Jump to content

BuxCamper

+Premium Members
  • Posts

    92
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by BuxCamper

  1. I see that its at least partially fixed. TB motion through 3/9 was updated with miles. I went and moved my mileage bug through 5 more caches and no distance between caches was noted or added into the total until I forced a recalculation.

  2. I'm also in the process of playing catch up with a personal TB and it is tedious. Fortunately my finds are not too high.

     

    But it would be great if GS could do this automatically for at least one TB per account. It might even lessen the load on the servers a bit.

  3. I just got a personal TB that I want to follow me from cache to cache. I've slowly been having it go to old caches I've visited and have alos found the mileage to no be updating.

     

    Looking through the TB's log, the entries for Feb 26 and later no longer have miles from the previous cache. But thoose before do. So I'm guessing that the calculation is correct for the miles noted and everything else is 0.

     

    The TB reference number is TB2PDHD. Hope this helps fix the problem.

  4. For a couple of years I organized the annual picnic of a club I belong to. We rented a pavillion at a county park. Part of the rental agreement stated I could bring one vehicle at a time to the paviliion for unloading and loading in support of the event. For that period of time, it was an authorized vehicle.

  5. I've hunted a few PMOC caches but admitantly I tend not to pay attention to that detail when I look at the listings for my surburban Philadelphia area. (I think we have a pretty low concentration of them around here but I could be wrong.)

     

    That being said, I have an idea for a cache (I'm not going to say what it is) which if I place I plan to make a PMOC. Only letting PMs look at the listing gives the cache a little extra security but is - of course - no guarantee. The cache itself won't be super hard to find. It will just have a little fun twist on what you have to do when you find it. And if you don't want to do that fun twist, then you can just sign the log. If the cache is just openly listed, based upon the concept I have, I wouldn't be surprised if its muggled within days of publication.

     

    Edit: Additional detail.

  6. My wife has a bunch of "Pill Pouches" They're a little heavier duty than most of the other small zip-lock bags I've seen. They also have a white surface to write the medicine name and when to take it time. They have found good use in a couple of my hides.

     

    I don't know where she got them but I'll try to remember to ask and post here.

     

    Edit: spelling/grammar

  7. A few tips I've received in my training as a park volunteer.

     

    1. Don't touch anything and leave the area quickly by retracing the route you used to enter the area. You never know if the growers may have set traps or tripwires and you happened to miss them on the way in.

    2. Take a fast waypoint if you can.

    3. Once someplace safe, notify the law enforcement agency responsible for the area. Tell them what you saw and the coords. You can make the report anonymously if you want but I wouldn't worry about being a suspect. How many criminals report their own activity to the cops?

     

    Ignoring the situation or pretending you didn't see it is a cop out. It's my public land as well and I shouldn't be afraid to use certain parts of it.

     

    Even without reading this, it is exactly what I did when I found a pot plant on the way to a cache. Though I did meet with a state trooper and lead him back to the plant. He confiscated it but admitted there was little they could do to find the culprit.

     

    If we do nothing, the criminals win.

  8. Several LEO's here have pointed there are regular memos to the LEO community about geocaching. And another has pointed that many LEOs don't bother to make a mental note about what they read if they even read it.

     

    On the way to a cache I stumbled across something in the woods that shouldn't be there. Called the PA state police which sent a trooper. He admitted he asked on their chat channel what geocaching was and another trooper gave him a quick overview.

     

    My guess the LEO who stopped you was well aware of the cache if not the owner and was just messing with you. Though stopping you with lights and siren is - IMHO - pushing it.

  9. I would prefer people to log a find on any of my hides. Prefferably with a few words of how the search went. Obviously the ones saying it was a good hide bring a smile to my face.

     

    But there are going to be some people who don't. Not logging isn't really going to change anything. The hide will be there at least as long as it doesn't get muggled.

     

    I haven't done any maintenance on my hides yet so I haven't counted the signatures verses log entries.

  10. Yes! As I have said many times before in the forums, this is my classic "disguise" and I have even used it early in the morning to place a geocache container 20 feet up a lamppost at a busy intersection in the middle of our city, and no one gave me a second look. I even "own" an engineering and services company called VXP Services, which has a webpage of its own, and which offers "geo-placement", "geo-maintenance" services and "geo-muuggle abatement" services, and I invested in high-quality adhesive labels for my hardhat, safety vest and clipboard bearing the company name and legend, and in three magnetic signs for my car (for the two front doors and for the trunk) which read something along the lines of "VXP Geo-Engineering Services" and display the company phone number and website URL. I park the car near my "worksite" and this cuts down on questions or second looks 100% when performing delicate geo-operations in urban and suburban areas.

     

    Now you've started me thinking... :P

  11. A cache near me was in bad shape with a badly cracked light weight tupperware type container. Several people noted it in the logs and when I found it, the condition was worse than described. About a week later I went back and replaced the container, put a note in the log including a comment that I would hold the original for a while if the CO wanted it back. Didn't hear a thing - ever - and after three months tossed the original container.

     

    If you can make it better, I don't see a problem with doing so. Just be reasonably sure you're making it better.

  12. I've been following this since it started. The one thing I strongly suggest is that we contact our senators and representatives. Enough contacts, complaining and questioning what has gone on will probably lead to calls from the senator's/representative's office to the NPS which will eventually trickle down to those who need some clarification about geocaching.

  13. If even the thought of a cache detracts from the wilderness experience for some people, then why are they even on the AT? Its a marked trail, that in its own right is a detraction from the wilderness experience.

     

    I'll accept the NPS doesn't want them on its lands, the AT or the ATC but to declare state park XYZ off limits just because the AT goes through it is getting extreme.

  14. I'm going to say BRAVO to these concepts.

     

    I think they are a creative and perfectly honest way to address at least some of the issues your area has been having.

     

    And if somebody doesn't want or can't claim the prize, they just have to let the CO know and another winner can be drawn.

  15. I had Lyme's Disease about 5 or 6 years ago before I took up caching. As best as I can figure I got it around my own house.

     

    So I am concerned about it but I have to decide if I want to hide from all my fears and concerns or take proper precautions.

     

    Last year I put up a short ham radio tower. I have never been comfortable with unenclosed heights (basically situations where there is nothing between me and falling). Planes & talls buildings don't bother me. I've pressed my nose up against a floor to ceiling window on the 23rd floor of a hotel and didn't feel an ounce of anxiety. Take that window away and I'd be as far as possible from the hole.

     

    But climbing my tower and a friends has put me in the suck it up and get it done category. I've got a full safety harness on, fall arrest lanyard and another around the tower. At least one is connected at all times. The first few climbs were knee knockers esspecially when leaning back from the tower and letting go with only the lanyards holding you in place.

     

    I've found I've built confidence in doing it and when I get down, want to do it again.

     

    There are a million perils around you at any momment so you may have to convince her to suck it up and 'git 'er done then shower and scrub after the trek.

×
×
  • Create New...