+cachensfun Posted November 15, 2009 Share Posted November 15, 2009 We love to see others geocaching pictures. Why don't people post more on the cache page. Here are some of ours Quote Link to comment
M.TEX Posted December 2, 2009 Share Posted December 2, 2009 yeap I like this....It's just better to see ( find ) here.... I will soon post something but so far Im just learning... Quote Link to comment
+zoltig Posted December 2, 2009 Share Posted December 2, 2009 Pictures are a plus when it comes to geocaching. You may also be interested in this thread: Sunset from the cache... Here is one from a few years ago in the middle of winter. Cabin fever had set in so I grabbed the dogs to head out to the open prairie to see about getting some caching in. Beautiful and quiet all day long and the dogs had a blast running throught the snow. The cache page is here. Quote Link to comment
+Bundyrumandcoke Posted December 7, 2009 Share Posted December 7, 2009 (edited) Heres some pics of a trip we went on earlier this year. 8200+km in 29 days. 335 caches found. What we travelled on, Our travelling TB companion (Freddo) perched on the cache container (ammo box) beside the helmet on the front of the trailer. Freddo at some outback dice One of the hazards of the outback Freddo at the Ettamogah Pub Freddo at the Great Ocean Rd WW1 war mamorial gates, Victoria, Australia Mrs Bundy, and Freddo at The Twelve Apostles rock formation, Great Ocean Rd, Victoria, Australia. Too bloody cold for us tropical Queenslanders. The Southern Ocean to the left, with wind and rain straight off the Antarctic continent. Freddo and a crow. Freddo at the Giant Cray. And before you ask, those fuel prices are dollars and cents per litre, not gallon. Cheers Bundy Edited December 7, 2009 by Bundyrumandcoke Quote Link to comment
+zoltig Posted December 7, 2009 Share Posted December 7, 2009 One of the hazards of the outback Cheers Bundy WHOA! Quote Link to comment
M.TEX Posted December 7, 2009 Share Posted December 7, 2009 very nice indeed! More please ! Quote Link to comment
+Bundyrumandcoke Posted December 8, 2009 Share Posted December 8, 2009 (edited) A couple of videos from the same trip, the first in outback Australia, and the second in Sydney, Australia. I will upload some more when I get the chance. Cheers Bundy WELL, that didnt work, did it. Edited December 8, 2009 by Bundyrumandcoke Quote Link to comment
+Gitchee-Gummee Posted December 8, 2009 Share Posted December 8, 2009 Will this one work for ya? Best thing, this was in a well (?) maintained roadside rest area nature trail, Nebraska. That's the nature trail right behind the pretty plant. Quote Link to comment
+zoltig Posted December 8, 2009 Share Posted December 8, 2009 Will this one work for ya? Best thing, this was in a well (?) maintained roadside rest area nature trail, Nebraska. That's the nature trail right behind the pretty plant. That stuff is all over Nebraska. A pretty low grade of "tumbleweed" for the most part. Quote Link to comment
+Gitchee-Gummee Posted December 8, 2009 Share Posted December 8, 2009 (edited) That stuff is all over Nebraska. A pretty low grade of "tumbleweed" for the most part. We call it "ditchweed" here -- but this looked pretty good quality (for no maintenance) -- somebody had pulled all the male plants at a young age and none were around. Methinks was the prison workers, caretaker said they are there probably 4 times/year. Lotsa nice flowers, see towards tops. EDIT: Ditchweed = leftover remnants from hemp grown during WWII for ships' lines. Edited December 8, 2009 by Gitchee-Gummee Quote Link to comment
+zoltig Posted December 9, 2009 Share Posted December 9, 2009 That stuff is all over Nebraska. A pretty low grade of "tumbleweed" for the most part. We call it "ditchweed" here -- but this looked pretty good quality (for no maintenance) -- somebody had pulled all the male plants at a young age and none were around. Methinks was the prison workers, caretaker said they are there probably 4 times/year. Lotsa nice flowers, see towards tops. EDIT: Ditchweed = leftover remnants from hemp grown during WWII for ships' lines. I use the term "tumbleweed" as a...ummm.... verb! Quote Link to comment
+Ed_S Posted December 9, 2009 Share Posted December 9, 2009 Some of these pictures, if posted on their respective cache page, would be a real spoiler. That's probably why more aren't put in "found" logs. But here's a few, from our local caching group's photo selection on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/home.php#/photo.ph...mp;id=627511462 http://www.facebook.com/home.php#/photo.ph...mp;id=627511462 http://www.facebook.com/home.php#/photo.ph...p;id=1371938522 Quote Link to comment
