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St.Matthew

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Posts posted by St.Matthew

  1. Back in 2005 I was hiking to a cache and came across 1 snake eating another snake across the trail. There are a series of pictures in the log at https://www.geocachi...4f-a16a65abfba7 showing a progression of the event. I left after I took the last picture and not sure how things ended up since 1 snake had itself wrapped around a stick.

     

    I've run into rattlesnakes and copperheads many times in NJ but this was the first time I came across something like this.

     

    Here's the first & last pictures from the series...

     

    102041bd-0b0b-443a-abcd-ccd668b8d031.jpg

     

    4f1b7665-db7a-4474-9e4f-a16a65abfba7.jpg

     

    Nature is so terrifying.

  2. According to this website, the S4 does support Ant+.

     

    If your phone supports Ant+, you need these drivers. On my S5 they were pre-installed:

    Ant Radio Service

    ANT+ Plugin Service

    These drivers run only when needed, so there's no extra battery drain or so.

     

    The app needed for reading chirp is ANT+ Plugin Sampler.

     

    Thanks! The first 2 apps you mentioned were preintalled on my s4 also. So when I get close to a chirp, I just open that last mentiomed app and it will receive the signal message?

  3. I think the only issue is mentioning chirp I certain ways would be deemed commercial since it's usable on Garmin units.

    My Samsung Galaxy S5 is capable of receiving Chirp and I know there are other Android smartphones which also support Ant+. So it's not a Garmin-only thing anymore.

     

    My Galaxy S4 supports Ant+ I think. I haven't the slightest idea how I would use the technology to "read" a chirp beacon. Will you enlighten this curious cacher?

  4. I know some cachers who check the sites for new Wherigos, play them then run out and sign the FTF spot before the actual cache goes live. I would rather them not send out notifications.

     

    Yep, that happened with one of mine. Someone got the FTF 2 days before it was published on geocaching.com.

  5. When I geocache, I usually wear white pants, white hat, and a sky blue shirt. It's become my Geocaching outfit because ant ticks are easily visible. If I'm in the woods, I do a check every few hundred feet, and especially before I climb back into my vehicle. When I get home my clothes all go immediately into the washer, and I check myself everywhere before I get in the shower.

     

    Once or twice a tick has snuck by, and if it embeds itself in me, I use a cheap chemical free tool called Tick Key that removes the entire tick every time.

  6. And yet, you still managed to hold your nose long enough to Lift that Skirt and sign that log eh? :rolleyes:

    If you found that location so offensive why not just keep on driving to the next one?

     

    So...was it intentional or coincidental for the CO to put a "skirt lifter" in a strip club parking lot? <_<

     

    I know the CO'S and have found the cache in question. It was intentional.

  7. I use GSAK as well. I create a database of all the geocaches I want to get in a particular day, and a macro will literally route the fastest possible route between them. You can even quickly create child waypoints (where to enter the parking lot etc.). Finally you can send all of these to your handheld gps AND your driving gps.

     

    GSAK: spend less time planning geocaching so that you can do more actual geocaching.

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