+CYBret Posted July 21, 2004 Share Posted July 21, 2004 I stopped by the Surplus Store the other night and picked up a can of olive green spraypaint for a couple new ammo boxes. It got me to thinking how almost all the ammo boxes I've seen/used are either olive green or some sort of a green camo. Of course, this makes sense, but I also got to wondering what other colors people have used. I wonder how an obnoxiously bright YELLOW ammo can would go over. I remember someone painting one with a blue fleck-stone paint, to make it look more "harmless." Purple? Black? Red white and blue? White snow camo? Anyone seen anything unusual? Got any good pictures? Bret Quote Link to comment
FallenFaery Posted July 21, 2004 Share Posted July 21, 2004 There's a cache here named after geogil's sidekick Dairy the geocaching dane. it's painted just like here white with black spots. http://www.geocaching.com/seek/log.aspx?II...7ad&LID=3722283 this log contains a picture of dairy and geogil with the cache Quote Link to comment
+KC0GRN Posted July 21, 2004 Share Posted July 21, 2004 I've seen some painted with fleck stone, and one in town here is done up as a travel bug graveyard cache, that ones painted up to look like a tombstone. On a slightly off tangent thing, I just found out my father is involved with a VFW post in town, and he can get me all the ammo boxes I'd ever want, for free! Quote Link to comment
+Seamus Posted July 21, 2004 Share Posted July 21, 2004 Here we see an example of the rare albino geocache in captivity. It is very unlikely that such ammo cans could survive in the wild for very long, as their lack of any pigmentation would make it extremely difficult for them to blend into their surroundings. This one was found and taken in by a kindly geocacher, who has retrained it to serve as a storage and transport container for fragile objects and equipment. Quote Link to comment
+Gizmo & Brazin Posted July 21, 2004 Share Posted July 21, 2004 I have just done straight cammo on the outside of the Ammo can. But one of mine, Bling-Bling, has lots of pretty colors, glitter and jewels on the inside! Quote Link to comment
+tirediron Posted July 21, 2004 Share Posted July 21, 2004 I prefer a basic black... Quote Link to comment
+TeamK-9 Posted July 21, 2004 Share Posted July 21, 2004 There was a cache posted here a while back that had a John Deere theme, it had lots of cool John Deere logo gear inside, and the outside? It was painted JD Signiature Green and Yellow... Quote Link to comment
+Lil Devil Posted July 21, 2004 Share Posted July 21, 2004 Most of my ammo can caches have a typical splotched camo design. However I raffled off this special cache at a Geocaching event I held on Valentines Day. The next day it became the Love Is In The Air cache. Quote Link to comment
+JoGPS Posted July 21, 2004 Share Posted July 21, 2004 I have several that are John Deere Green and Yellow, but this is my favorite …. JOE Quote Link to comment
SCP-173 Posted July 21, 2004 Share Posted July 21, 2004 (edited) I had this whipped up specially for a local cacher who had the gall to say publicly in a log that she had found a lot of dud caches recently. The cache is called "This Duds For You". It's hidden in a black bag, though, to protect the paint and to make it not stand out. On the cache page it's listed as a "surprise container". This Dud's For You Edited July 21, 2004 by Vargseld Quote Link to comment
lowracer Posted July 21, 2004 Share Posted July 21, 2004 I use flat black (makes them very difficult to find even in bright daylight), slate grey (in our limestone rock in Austin this color is excellent camo), and even brown (woodland hides in hollow logs). I never use green and I never deploy one with the original military markings. Quote Link to comment
+wimseyguy Posted July 21, 2004 Share Posted July 21, 2004 I have seen light blue, pastel pink, and black and white checks (hidden in the woods near a racetrack) out in the woods. At geowoodstock2 there were a few solid gold ones, and clayjar's hyundai beige custom mounted one. I just read of a bright yellow one I plan to look for at the beach this weekend. I think lowracer's comment of painting over the original military markings is a wise suggestion. Quote Link to comment
+CurmudgeonlyGal Posted July 21, 2004 Share Posted July 21, 2004 We recently went to Portland. A story in and of itself, but our very first cache as we were hunting the 'Machine' in reverse order had horror stories tied to it. The area was heavily treed with a rather large water tower blocking out a perfectly good skyline on one side. The ivy was thick and the muggles, at times, were said to be even thicker. Nervous enough to break out in a cold... well, certainly not sweat as women do NOT sweat... Um, er, I digress. It took us about 3.5 seconds to find the cache... painted BRIGHT RED lying amongst the ivy. Mayhap the locals are color blind. Locally we have one that's painted a flourescent green/yellow - amazingly enough it is rather well hidden in amongst the ferns and salal and other greenery on the forest floor. Another is a cache called "Mr. Mickey Man" out on an island you have to boat or swim to. I donated a new 50 cal can to replace the old plastic container so a friend could replace it for the owner. He went out on a Saturday and replaced it, and I followed closely behind a couple of days later... He'd painted the can itself, black (I think) and it had huge Mickey Mouse decals on it. We had a good chuckle over the 'non-threatening' ammo can. Pictures? Not hardly. Most of the cans here are painted in those nice flat deep-woods colors in the 'camo' set of spray paint cans and then we rip off some nice leaves or fern fronts to get that nice 'it's really a plant' sort of look going for them. -=- michelle Quote Link to comment