+jwbowman Posted December 17, 2009 Share Posted December 17, 2009 my husband searching for a geocache that put him in a very weird position...lol yeah...not cool our fav Quote Link to comment
+AirborneSurveyor Posted December 18, 2009 Share Posted December 18, 2009 (edited) A windy day on the top of Pikes Peak. The wind was 50-60mph and the temp was about 12-15deg. Lucky for me I just got back from Afghanistan a few days before and was use to high altitude and cold. It was funny watching people huffing and puffing in the thin air and I was not even close to being short of breath. Me and the wife LOL just a tad windy. Edited December 18, 2009 by AirborneSurveyor Quote Link to comment
CircadianHour Posted December 28, 2009 Share Posted December 28, 2009 Me and Dad at an Artesian Well Earthcache. My wife and dad. Wife with a small magnetic cache. Quote Link to comment
+leejas72 Posted March 2, 2010 Share Posted March 2, 2010 The kids finding a cache on the Rims in Billings, MT Quote Link to comment
+George1 Posted March 8, 2010 Share Posted March 8, 2010 A bunch of Central PA Cachers getting together for a fun day. Quote Link to comment
+Bitterseed Posted March 29, 2010 Share Posted March 29, 2010 Will this one work for ya? Best thing, this was in a well (?) maintained roadside rest area nature trail, Nebraska. That's the nature trail right behind the pretty plant. LOL That's the wrong kind of cache Quote Link to comment
Kedenna Posted March 29, 2010 Share Posted March 29, 2010 One of the hazards of the outback Cheers Bundy WHOA! Being new to Geocaching....never thought of a Travel buddy...but definately going to get one now for picture ops...TY Quote Link to comment
+Woodstramp Posted April 7, 2010 Share Posted April 7, 2010 One of the hazards of the outback Cheers Bundy From what I've heard of the Oz Outback that driver probably uses the first three tanker-trailers just to get where's he's going. Quote Link to comment
+Knight2000 Posted April 7, 2010 Share Posted April 7, 2010 We enjoyed this atypical cache and the place that it brought us to. Quote Link to comment
oakenwood Posted April 8, 2010 Share Posted April 8, 2010 I always bring a camera. It's one of the things I like best about caching. Something in the woods near a cache. And some other assorted pics: The last one is the "Hall of Pines" near Crash Cache. Quote Link to comment
+FierceFrogs Posted April 9, 2010 Share Posted April 9, 2010 This was our first day caching, and our second ever cache. It was pouring on our way to this second cache. Shortly after arrival, the rain ended and we were greeted with these: Quote Link to comment
+AKDisneyPirates Posted April 9, 2010 Share Posted April 9, 2010 Great pics everyone! was fun going through them. Hope to see a lot more loaded up! Here are a few of ours of some of our first caches of my hubby and I. Quote Link to comment
+Viajero Perdido Posted April 11, 2010 Share Posted April 11, 2010 From some recent DNFs in Mexico: ...and a couple from back home in Canada: Quote Link to comment
kent.babcock Posted April 11, 2010 Share Posted April 11, 2010 Bowen Creek Refugees Here's one from our Good Friday outing Quote Link to comment
+do not resuscitate Posted April 18, 2010 Share Posted April 18, 2010 I highjack a TB and take it with me and log it in to every cache I find (for mileage) and take at least one photo for each cache (for fun). After a while I drop it into a TB Hotel and pick up another one to do the same with. A lot of the pics are spoilers so I only post it on the TB page. I've found over 1,000 caches. My photo gallery is jam-packed. Caching and camping in the Mojave Desert. Our campsite was 30 from a cache. A Jumping Cholla. The needles have barbed hooks. Makes you keep your eyes open. A Joshua Tree. Bumped into one and the needle barely pricked the back of my hand and my hand swelled to twice its size and I couldn't move my fingers. Man, I love the desert. Quote Link to comment
+do not resuscitate Posted April 18, 2010 Share Posted April 18, 2010 An extinct sloth at The La Brea Tar Pits A family of mammoths mired in the tar. An enraged mammoth. A saber-toothed battle. Quote Link to comment
sabrefan7 Posted April 18, 2010 Share Posted April 18, 2010 Prison Cemetery Attica NY GC39 The Spot Near GCM983 Quote Link to comment
+t4e Posted April 18, 2010 Share Posted April 18, 2010 finally got to do the Badlands Earthcache today had no idea about this place, and its only 50kms from where i live Visit to "Mars" - Cheltenham Badlands, Ontario - Canada Quote Link to comment
