knowschad Posted July 2, 2012 Share Posted July 2, 2012 Make sure you note that the cache started out with quality swag, and encourage the finders to keep it that way. Put chipped or broken beads or other worthless, useless items in the cache as the only swag. Swag?!? No room for swag in this little thing. Quote Link to comment
+St.Matthew Posted July 2, 2012 Share Posted July 2, 2012 Remember to note that it is "pretty difficult" and make the difficulty 2.5 stars. Quote Link to comment
+Ohiosiouxfan Posted July 2, 2012 Share Posted July 2, 2012 Start the description with: "I just discovered geocaching yesterday and love it, so I put out this..." Quote Link to comment
+St.Matthew Posted July 2, 2012 Share Posted July 2, 2012 Start the description with: "I just discovered geocaching yesterday and love it, so I put out this..." "I got the coordinates using Google maps." Quote Link to comment
+SwineFlew Posted July 2, 2012 Share Posted July 2, 2012 (edited) Dunno. Think BrianSnat beat you to this idea by four years. No Redeeming Value: NJ's Worst Cache Park at the strip mall, walk through the construction debris, trough mud and poison ivy and sticker bushes. To find a Scottish Oats container in a rock pile, with a minimal, torn log sheet, and the TB was missing! You're going to have to work hard to beat that one! Sad thing is that a number of logs stated that they had found worse. What's worse than a cache with "No Redeeming Value"? How about a power trail of caches with "No Redeeming Value"? Edited July 2, 2012 by SwineFlew Quote Link to comment
+jlinbu Posted July 2, 2012 Share Posted July 2, 2012 How about you include some business cards or religious tracts as "swag"? Quote Link to comment
+Ambient_Skater Posted July 2, 2012 Share Posted July 2, 2012 Use "evil hide" in the description. Email everyone who posts a DNF and chide them for "implying" that the cache had been muggled, even especially when their DNF log said nothing of that sort. Quote Link to comment
+The VanDucks Posted July 3, 2012 Share Posted July 3, 2012 Make it be the main attraction at a your local geocaching club picnic; find it with a big group of cachers to attract maximum atention from muggles. (Or have it be the focal point of a flash mob geocache event.) Quote Link to comment
+Cryptosporidium-623 Posted July 3, 2012 Share Posted July 3, 2012 Mark it as a regular (now, medium) and kid-friendly. Quote Link to comment
+lamoracke Posted July 3, 2012 Share Posted July 3, 2012 make the hint...."you are looking for a geocache". Have seen some caches with that as the hint. Quote Link to comment
+jlinbu Posted July 3, 2012 Share Posted July 3, 2012 I'm willing to donate a favorite point to the cause. Quote Link to comment
medoug Posted July 3, 2012 Share Posted July 3, 2012 (edited) Here's a good example in our area: Hide it and they will come It's kind of a sarcastic spin on bad geocaches. This one is hidden behind the local Walmart which had also bordered with a "gentleman's club" which help it meet the "family-friendly" criteria. I find that reading both the description and the logs on this one is also quite fun. Edited July 3, 2012 by medoug Quote Link to comment
+lamoracke Posted July 3, 2012 Share Posted July 3, 2012 Here's a good example in our area: Hide it and they will come It's kind of a sarcastic spin on bad geocaches. This one is hidden behind the local Walmart which had also bordered with a "gentleman's club" which help it meet the "family-friendly" criteria. Kinda neat to be able to say what you truly feel on a cache for once. Quote Link to comment
+msrubble Posted July 3, 2012 Share Posted July 3, 2012 I second the suggestion of a multi or, better yet, a puzzle with multiple stages. Make errors in the solution. A few spelling errors in something that has to be decrypted make a fun challenge! Or mathematical errors that produce incorrect coordinates. Make the log sheet a spitball that is nearly impossible to fish out and unfold. If possible, place near "No Loitering" signs or in view of security cameras. Use "Stealth Required" attribute. Quote Link to comment
+Don_J Posted July 3, 2012 Share Posted July 3, 2012 DON'T FORGET TO TYPE THE DESCRIPTION UP IN ALL CAPS. Quote Link to comment
+Ambient_Skater Posted July 3, 2012 Share Posted July 3, 2012 DON'T FORGET TO TYPE THE DESCRIPTION UP IN ALL CAPS. That one's a must. Combined with the bright colors and illegible fonts. And don't forget to make it all a graphic file instead of text like I suggested before. Quote Link to comment