+sept1c_tank Posted July 21, 2004 Share Posted July 21, 2004 I like this "thinking out of the box." I have a couple of boxes that need to be painted, and I'm determined to use some outrageous colors. The hard part is finding an appropriate place to hide them. Quote Link to comment
+gorillagal Posted July 22, 2004 Share Posted July 22, 2004 I've found a couple with unusual colors. One is painted with rainbow stripes on it. It is well hidden in a pile of large rocks up in the mountains. The other was white with black paw prints on it. It wasn't hidden real well when I found it, but is quite aways off of the well traveled trails. Quote Link to comment
+Renegade Knight Posted July 22, 2004 Share Posted July 22, 2004 I found one that set my standard for a 1 difficulty find. It was day glow orange sitting by itself in the middle of nowhere after a mile hike to get there. After the hike you could see it from a long ways away. That cache I will remember for a long line time. Quote Link to comment
+Seamus Posted July 22, 2004 Share Posted July 22, 2004 I found one that set my standard for a 1 difficulty find. It was day glow orange sitting by itself in the middle of nowhere after a mile hike to get there. After the hike you could see it from a long ways away. That cache I will remember for a long line time. Something like this? Quote Link to comment
+flask Posted July 22, 2004 Share Posted July 22, 2004 so far i haven't seen any colors i consider "weird". i'm about to hide a white one, and we have a bright yellow one near here that people have trouble finding. white and yellow are such un-weird colors that kindergarten students and probably even stunod can identify them with little difficulty. (sorry, dude, but you name just happen to pop into my head at the wrong time.) Quote Link to comment
+Stunod Posted July 22, 2004 Share Posted July 22, 2004 so far i haven't seen any colors i consider "weird". i'm about to hide a white one, and we have a bright yellow one near here that people have trouble finding. white and yellow are such un-weird colors that kindergarten students and probably even stunod can identify them with little difficulty. (sorry, dude, but you name just happen to pop into my head at the wrong time.) That's OK...I'm just looking up results from last years bike races in Vermont... Quote Link to comment
+Corp Of Discovery Posted July 22, 2004 Share Posted July 22, 2004 This one is painted to look like a taxi. It is one of the few moving caches still out there. Check out the gallery for a picture. Quote Link to comment
+KC0GRN Posted July 22, 2004 Share Posted July 22, 2004 After thinking of these ammo boxes some more, I wondered how funny it'd be if you could by some miracle win an auction of a pallet load of ammo boxes, place the entire pallet somewhere it wouldn't be an eyesore, waste of space, against the rules, whathave you. Trick is they're all empty, save one, which would be the actual cache. Maybe that's just too evil....... Quote Link to comment
kayaker22589 Posted July 22, 2004 Share Posted July 22, 2004 Or you could glue a bunch of ammo boxes together but leave a space at the bottom for a micro container. That way you could really frustrate people who like traditionals. Quote Link to comment
+Prairie Dog Posted July 22, 2004 Share Posted July 22, 2004 (edited) Here's that John Deer themed cache. Green & Yellow cache Waypoint GCJ127 Edited July 22, 2004 by Prairie Dog 76 Quote Link to comment
+TeamK-9 Posted July 22, 2004 Share Posted July 22, 2004 Here's that John Deer themed cache.Green & Yellow cache Waypoint GCJ127 Yep, that's the one.... Just for the heck of it, I went to the local sporting goods store and bought a can of blaze orange paint, I then proceeded to spray the ammo can with it. I now notice I should have put a base coat of white or something but I can fix this.... Anyway, my idea is to take the now day-glow orange cache and hide it somewhere so devious that it won't make a difference what color it is... Quote Link to comment
+drat19 Posted July 22, 2004 Share Posted July 22, 2004 Here we see an example of the rare albino geocache in captivity. It is very unlikely that such ammo cans could survive in the wild for very long, as their lack of any pigmentation would make it extremely difficult for them to blend into their surroundings. This one was found and taken in by a kindly geocacher, who has retrained it to serve as a storage and transport container for fragile objects and equipment. Ah, but I've seen a situation where this is PERFECT camo. There's a cache in Destin, FL, hidden on a corner of the sugar white sand beach among the reeds, anchored down with a stake (in case of flooding of said beach), where this color camo is the PERFECT application of it. -Dave R. in Biloxi Quote Link to comment