+do not resuscitate Posted April 25, 2010 Share Posted April 25, 2010 This is the house (a virtual in Los Angeles) that was the mortuary on the tv show Six Feet Under. Soup anyone? Cool cache container! An impromtu grave marker in the Mojave Desert. A turn-of-the-century hearse at a graveyard on the Cajon Pass. Quote Link to comment
+do not resuscitate Posted April 25, 2010 Share Posted April 25, 2010 World famous donut house. The best donuts ever. They're so busy they have two drive-thru's. Don't get stranded in the desert... Let me reiterate... This is the actual church from the Kill Bill movie. Quote Link to comment
+simpjkee Posted April 26, 2010 Share Posted April 26, 2010 First things first, the pics from Viajero Perdido are fantastic! Well done! Alright, here's a bunch of faves of mine that I have taken. I love to take pictures and try to take good pictures, but I don't know anything about photography. I would really appreciate it if some of you who know about photography tell me how I can make my pictures better or if you see something I'm doing wrong, etc, etc. Or if maybe some are better than other, etc. Thanks! One from a park in Scottsdale, AZ: Some from the Riparian Preserve in Gilbert, AZ: These are of the Mogollon Rim in North Central Arizona: Quote Link to comment
+simpjkee Posted April 26, 2010 Share Posted April 26, 2010 And Part 2: These are from Deer Creek AZ: These are from the Ballantine Trail: The Desert around Phoenix: Quote Link to comment
+do not resuscitate Posted April 27, 2010 Share Posted April 27, 2010 The middle of nowhere. Found these bones in the desert. Possibly human? A steam pump relic. This "device" was a few feet from the cache. Gotta love urban caching... Quote Link to comment
+Chi-Rho Posted April 27, 2010 Share Posted April 27, 2010 Found these bones in the desert. Possibly human? It is hard to tell in a picture but they do kind of look human. It looks like the distal end of a femur and a tibia in two large fragments. The other, smaller pieces I can't identify from the picture. If you took the coordinates of the remains maybe call your state archaeologist and let them know the information. Quote Link to comment
+do not resuscitate Posted April 29, 2010 Share Posted April 29, 2010 The Queen Mary at Long Beach, California. This cache was called Micro In The Desert. It was a "micro"wave oven, camoed. Another unfortunate creature who's bones were bleached by the desert sun. The entrance to Burro Schmidt mine. You enter here and 700 feet later you emerge on the other side of the peak and then it's another 100 feet to the cache. Quote Link to comment
+do not resuscitate Posted May 1, 2010 Share Posted May 1, 2010 The California Aqueduct, where we get our water. Seeing light at the end of the tunnel. The mouth of an old tunnel. Meow... Quote Link to comment
+do not resuscitate Posted May 1, 2010 Share Posted May 1, 2010 Would you climb this to reach a cache? He is actually standing on top of a chain-link fence. This water tank in Turnbull Canyon was my 1,000th find. View from water tank overlooking Rose Hills Cemetery. Solvang, California. Quote Link to comment
+Herb and Beans Posted May 1, 2010 Share Posted May 1, 2010 On top of Sulphur Mountain in Banff National Park A view of Lake Louise in Banff Searching.........in the wrong flippin' spot. Quote Link to comment
+Fjordi Posted May 4, 2010 Share Posted May 4, 2010 Wow, great pics! Here are some photos of our caching trips: A T5 climbing cache some kilometres from our home (Austria) Budapest, Hungary Salzburg (Austria) "Fountain of Youth" - 5 minutes from our home Quote Link to comment
+Fjordi Posted May 4, 2010 Share Posted May 4, 2010 Medulin (Croatia) And some of the cache locations of the "Lord of the Rings" tour we placed in the mountains around our home Quote Link to comment
+do not resuscitate Posted May 6, 2010 Share Posted May 6, 2010 A miner at Stateline on the way to Las Vegas. His ore carts. This was a fun cache. These cats are right next to a busy intersection. The theme of the cache is "what would you do to get the smiley?" As you reach for the cache the passersby see you sticking your hand up the cat's you-know-what! Quote Link to comment
+do not resuscitate Posted May 6, 2010 Share Posted May 6, 2010 Can you say "pipe bomb"! A totem pole in Temescal Valley. Jawbone Canyon store on highway 14 in the Mojave Desert. This jail cell cache was hanging in a tree. Even tho it is easy to see here, it took me over 30 mintues to find it. http://img.geocaching.com/track/log/f49b67...0645ca701f1.jpg Quote Link to comment
+chasclifton Posted May 6, 2010 Share Posted May 6, 2010 I had to drop off a dinosaur TB yesterday in a dinosaur-themed cache. On the way, I nearly lost the TB to a hungry Allosaurus. Quote Link to comment
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