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nonaeroterraqueous

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Posts posted by nonaeroterraqueous

  1. A nice idea would be to have a retirement event and declare you are finished for good. Give a variety of excuses and list the event as being 4 hours long. After an hour and a half arrange for someone to list and publish several caches nearby. Run out and find them and don't return. Write an apology on the event page, saying that something came up and go back to finding caches as normal. Three months later hold another retirement event and explain that because the last one was cut short, this one will be for real. Then do it again. And again. And again. Write a longer and more detailed apology at each one to try to make it sound sincere. After it gets old have a sock puppet ready to thoroughly criticize you and complain about the fakery. Make it bitter enough that nobody suspects anything. Then announce that "this is it" and you've "had enough" and archive several hides, and adopt a few out, saying that it was no joke and you were just putting it off. Next hide a milestone cache under the sock account, celebrating the sock's 100th find, and post a picture on the page of you holding a 100th find card. Then go out and simply resume caching like normal.. :P

     

    Also known as the Cher method.

     

    * * *

     

    I'm basically done with geocaching, but I don't see any reason to officially call it quits. I might still use the activity as something to do with my sister's kids, or whatnot. A couple of years ago, I changed perspective on the hobby and switched from a finder to focusing on coming up with new cache designs. Basically, it was an arts and crafts hobby at that point. That really helped me to keep an interest in it for a little while longer. Right now, I'm changing the nature of the game for myself and trying to find caches without any help from the website. It's a whole lot harder that way, looking for physical evidence and searching for likely spots, but it gives me a new angle and a renewed interest. Eventually, I'm sure I'll tire of the whole thing and hike those trails for their own sake, again. I've never had any activity keep my interest forever, though geocaching certainly holds the record, so far.

  2. People stuff one in a duffle bag in their car, and drive all over the place.

     

    That works best when you follow this rule:

     

    Mainstay's TB longevity strategy #1. Drill a great big friggin hole in it to eliminate any collectable qualities....

     

    You see, if you drill a proper hole you can prevent it from walking away and disappearing. Then, once you tag it, you can toss it in your duffle bag and transport it to wherever. Although, I must confess, the last one I found was dumped in a river, and the hole certainly didn't help with the longevity, either.

     

    Of course, I was talking about a TB... :anibad:

  3. Think about it this way: if the coordinates were bad, then they did future finders a huge favor. If they weren't bad, then there was no advantage to making the call. It's no problem. If they had the cache owner on the phone and didn't even ask for additional clues, then I'd say they did well.

     

    But that was my point- they did indeed get extra help from the CO. They had the coords wrong (just as I had) but asked the CO if they were right, and got additional info on it (which coord was wrong and that they were off by one digit.)

     

    I would consider "additional info" to be extra clues, or a more elaborate description. There's nothing additional about coordinates. It just happens that they helped to fix the erroneous coordinates, which is very much more important than making for a fair FTF race. Remember, the first finder is also the beta tester.

  4. Think about it this way: if the coordinates were bad, then they did future finders a huge favor. If they weren't bad, then there was no advantage to making the call. It's no problem. If they had the cache owner on the phone and didn't even ask for additional clues, then I'd say they did well.

  5. Nanos are not functionally different from micros. It's just a difference of degree, meaning that there's no clear line between very small and impossibly small. At least, with the other sizes, there's a functional distinction, based on what they can contain. As it is, we've got plenty of people trying to slide the definition, and that's with functional differences set into the definitions. Just imagine the trouble in keeping the distinction between micro and nano, where one is tiny and the other is tinier.

  6. 4. Permethrin and DEET work much better when you actually put it on rather than just having it in the truck. :laughing:

     

    That reminds me:

     

    1. Bug spray with DEET will ruin a flashlight lens. Maglites have a replaceable lens, but it isn't cheap for what it is.

     

    3- Always, always bring snacks so when you're walking around a park in circles trying to find your way out, you at least won't die of starvation.

     

    This reminds me:

     

    2. Always bring water for anything more than a simple park-and-grab. I usually can count on my wife to remember it, but on one of my few solo geocaching hikes when I didn't remember to bring water, I was lucky enough to meet a fellow geocacher who brought extra. I didn't think it was much of a hike when I started.

     

    also:

     

    3. If it sounds like a ridiculously daring hide, then it probably is. Caches that ask to be muggled probably will be, very quickly.

     

    4. There is no glue on the market that can stand against the forces of nature. Bolt it, clip it or wire it, or be prepared to make frequent maintenance visits. The strongest glue in the world is only as strong as the weakest mating surface.

     

    5. Wood is the most effective camouflage out in nature, but it shrinks when it dries, swells when it's wet, and it generally requires very frequent replacement.

     

    6. About one in ten finders can properly close a container with a complicated closure mechanism. About one in ten finders cannot properly close any kind of container. I've made both kinds and learned my lesson. Recently, I had someone complain that he couldn't unscrew the lid, so the log wasn't signed. The lid was a soft rubber cap that pulls straight off. I had a feeling that might happen, but there's no way to make a closure any simpler than that, so what can I do? No container is so robust that it never needs to be checked on. Someone, somehow, will leave it compromised.

