Jump to content

mcsc.allen

+Premium Members
  • Posts

    2
  • Joined

  • Last visited

    Never

Everything posted by mcsc.allen

  1. It's the cacher who is responsible for his or her own safety. There are several caches in Oregon that are accessed only at low tide and the Pacific Ocean waits for no one. I have and will not attempt these with my family, kids 3 and 11 years. There are other caches better suited to us and our capabilities and limitations. We screen caches and have eliminated several by the location, log entries and map study. I would suggest the same. I have also approached a cache and turned around because of the terrain. We, unlike the USCG, do not have to go. The USCG says they have to go, they also say they don't have to come back. We do have to come back. Logging caches are not worth a life or injury.
  2. It's the cacher who is responsible for his or her own safety. There are several caches in Oregon that are accessed only at low tide and the Pacific Ocean waits for no one. I have and will not attempt these with my family, kids 3 and 11 years. There are other caches better suited to us and our capabilities and limitations. We screen caches and have eliminated several by the location, log entries and map study. I would suggest the same. I have also approached a cache and turned around because of the terrain. We, unlike the USCG, do not have to go. The USCG says they have to go, they also say they don't have to come back. We do have to come back. Logging caches are not worth a life or injury.
×
×
  • Create New...