+ganurse Posted October 11, 2008 Share Posted October 11, 2008 Hey guys, my other passion (which I combine with caching) is pathtag design & trading. I use pathtags for signature items in caches and to do trades with others. I'm creating a new series 4-5 tags on Caching Castrophies (it's been done before but I wanted to expand on it)....things that would happen to you while caching (besides losing a signal, falling, DNFs, regular stuff). Looking for something totally unusual and I knew ya'll could come up with some interesting ideas! Quote Link to comment
+JEEPers5130 Posted October 11, 2008 Share Posted October 11, 2008 How about caches that are muggled or have been stolen? Or have gotten all wet? I can imagine dripping log books. Or the rain and snow? <-- probably been done. Or 2 people fighting over a FTF cache! Or, winching your jeep through a pile of mud then realizing after that you now have to cross a lake! Or the coordinates take you to the top of a mountian or middle of a lake. Sounds like a fun project! Georgette Hey guys, my other passion (which I combine with caching) is pathtag design & trading. I use pathtags for signature items in caches and to do trades with others. I'm creating a new series 4-5 tags on Caching Castrophies (it's been done before but I wanted to expand on it)....things that would happen to you while caching (besides losing a signal, falling, DNFs, regular stuff). Looking for something totally unusual and I knew ya'll could come up with some interesting ideas! Quote Link to comment
+Vinny & Sue Team Posted October 12, 2008 Share Posted October 12, 2008 (edited) I am sending this post on the advice of the team of seventeen crackerjack psychotherapists, psychiatrists and licensed social workers who work with me for many hours per day to try to help me keep my behavior relatively sane, and to keep me from going back to the federal pen for the criminally insane for another twenty years. They suggested that it might be very good, and very therapeutic, to share with you all what is going on for me on an inner level right now. Here goes: You see, I want to share with you that I am working very very very hard in trying to control myself and keep myself from sending a post playing on the title of this thread, which is "Cashing Castrophies?", and I am working very very very hard (and my therapists say that that I will get four silver stars on my forehead and an "A" in "Plays Well With Others" for this effort) to keep from making silly jokes about the word "Castrophies". I am being a good boy today! I deserve lots of smileys! I am going to give myself lots of smileys! Edited October 12, 2008 by Vinny & Sue Team Quote Link to comment
+jicknarson Posted October 12, 2008 Share Posted October 12, 2008 Well, guess this is not a catastrophe on a global level. but it nearly was on a personal one.... Heading for a couple of caches that the logs indicated were a long, tough hike in, so I wanted to drive as much of the way as possible. Found what I believed to be the right road, and although it looked pretty rough I managed to travel about 50 feet before I realized this was the entrance to a hiking trail. There was no possible way to turn the car around, and when I attempted to back out I realized (by the terrible screeching noise coming from the passenger side of the the car) that not only way there a visible boulder on the driver side (which I managed to avoid) but a hidden one on the other - don't know how I drove in without hitting it. I think I only had about two inches clearance on either side of the car, and for a while I was quite worried I wasn't going to be able to "thread the needle" to get back out.... and then what? Abandon my car, paint it camo, and hope no one noticed? Finally maneuvered it out and ended up with a bunch of dents and much less paint on one side of the car. The hike in to both caches was not bad at all..... ug. Learned my lesson (for awhile, anyway!) Quote Link to comment
Dinoprophet Posted October 12, 2008 Share Posted October 12, 2008 Forgetting to bring a writing implement to a micro? Quote Link to comment
+Team LaLonde Posted October 13, 2008 Share Posted October 13, 2008 (edited) You see, I want to share with you that I am working very very very hard in trying to control myself You - get in the corner until you can behave. Now, back on topic: What about wrong coordinates? I'd classify that as a catastrophy. Edited October 13, 2008 by Team LaLonde Quote Link to comment
+BCandMsKitty Posted October 13, 2008 Share Posted October 13, 2008 (edited) Dropping reading glasses into a canal while leaning over to search for a micro under the dock. Then stripping down to underwear and swimming for them, much to the amusement of my wife, and some fishermen at a nearby boat ramp. "Castrophy" averted, though ... I got my glasses back! EDIT: Oh yeah ... to make matters worse, we DNFd the cache! BC Edited October 13, 2008 by BC & MsKitty Quote Link to comment
+Scooter Bill Posted October 13, 2008 Share Posted October 13, 2008 Stung by a wasp which I am allergic to while seeking a local multi-stage puzzle cache. I ended up in the emergency room and still DNFed the cache. Quote Link to comment
+soapboxderbyfamily Posted October 13, 2008 Share Posted October 13, 2008 Has to be 5 police cars (local, state and sheriff) surrounding car, lights going? Quote Link to comment
+Okiebryan Posted October 13, 2008 Share Posted October 13, 2008 Or posting the same post 7 times in a thread? lol Quote Link to comment