     

    7. When looking for a cache, keep in mind that this is not your job. You're not getting paid for it. If you aren't having fun, then there's no reason why you shouldn't move on.

     

    8. When looking for a cache, assume nothing about the legality or the safety of the hide. Think for yourself. At the end of the day, if you are uncomfortable about what you did, then you have no one to blame but yourself. The cache is available for anyone who chooses to seek it. That choice belongs to the finder.

     

    9. Don't hide a cache if you can't handle criticism. Also, rethink hiding a cache if you have obsessive tendencies, because you might lose sleep over it.

     

    10. Don't spend too much time on the forums. Much of the participation is motivated more from the joy of chatting or bickering than the joy of caching.

  7. I notice you gave that angry CO a good picture of your caching partner in that reflection :) Yeah, people need to realize that when they put out any kind of positive effort, meaning that they're making something and presenting it to the public for an ostensibly good purpose, that they stand a very good chance of getting criticized. This is true for business endeavors, volunteer work, and all kinds of things. They need to be able to stoically decide whether or not the criticism has merit. If it does, then fix the problem, or learn from it. If the criticism is baseless, then it doesn't really matter, unless it becomes a kind of negative spam. People who react very badly to criticism should reconsider cache ownership, because it's not the sort of thing you want to get into at all if you can't take it.

  8. Leapfrogging is when a team splits up into two groups. One group finds every second cache and signs on behalf of everyone. The other group finds the ones skipped by the first group and signs on behalf of everyone. Please don't do it. Unless you actually find a specific cache yourself, your name should not be on the log.

  9. Whether the font size needs changing or not, I can't see a good reason the designers' hands should be tied because a small number of users like to....

    ...discuss twisted knickers.

     

    <_< Yeah, you're going straw man on us, Toz. The statement was not to imply that the web site should not change, in order to suit our HTML. The suggestion was to imply that a large number of changes on the web site neither improve nor worsen the design, but change for change's sake, which happens to be an inconvenience to those of us who format our profiles to fit the current design. Indecisiveness can be a problem for any business.

     

    Never mind that, though. Let's talk about twisted knickers and different flavors of ice cream, ubiquitously irrelevant subjects, but ones that find their way into many geocaching discussions.

  10. Yeahh... small ajustments... New code!

     

    <div class='stat' style='position:relative; top:-226px; left:453px; height:0px;'>
    |  
    <img style="vertical-align:sub" src='/images/icons/32/dnf.png' alt='' height="15" width="15" />
    376 DNF Logs
    </div> 

     

    Thanks again. There's an old saying about an artist who keeps improving his painting until he royally messes it up beyond all hope. These web designers need to know when to call it good enough.

  11. It exists, but the USSRC site is no longer selling it. Here's a copy of the old web page (please don't try to order one from this page, because it's just a copy of the original page and won't get you anything):

     

    http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:C1yG4dwEi1QJ:www.spacecampstore.com/GPS-Adventure-Maze-GeoCoin-MEGP50/+&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us

     

    This is what it looks like:

     

    image2-megp50.jpgmegp50.jpg

     

    I can't locate any other site selling this coin. I think you're out of luck.

  12. Just one example and its not a hard fast rule. I have skipped caches in my day, I have waited out people or came back to spots but if you put one in a lamp post, I am not going to be stealthy about it.

     

    It's funny that you mention lamp post caches, because I don't think there are any such caches in the OP's area.

  13. ...I'd forgive a traditional CM for being a micro - I can forgive any micro if the location is interesting.

    Forgive? Or Absolve?

    "I'd absolve a traditional CM ..."

    Maybe only the Catholic CMs get absolved, while Protestant CM are forgiven.

     

    A Protestant would say that the Church Micro is justified. It may not be sanctified, though. Are we allowed to discuss soteriology in here?

  14. Also, once the initial search is performed, you get a new search box at the top, pre-filled with the text, "schepenbrief van bochoute." If you add the specific site to this (site:geocaching.com) so that it reads, "schepenbrief van bochoute site:geocaching.com," then it will narrow the results to only web pages at Geocaching.com.

  15. I went to https://images.google.com/. Click the icon of the camera at the right end of the search box. I think this cannot be done on a smart phone. Paste the url of the image into the box, and hit enter. Somewhere down the page is a heading "Pages that include matching images," and the first link is from Geocaching.com. Using this feature has a nasty habit of bringing up porn, so if you don't want to see that in the future, you'll want to adjust the search settings in the upper right corner (a gear icon).

     

    There might be a more direct method than what I did, but this was a pretty easy way to do it.

  16. You're allowed to do that. It's not a problem. I wish Groundspeak made it easier for us to repurchase tags with the codes that we already own, but they don't. I don't know if they still do, but they used to sell the tags with an included copy tag that you could release if the first one was lost.

     

    Also, I think you can reset the travel bug page and start over, if you wish.

  17. but the cacher has only found 9 caches and hasnt been back on the website since April...

     

    June. The listed "last visit" date may be April, but his last find was two months later.

     

    Edit: you're right, though. He hasn't visited the website since April.

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