+Arrow One Posted March 13, 2006 Posted March 13, 2006 I just did a 17 mile round trip ride to place 9 caches. I plan on doing mainly bike caching in the future. I loved it! I found trails right off the main roads that I never knew were there, because by car, you're going to fast. I live in Ocean County NJ, and rode a few main roads, and took dirt trails completely thru one park about 7 miles! Anyone else enjoy bike caching? I'm planning a bike caching trip to Brendan T Byrne and Wharton Forests in the upcoming weeks. Quote
+Pablo Mac Posted March 13, 2006 Posted March 13, 2006 (edited) I have been meaning to inventory my caches that I placed during mountain bike adventures, and I have found that I placed 14 of my caches during mountain biking adventures: The View. The Proud. Scene of the Times View Have Scene It View of Far Between Passion of the Glass Dragon Pablo's Singletrack Mind Doctor's Orders Hard Corps Creampuff Just For Fun PPPP1: Land Navigation 101 Sand Ridge Sandwich Root Scootin' Boogie Scoot Over Edited March 13, 2006 by Pablo Mac Quote
+JimmyEv Posted March 14, 2006 Posted March 14, 2006 I've gotten to the point of hating drive-up caches, so I bought a road bike. It's much more enjoyable now. You do discover a lot of things from a bike. And it does for micros what hiking does for ammo cans, makes each one an adventure to get to. Quote
dutchmaster Posted March 14, 2006 Posted March 14, 2006 A cross country mtbike ride with caches along the way? BONUS! I do worry about hikers though when placing caches that far out in the boonies. Too difficult maybe? Less visits? Should I care? I'm stressing again! Quote
Verga Posted March 14, 2006 Posted March 14, 2006 A cross country mtbike ride with caches along the way? BONUS! I do worry about hikers though when placing caches that far out in the boonies. Too difficult maybe? Less visits? Should I care? I'm stressing again! Why not go out for a ride, hide a few caches, find a few and just let all the stress just drift away Mon (Terrible Jamacian accent) Quote
+Pablo Mac Posted March 14, 2006 Posted March 14, 2006 I do worry about hikers though when placing caches that far out in the boonies. Too difficult maybe? Less visits? Should I care? I'm stressing again! I thought the same thing about some of my more remote caches (see above), but a couple of cachers recently hiked 9 miles to find two of them. I don't place my remote caches with the hope of high find numbers. The few who find them are the hardcore hikers and bikers I can relate to, though. Quote
+el-toro Posted March 15, 2006 Posted March 15, 2006 The problem I've run into when caching on my bike is I hate having to leave my bike unattended if the terrain requires. I just had a bike stolen from my driveway recently. I don't want someone to come across my unattended bike in the woods, grab it and take off. Quote
+bike&ski Posted March 15, 2006 Posted March 15, 2006 Caching this winter led me to small park with a couple of trails running out of it. Now that spring is almost here, the Boss and I will be exploring them on our hybrids. I am also looking forward to caching on road rides this summer. Then there's the MS150 ride in South Jersey. I'm trying to figure a way to combine caching with this event. But 8000 biking muggles could be a bit of a challenge. Quote
+ZackJones Posted March 15, 2006 Posted March 15, 2006 I'm trying to figure a way to combine caching with this event. But 8000 biking muggles could be a bit of a challenge. Overhead at the MS-150 ride "Dang, that bike&ski person must be having some serious stomach issues - they keep jumping off their bike and running into the woods" Quote
+Bluejaytoo Posted March 15, 2006 Posted March 15, 2006 I love caching from my bike! I even have a handlebar mount for my eTrex Summit. Have to turn the compass off, though, cuz the bike hardware interferes with it... Quote
+Lightning Jeff Posted March 15, 2006 Posted March 15, 2006 The problem I've run into when caching on my bike is I hate having to leave my bike unattended if the terrain requires. I just had a bike stolen from my driveway recently. I don't want someone to come across my unattended bike in the woods, grab it and take off. I think most of us are much more likely to have a bike stolen from our driveways than from a trail. That said, I share the concern, and alleviate it by (1) stashing the bike off trail and out of view, if possible, and (2) carrying a cable lock and just locking the bike to a tree (or just running the cable through the wheels and frame - if someone wants to carry my bike 10 miles on foot, they're welcome to it). I've never had any problems, and this turns out to be a great way to cache. As for the concern that not as many people will find a cache that essentially requires a bike to get to, I don't mind that. The cache probably won't ever get muggled, and those who do seek it will enjoy the rare company. One of mine hidden this way just went a year without a finder. But the log made up for that. Quote
+bike&ski Posted March 16, 2006 Posted March 16, 2006 For ZackJones- Been there, done that. After you pass the same folks 4 or 5 times... For Bluejaytoo- I saw that Garmin has a GPSr that has wireless cadence and HRM functionality. A blending of cultures, and all it takes is money. For Arrow One- Take your rig to West Virginia (esp. Pendelton, Grant, etc. counties) for some amazing mountain biking and infrequently visited caches. I'm still pretty new at this, but when I was REAL REAL new, I tried to get at GC2D87. (See, I'm so new I'm not going to try and link to the page.) I managed to get within 100 or so feet. Didn't know enough to log a DNF, but the views of the Germany Valley made up for the disappointment. I'll be back. Quote
Mango Hunt Posted March 17, 2006 Posted March 17, 2006 Well I just started geo caching. I have no car; but I do have a mtbike and trails all around my house. I actually stumbled across my first cache while doing some extremely off road bikeing on rocks. So now any cache w/in 10 miles or so I'll get it. Plus a bike is much faster than walking. Mango Quote
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