+OZ2CPU Posted July 3, 2012 Share Posted July 3, 2012 funny, I found alot of caches, and quite alot of them actually fit very well on this threads definition of the lamest cache ever, I think: hum.. who do so many people clearly make a VERY lame cache ? are they just plain dumb ? BTW: All my own caches are offcourse PEFFECT made of pure gold, and newer muggled. Quote Link to comment
+Cryptosporidium-623 Posted July 3, 2012 Share Posted July 3, 2012 DON'T FORGET TO TYPE THE DESCRIPTION UP IN ALL CAPS. That one's a must. Combined with the bright colors and illegible fonts. And don't forget to make it all a graphic file instead of text like I suggested before. Oooo! Ooooo! And the background image should be a brightly-colored ANIMATED GIF! Quote Link to comment
+Vater_Araignee Posted July 3, 2012 Share Posted July 3, 2012 I second the suggestion of a multi or, better yet, a puzzle with multiple stages. Make errors in the solution. A few spelling errors in something that has to be decrypted make a fun challenge! Or mathematical errors that produce incorrect coordinates. Make the log sheet a spitball that is nearly impossible to fish out and unfold. If possible, place near "No Loitering" signs or in view of security cameras. Use "Stealth Required" attribute. Going that rout you just have to make the final coords the start coords. Quote Link to comment
+pnpure Posted July 3, 2012 Share Posted July 3, 2012 When you are selecting the lamppost, find the one with a damaged skirt, or modify the skirt to allow rain to get to the cache. Alternately, go out every few days and put a few drops of water in the container, ensuring that the log gets good and damp. When people complain that the log is just mush, post a note to the cache page chastising them for whining. Quote Link to comment
+Thrak Posted July 3, 2012 Share Posted July 3, 2012 I found one made from one of those flimsy water bottles from the grocery store. You know, the REALLY thin plastic bottles. It had been cut in half and then kind of stuffed back together. It was at the bottom of the bank of a seasonal overflow creek that gets a LOT of water in the winter. It was maybe 4 feet from the water in mid summer and maybe 1 foot above the water line. It would be a good 4-5 feet under the water when its been raining for a week or so. It totally didn't seal at all and there was no type of baggie inside. It had bugs in it including a small slug. No lamp post but definitely qualifies as a lame cache. Quote Link to comment
+bflentje Posted July 3, 2012 Share Posted July 3, 2012 Aren't there enough bad caches? This thread should not be allowed to continue. I'm pretty sure that this thread is about describing all the attributes of the lamest cache ever and not a suggestion for anyone to place another lame cache. This thread should continue as it's becoming a pretty good summary of what makes a lame cache. I suspect that most of the readers of the thread know it's not an endorsement for placing lame caches and most cachers (with the exception of Briansnat ) don't want to place a cache with No Redeemable Value. I am well aware of what the thread is about. If most people know it's not an endorsement then why confuse the remaining small percentage of clueless noobs? Besides, my post was sarcasm. That was literally all I had to add to the thread. Quote Link to comment
+frinklabs Posted July 3, 2012 Share Posted July 3, 2012 What's that thing -- I can't remember the name or I have blocked it -- where a CO puts some icon or link on the listing basically indicating that they want other people to maintain their cache for them? Would addition of that make a cache more or less lame? More, for obvious reasons of the concept itself being lame? Or less, because the cache might get more maintenance than it should, decreasing the lameness? Quote Link to comment
+OZ2CPU Posted July 3, 2012 Share Posted July 3, 2012 >No lamp post but definitely qualifies as a lame cache. but did your found it log, clearly reveal your truely feelings about his cache ? or did you just log it : TFTC so you let him think, it was ok to make such horrible bad cache. If people where a bit more honost in their logs, maybe it will help too ? who wants a log : clearly a bad cache, no thanks at all, for all the nasty bugs and slugs. Quote Link to comment
mtnman4jesus Posted July 3, 2012 Share Posted July 3, 2012 Place cache on the outside of the skirt in plain sight. Quote Link to comment
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