+Justin0520 Posted February 23, 2011 Share Posted February 23, 2011 Me and my friends want to attempt the hardest puzzle type cache in the southeast. Preferably in the Northeast Alabama area, but anywhere in the southeast will do. Or even any in America Quote Link to comment
+mpilchfamily Posted February 23, 2011 Share Posted February 23, 2011 You may want to set up a PQ of all the puzzle caches near you. Puzzles that are hard for some are easy for others and vise verse. So it would be hard to designate one over the rest. But a good indication of difficulty would be ones that have been around for a while but have very few finds. Even those that are a few months old and still don't have any finds. Quote Link to comment
+MSwahoo & the Cache Hound Posse Posted February 23, 2011 Share Posted February 23, 2011 http://coord.info/GC1JX1T 6 DNF's and counting Quote Link to comment
+mpilchfamily Posted February 23, 2011 Share Posted February 23, 2011 http://coord.info/GC1JX1T 6 DNF's and counting Sure you got the right link. Looks like there are a good string of finds all fairly recently. Quote Link to comment
+MSwahoo & the Cache Hound Posse Posted February 24, 2011 Share Posted February 24, 2011 http://coord.info/GC1JX1T 6 DNF's and counting Sure you got the right link. Looks like there are a good string of finds all fairly recently. OH I AM SURE! Quote Link to comment
+The Seanachai Posted February 24, 2011 Share Posted February 24, 2011 I have heard that several people have found The Key to the Cryptonomicon to be quite challenging. Over a year to put together, 7 months to the first find, found 40-ish times in 4 years, often by large groups working together and it has spawned it's own threads and sites dedicated to solving it. I think you will find it fits the bill quite nicely. Quote Link to comment
+wimseyguy Posted February 24, 2011 Share Posted February 24, 2011 You might want to start with the easier puzzles in your local area, and then work up to the hard ones. Unless you have already solved and found the local ones, and just don't bother to log online? I've heard good things about the one cited above me. There are also a few fiendish ones in the Raleigh area-check out anything hidden by Stumpwater, The Alethiometrists, 1101010, binaryflow, or smoovetalker for starters. Quote Link to comment
+t4e Posted February 24, 2011 Share Posted February 24, 2011 (edited) You might want to start with the easier puzzles in your local area, and then work up to the hard ones. Unless you have already solved and found the local ones, and just don't bother to log online? puzzles do exist outside of geocaching, and many people enjoy solving them as a hobby, can't exactly tie his/hers ability to solve puzzles with the fact that haven't found any yet Edited February 24, 2011 by t4e Quote Link to comment
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