+Sloopy Posted November 23, 2003 Posted November 23, 2003 Is it considered acceptable to take a travel bug you've had before and move it to another cache? As far as I can tell there aren't any rules against it, but I wasn't sure if it was something people do. There is a TB I've moved before that is now sitting in a cache I was planning on finding in the near future. Thanks! Quote
+Damenace Posted November 23, 2003 Posted November 23, 2003 Just remember these are travel bugs . So in my opinion it is hurting nothing to pick it up and move it again. It is better to have someone pick it up and move it than have it sit there stranded. Damenace Quote
+Cave Troll and Eeyore Posted November 23, 2003 Posted November 23, 2003 Yep I would pick it up and move it again if I could continue to help it towards its goal. Quote
+garri Posted November 23, 2003 Posted November 23, 2003 I took the same TB two times when someone of my team took it in a event cache I couldn't go because he didn't know it was in my hands, and now I can't left it in any caches because each day i haven't go to work rains. Some Travel Bugs are predestined to travel with the same geocachers for long time Quote
+ShaneN4Girls Posted November 24, 2003 Posted November 24, 2003 I've done this without planning on doing it. We first found Sexy Santa on December 24, 2002, on the way up to Mom & Dad's and dropped him off after our travels on January 1, 2003, in Arlington, TX. On Jan 26, 2003, we found Sexy Santa again about 50 miles from home, so we moved him further on that day. He has been my favorite travel bug to find, and I keep track of him still. Quote
+Doc-Dean Posted November 24, 2003 Posted November 24, 2003 I see no problem with this... I think it would be pretty cool to meet up with a TB I've seen before! Quote
+Webfoot Posted November 24, 2003 Posted November 24, 2003 I see no problem with this... I think it would be pretty cool to meet up with a TB I've seen before! I agree. Some of the bugs I've found have been very well traveled and I think it would be very cool to see them again at some cache. I say, go ahead and pick it up again. Quote
+ChrisCindy Posted November 24, 2003 Posted November 24, 2003 I am in the pick it up and move it group. Why not as long as you don't capitalize all it's time. Quote
+smenzel Posted November 27, 2003 Posted November 27, 2003 Now that we've determined it's alright to pick up a TB you've picked up before ... I dropped off a TB about two weeks ago and no one has visited the cache since. At what point should I go retrieve the TB and move it to another cache? Or should I not worry about it and just leave it where it is? Quote
+brad.32 Posted November 27, 2003 Posted November 27, 2003 Don't worry about it. How much traffic does that cache get? In a couple months, then you might be more interested. Quote
+Lazyboy & Mitey Mite Posted November 27, 2003 Posted November 27, 2003 Two weeks is nothing in the time span of travel bugs. I've had one sit for a year. In fact I'd love for someone who had my bug previously go and move it again. Quote
+Cave Troll and Eeyore Posted November 28, 2003 Posted November 28, 2003 I also had a bug that was picked up from my cache & was placed in another and its been stuck there ever since.(about 6 weeks so far). I,m gonna go move it on myself soon as thats what everyone said to do when I opened a topic on the subject. Quote
mortonfox Posted November 28, 2003 Posted November 28, 2003 In order to let others have a go at it, I try not to pick up the same travel bug twice but sometimes I make a mistake and do that anyway. However, I don't see a problem with that. In fact, sometimes I've been able to move the travel bug much further on my second pickup. Quote
+pjmorse Posted November 28, 2003 Posted November 28, 2003 I'm in Western Massachusetts. Late this summer, I picked up Lightning Bob at a cache out here. I dropped him in Rhode Island on a weekend trip down there. A few weeks later, he turned up back out here, in a cache I had driven past on the way to the one I picked him up at the first time. So I picked him up again, and this time I took him to Maine. I'm responsible for about a third of the little guy's mileage to date. Now he's back within twenty or thirty miles of me, in Springfield. I'm tempted to pick him up and try to find out where he can go that he won't come back to Western MA. Bermuda? Quote
+Webfoot Posted November 28, 2003 Posted November 28, 2003 I'm in Western Massachusetts. Late this summer, I picked up Lightning Bob at a cache out here. I dropped him in Rhode Island on a weekend trip down there. A few weeks later, he turned up back out here, in a cache I had driven past on the way to the one I picked him up at the first time. So I picked him up again, and this time I took him to Maine. I'm responsible for about a third of the little guy's mileage to date. Now he's back within twenty or thirty miles of me, in Springfield. I'm tempted to pick him up and try to find out where he can go that he won't come back to Western MA. Bermuda? Maybe you should grab him again, but drop him west of you instead of east? Quote
+pjmorse Posted November 29, 2003 Posted November 29, 2003 Maybe you should grab him again, but drop him west of you instead of east? I missed the chance; I was in Iowa last weekend, when he got placed in Springfield. I'm not going west again until February. Good thought, though. Maybe a field trip to Albany is in order. Quote
