros I wouldn't personally describe as lame per se - I just don't hunt 'em because I don't enjoy 'em. YMMV.

  8. ...You are certainly the World's Least Efficient Geocacher.

     

    ...Although a little surprised you haven't passed the million-mile mark yet...

    Yeah, I'm not going to get any "green" awards for caching efficiency. The sad truth is, I'm way over a million miles traveled, but work crowds out geocaching far too often, and I'm frequently unable (or too lazy) to find a cache at each place I happen to be.

  9. dose anyone agree that virtual cache should come back instead of begin grandfather caches...

     

    To answer the OP's question, I am in favor of virtuals being reinstated as a submittable cache type. The reason for them being included in the early days has not changed. There are still many interesting locations around the world where physical caches are prohibited by law or are otherwise inappropriate. One physical cache that immediately comes to mind is GC1CE0. Because the coordinates were posted on this website, I had a destination I never would have otherwise known about or visited; but it was simply an inappropriate location for a physical cache. Had it been posted as a virtual cache, other geocachers could still be enjoying it today.

     

    I know the history and the reasons given for disallowing new virtuals. I also know this is Jeremy's sandbox and that he can make up whatever rules he wants. I just disagree that this was the best one for geocaching, and I choose to not support the substitute he has proffered in the form of Waymarking. I continue to hope he will eventually recognize the value and legitimacy of virtual caches and figure out a way to consistently allow the "Wow!"s while filtering out the old sneakers.

     

    With less than 600 finds in nearly nine years, it's clearly not about the number of smileys for me. It also has never been about the box. When I started geocaching, I knew almost every set of coordinates I loaded into my Garmin would take me to a really neat place or challenge me with an interesting hide technique. Often it was both. That's still what I hope for, but I hate missing out on some neat places simply because an earlier explorer was unable or knew better than to hide a box there.

  10. There is also Worldtraveler. There might be someone who has found caches in more countries than he has , but I doubt it.

    Wow! Thanks, briansnat. I'm really honored by the nomination, especially coming from you. I really don't know whether others have found caches in more countries, but I'm almost certain no one has a worse cache-to-miles ratio. With only 549 cache finds in 672,426 miles, that's about one :) for every 1225 miles traveled.

  11. It has more miles than mine.

     

    Dude, don't let me down.

    I was surprised, but I had to call it as I saw it. I browsed through the posts, and they appear to be legit. There were a few that I'm not sure are in the correct order simply due to the time required for travel between the finds, but it wouldn't account for the mileage difference between it and mine. I'm pretty certain it belongs to a flight crew member (pilot or flight attendant), and my guess is United Airlines. I travel a lot, but most of my stays are at least four days in each city. I can't compete with someone who stays only a day or two between stops.

     

    I had become somewhat complacent thinking my mileage was way beyond anyone else, and I hadn't even looked for caches on several long trips over the past year. I guess I'll have to step it up a notch to stay in the running. :o

  12. Okay, you asked...

    Worldtraveling Old Glory #3 logged 15, 458 miles before being grabbed by a cacher in Alberta 2 years ago. It hasn't been heard from since.

     

    Worldtraveling Old Glory #1 logged 16,801 miles before being stolen from a chache in Texas almost 4 years ago.

     

    World Traveling Old Glory #10 currently has 18,720 miles on it. It spent the last 10 months in the hands of a geocacher in Texas, but it has recently been put in a cache. Here's hoping it can continue its journey home.

     

    World Traveling Old Glory #6 logged 35,805 miles before being stolen from a cache in Texas 2 years ago.

     

    Given the track records of these and 6 other travel bugs I launched into the wild, I think the odds are against most "free range" travel bugs obtaining really high mileage. Fortunately, however, many of us have personal travel bugs. Many of them go far, but I don't know of any travel bug that has exceeded the mileage of my Worldtraveler. It has logged an honest 604,829.9 miles.

  13. Howdy

    Anybody know what the record is for most miles traveled by a "Travel Bug" & what the record is for years out in the field?

    Feel free to boast your bugs stats.

    Mine is at 26,904 miles & 5 years

    I think my personal travel bug is still the record holder for actual miles traveled from cache to cache (currently 578,133.8 miles).

  14. I understand your desire to help out, but consider this: The owner may just be an infrequent participant in this activity, and the lack of a response to your emails is not a justification to hold onto his/her travel bug beyond the normal time limit. The tag can still travel with the remains of the TB in a ziplock bag, if necessary.

  15. ...If the only numbers that matter are our own personal numbers, then why does it bother us that others log multiple logs?

     

    I know that fake finds effect others. I'll be one the first to point that out anywhere, anytime. My question is, why is that many of us, myself included, dislike the practice of multiple finds? Is it our competitive nature? Is our sense of ethics? Is it elitism?

     

    Even from the day one as a cacher, I thought it wrong to do this. Now I just want to know why it bothers me to see others do it, if indeed their numbers don't matter to anyone but them.

    You've answered your own question. It is our nature to be offended by a perceived wrong. It has nothing to do with geocaching, or whether the perception is objectively accurate or logically consistent.

     

    Jeremy hasn't handed down the 10 Commandments of Geocache Logging from Mt. Rainier, so (to paraphrase Judges 21:25) "every geocacher does what is right in his own eyes". Hence, the diversity which sometimes leads to discord.

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