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Paying Cash for Caches


vwaldoguy

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Was showing my brother and family how to cache this morning. The only nearby cache in their town that we could do on short notice (we were headed back home) was a 5star hide on a caboose in a local park. I said I thought it would be impossible for us to find it, but we tried anyhow. Six of us looked but came home cacheless.

 

We were soon muggled by three young kids from across the street offering to show us the cache location for $10. They obvsiously knew what we were doing. I politely said no. They did offer a few hints to the possible location, but kept asking for the money. Their mom came out a short bit later and the hustling quickly stopped. Anyone else ever been hustled for cash for the hidden cache location? I'm just getting into this myself (only 15 finds), but had to laugh at the entrepreneurship of these young kids (aged 3 to 12). While it would have been funny to log a 5-star find, it didn't feel right, and certainly not worth $10!

 

Then I had to wonder, maybe instead of selling lemonade, kids nowadays would offer hints and cache locations for cash instead. Parents could hide the caches, and let their children hustle money out of strangers for the hiding place.

Edited by vwaldoguy
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A local cacher was hunting for a micro when a homeless fella wandered up to him and held out a film canister and asked "This what you looking for?"

 

He responded "Yeah" and the homeless guy asked him how much it was worth to him. He offered $5 (I think) and took the film canister with him to return to the cache owner. There's a Needs Maintenence log if I ever saw one.

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A local cacher was hunting for a micro when a homeless fella wandered up to him and held out a film canister and asked "This what you looking for?"

 

He responded "Yeah" and the homeless guy asked him how much it was worth to him. He offered $5 (I think) and took the film canister with him to return to the cache owner. There's a Needs Maintenence log if I ever saw one.

Something similar to that happened near my office. A couple was looking for a devious little micro and a panhandler offered to help. He found the cache, and asked for payment for his services. Later, the cache went missing, so I believe the panhandler took it.

 

Incidentally, I personally believe that Chattanooga, TN, is the panhandling capital of Tennessee. There are even local laws stating where and when people can beg for money. There's this one poor guy who has a flat tire on his car who's been trying to get to a hospital to visit his mom for 3 years now. All he needs is a few bucks for a can of fix-a-flat. His mom must be REALLY sick.

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<snip>

 

Incidentally, I personally believe that Chattanooga, TN, is the panhandling capital of Tennessee. There are even local laws stating where and when people can beg for money. There's this one poor guy who has a flat tire on his car who's been trying to get to a hospital to visit his mom for 3 years now. All he needs is a few bucks for a can of fix-a-flat. His mom must be REALLY sick.

 

Be kind to him! Buy him a tire! :)

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A local cacher was hunting for a micro when a homeless fella wandered up to him and held out a film canister and asked "This what you looking for?"

 

He responded "Yeah" and the homeless guy asked him how much it was worth to him. He offered $5 (I think) and took the film canister with him to return to the cache owner. There's a Needs Maintenence log if I ever saw one.

 

You payed $5.00 bucks for a carpy film canister! :) What a rip off.

 

I have to admire the kids trying to make money as geocaching guides. :lol:

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In the late winter, but no snow on the ground, I was looking for a cache in a bush in a very small park. I wasn't making very good progress because of all the foot traffic in the area. Then a homeless guy came up to me and offered to pick up all the litter in the park. He was sure that we could agree upon a price. He wouldn't take no for an answer, finally I had to leave. If he had known about the cache I'm sure he would have bargained for it.

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I had a fisherman try to hustle me (cash for cache hints) one day as I was looking for a tough, often DNFed hide on a fishing pier. I left, but have been sorry I didn't just give him $ to show me the cache ;-)...seems like just another way to make a find, and it was archived before I got a chance to go back and hunt it again

 

Glad to know kids are growing up entrepreneurial ...

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The problem with paying money for caches, or (more commonly) leaving money in caches, is that eventually people figure out that's where the money is. When wandering scavengers start looking for cache hiding spots (piles of sticks, etc), the local caches are doomed.

 

Leaving money in a cache is like leaving an open package of bacon in your tent, in bear country.

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I've paid a heck of a lot more than $10 for a cache. Just finished up the Minnesota State Park Geocaching History Challenge last month. A cache in each of the 72 state parks, 4 regional caches, and then the state bonus cache. Total milage was in excess of 5500 miles with a calculated cost per cache of about $23, after fuel, lodging, food, boat launch, speeding ticket, etc.

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