+hedberg Posted November 29, 2003 Posted November 29, 2003 What about picking up a TB from a cache you already have visited? Just going back to pick up a travelbug - new TB or an already previous logged TB? Quote
+bons Posted November 29, 2003 Posted November 29, 2003 I don't see what the problem would be. People revisit TB hotels to drop off/pick up all the time. People revisit old caches to do maintainence (even when it's not their cache). I'm tempted to start a cache called "TB reading room" which would provide easy access for TBs, storage for bookcrossing, and act as a letterbox for those without a GPS. Sure, it would just be a 1/1 but it would be a nice fast way to move a TB east or west and swap books in the process. Just need to find the right location... Quote
+Webfoot Posted November 29, 2003 Posted November 29, 2003 I'm tempted to start a cache called "TB reading room" which would provide easy access for TBs, storage for bookcrossing, and act as a letterbox for those without a GPS. Sure, it would just be a 1/1 but it would be a nice fast way to move a TB east or west and swap books in the process. Just need to find the right location... Oh that's a great idea. That would be a neat thing to have at several different locations around the country. Quote
Tracker Tom Posted December 10, 2003 Posted December 10, 2003 What if someone takes a TB, and put's it somewhere outside of guidelines ? Quote
+Gargoyle Posted December 10, 2003 Posted December 10, 2003 (edited) Let us not forget that this is mostly a game... I also call it a sport... but lets face the facts... if a travelbug ends up outside of a goal (or guildline) the world will not end. I have eight bugs... a few of them have specific goals and some of them don't. If one of them ends up in Florida when I want it to end up in Maine... I will not lose sleep. Who knows if that detour is not part of it's natural movement. Here is what I think is UNacceptable: Grabbing a TB and not logging it. Planting a TB and not loggin it. Scooping up a TB and holding onto it for an excessive period of time. I think it is better to leave a TB in a cache then it is to grab a TB and hold onto it longer then a month. Edited December 10, 2003 by Gargoyle! Quote
+bons Posted December 10, 2003 Posted December 10, 2003 I think it is better to leave a TB in a cache then it is to grab a TB and hold onto it longer then a month. And that's why I plan on leaving all the local TBs buried under the snow this winter. People would rather they didn't travel in a cache than not travel in my hands. I'm tired of feeling guilty because I haven't visited an appropriate cache to drop the travel bug off in within the past week and a half. Quote
+Gargoyle Posted December 10, 2003 Posted December 10, 2003 (edited) Well its hard to decide on what to do in the winter. Sometimes I guess it is really hard to get out in the wintertime... I was not doing caches last winter, however I was out exploring last year. My statement also only my opinion which may change as I am currently holding four bugs. I am hoping to hide a large ammo box in the next two weeks and I want to stick a bunch of TBs in it. Don't mind me - I am a grumpy old cacher who likes to post before he thinks. Sometimes we can't control the amount of time we spend not caching. I know that usually I can oply get out once a month and I am usually feeling guilty for holding onto a bug so long. So I am sorry if I offended. Disregard my statement about holding on to it for a month... it was stupid for me to say that. I am just glad there are so many people that love doing this. It is... as I said... just a game. And it is a great game... and sport. Edited December 10, 2003 by Gargoyle! Quote
+pjmorse Posted December 31, 2003 Posted December 31, 2003 I'm in Western Massachusetts. Late this summer, I picked up Lightning Bob at a cache out here. I dropped him in Rhode Island on a weekend trip down there. A few weeks later, he turned up back out here, in a cache I had driven past on the way to the one I picked him up at the first time. So I picked him up again, and this time I took him to Maine. I'm responsible for about a third of the little guy's mileage to date. Now he's back within twenty or thirty miles of me, in Springfield. I'm tempted to pick him up and try to find out where he can go that he won't come back to Western MA. Bermuda? OK. He got even closer - within a mile of my apartment. So I picked him up. I've been planning a vacation to a warm island in January. I emailed the owners to ask if they were OK with me hanging on to the bug and taking him there, if I could find an appropriate cache. Only problem: they're marked "unverified" and haven't logged in since, uh, March '02. Is this a bug free-for-all? Quote
+Webfoot Posted December 31, 2003 Posted December 31, 2003 OK. He got even closer - within a mile of my apartment. So I picked him up. I've been planning a vacation to a warm island in January. I emailed the owners to ask if they were OK with me hanging on to the bug and taking him there, if I could find an appropriate cache. Only problem: they're marked "unverified" and haven't logged in since, uh, March '02. Is this a bug free-for-all? I'd say go for it. If they haven't responded, then it appears as if you can do with it what you want. Quote
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