+LDove Posted October 13, 2008 Share Posted October 13, 2008 (edited) How about taking a "shortcut" to a cache while the weather was minus 10 degrees at a public hunting ground? Surely the ground is frozen right? Drive a little farther in, save a few steps, easy. Yep, until my 2 week old car sinks up to the door frames in black muck. Had to call a 30 ton wrecker to pull me out. He says, "lady, what are you doing with your car in the hunting area?" I replied, "I am hiking," he took a drag off his cigar and said, "well you should be walking then..." yeah... Well at least he felt sorry for me and only charged me 90 bucks instead of 250.00, maybe my frozen tears helped. Edited to add: I am not the only one who has had trouble with this black pit of muck, read on... GCYNN9 Edited October 13, 2008 by LDove Quote Link to comment
+markandsandy Posted October 13, 2008 Share Posted October 13, 2008 Well, guess this is not a catastrophe on a global level. but it nearly was on a personal one.... .... and then what? Abandon my car, paint it camo, and hope no one noticed? ... Abandon my car, paint it camo, and hope no one noticed?fill with swag, and post the coordinates. Quote Link to comment
+LDove Posted October 13, 2008 Share Posted October 13, 2008 I have seen other pictures and heard other stories of car mishaps so I am happy to know I am not the only one out there that has had a cartastrophe while caching! Quote Link to comment
+MarshMonsters Posted October 13, 2008 Share Posted October 13, 2008 How about a cache frozen in ice? Hasn't happened to us yet we have been able to pull them out. Quote Link to comment
+wimseyguy Posted October 13, 2008 Share Posted October 13, 2008 How about getting bit by a copperhead while reaching for a cache? Not really a catastrophe, but more than a minor inconvenience. Two days later: Quote Link to comment
+Team Christiansen Posted October 14, 2008 Share Posted October 14, 2008 Read my log for "Wildwash Off-Roading..." (GC9D0C). Although only 1.7 miles from the interstate, it takes about 3-4 miles of pretty rough roads to get to it. No problem with my Jeep. But like a complete MORON, I lock my keys in my Jeep. My wife was out of town and my insurance company's road-side assistance sent some help in a big tow truck. By this time it is dark. This guy couldn't follow directions, gets lost and stuck in some soft sand. I walk from my jeep to his truck about a mile (in the dark, in the desert) to assist. Once he got unstuck, he left me alone out in the desert, in the dark, a mile from my Jeep, and two miles from the interstate. My wife, (although out of state) calls a neighbor, tells him how to get in our house, find an extra set of keys and to meet me at the interstate. Although, I had my GPSr, it wasn't easy to navigate through sagebrush, creosote, rock formations and pockets of soft sand in the dark for two miles. Once my friend met me at the interstate, (bear in mind he wouldn't be able to drive his little Honda most of the way), I still had to get back to my Jeep. I'm glad my GPSr has a back light, otherwise, I would have had to wait till morning to find my Jeep and miss work. From finding the muggled cache, it tooks 5 hours (most in the dark) to get home. The worst part of the whole ordeal was that my wife grounded me from geocaching. But if you check my profile, I was back at it two days later. Quote Link to comment
GPS-Hermit Posted October 14, 2008 Share Posted October 14, 2008 I put in the co-ordinates incorrectly and took myself into a wonderland of briars and heavy brush - could not find the cache and almost had to spend the night in the woods without the right clothes. Had to follow the bread crumbs back to the car. Learn Learn Learn. Doing better now! Quote Link to comment
+TheBeanTeam Posted October 14, 2008 Share Posted October 14, 2008 This was our worst crash....er....cache catastrophe. Quote Link to comment
+Harry Dolphin Posted October 15, 2008 Share Posted October 15, 2008 Heading for a couple of caches that the logs indicated were a long, tough hike in, so I wanted to drive as much of the way as possible. Found what I believed to be the right road, and although it looked pretty rough I managed to travel about 50 feet before I realized this was the entrance to a hiking trail. Did that. Page 46 for the Maine DeLorme Challenge. Only one cache on the page. About four miles in on a dirt road. Well, the mapping programs brought us in on Salmon Brook Road. I think we made it in almost three miles, before we abandoned the hunt. That Salmon Brook Road hasn't been used for vehicular traffic in many a year! Fortunately we were able to turn around, and find the other Salmon Brook Road! Much better road! Got poor Miss Oomphy stuck on a sand road in the Pine Barrens in South Jersey hunting an EarthCache. Fortunately some nice people came along and pushed us out. Not sure that AAA would have thought about four miles in on a sand road... Yeah. Even locked the keys in the car, for the first time in forty years! I'll rate my worst catastrophe as a couple of bouts with Lyme. Not pleasant. Quote Link to comment
+WRASTRO Posted October 15, 2008 Share Posted October 15, 2008 This was our worst crash....er....cache catastrophe. Those FTF races can be brutal sometimes! Quote Link to comment
+jeffbouldin Posted October 15, 2008 Share Posted October 15, 2008 Read the following two logs. http://www.geocaching.com/seek/log.aspx?LU...52-68d3fffe15fb http://www.geocaching.com/seek/log.aspx?LU...31-37fed7d99b2c Quote Link to comment
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