+Cow Spots Posted July 22, 2004 Share Posted July 22, 2004 I had a silly puzzle cache in the San Diego area (since archived due to cache theft) called Serious Black. Since the cache is dead, I'll share a few details. The ammo can was completely flat black. Inside and out. I wouldn't accept a find unless they also signed the logsheet and provided a codeword from it -- which, according to the webpage, was within "5 feet of the container." When the ammo can was opened, at least for the first finder, it appeared to be completely empty. In reality, the logsheet was stuck to the underside of a piece of magnet sheet cut to fit the bottom of the ammo container, the back side of which was painted the exact same flat black. In essence creating a false bottom. It was darn hard to see, and as cachers added black trade items to the ammo can, it got harder and harder to detect. I know of one cacher who had to make a repeat 20-mile visit to claim the find. Whoever stole the can probably has no clue the logsheet exists. --Dave, The Cow Spots Quote Link to comment
+WalruZ Posted July 22, 2004 Share Posted July 22, 2004 I found this Blue & White one in a nice sub shop... North of Downtown Quote Link to comment
+flask Posted July 22, 2004 Share Posted July 22, 2004 I had a silly puzzle cache in the San Diego area (since archived due to cache theft) called Serious Black. Since the cache is dead, I'll share a few details. The ammo can was completely flat black. Inside and out. I wouldn't accept a find unless they also signed the logsheet and provided a codeword from it -- which, according to the webpage, was within "5 feet of the container." When the ammo can was opened, at least for the first finder, it appeared to be completely empty. In reality, the logsheet was stuck to the underside of a piece of magnet sheet cut to fit the bottom of the ammo container, the back side of which was painted the exact same flat black. In essence creating a false bottom. It was darn hard to see, and as cachers added black trade items to the ammo can, it got harder and harder to detect. I know of one cacher who had to make a repeat 20-mile visit to claim the find. Whoever stole the can probably has no clue the logsheet exists. --Dave, The Cow Spots can i steal that? Quote Link to comment
+Lil Devil Posted July 22, 2004 Share Posted July 22, 2004 Can I take the red-head and leave a McToy in trade? Quote Link to comment
+Cow Spots Posted July 22, 2004 Share Posted July 22, 2004 I had a silly puzzle cache in the San Diego area (since archived due to cache theft) called Serious Black. Since the cache is dead, I'll share a few details. The ammo can was completely flat black. Inside and out. I wouldn't accept a find unless they also signed the logsheet and provided a codeword from it -- which, according to the webpage, was within "5 feet of the container." When the ammo can was opened, at least for the first finder, it appeared to be completely empty. In reality, the logsheet was stuck to the underside of a piece of magnet sheet cut to fit the bottom of the ammo container, the back side of which was painted the exact same flat black. In essence creating a false bottom. It was darn hard to see, and as cachers added black trade items to the ammo can, it got harder and harder to detect. I know of one cacher who had to make a repeat 20-mile visit to claim the find. Whoever stole the can probably has no clue the logsheet exists. --Dave, The Cow Spots can i steal that? Heck, by opening my big mouth in the forums, I suppose the idea's open for business, just give me a one line credit in the cache page if you snag it from me. Dave, The Cow Spots Quote Link to comment
+art begotti Posted July 22, 2004 Share Posted July 22, 2004 you know what stinks? this one time, i went looking for a cache out in the woods, but went to it from a "back way". the cache was hidden inside a hollowed out tree trunk. if i had gone the "right" way to get to it, i would not have seen the cache. if the cache box had been replaced a certain way, i would not have seen the cache. BUT, since someone did replace it wrong, a bright neon green sign on the outside of the box kinda sorta caught my attention. Quote Link to comment
Black Mage Posted July 23, 2004 Share Posted July 23, 2004 I use the standard olive drab with yellow army stenciling on one side. Though I have seen some that are quite well camoed (is that a word?), painted to look like that Advantage camo, or painted to look like surrounding rocks. Quote Link to comment
+Pobre Rico Posted July 23, 2004 Share Posted July 23, 2004 I use the standard olive drab with yellow army stenciling on one side. Dang! Someone beat me to it! I was hoping to use olive drab as sort of a signature color! Oh, well... Quote Link to comment
+Ambrosia Posted July 23, 2004 Share Posted July 23, 2004 Wow. This makes me feel so shameful of my drab green. Quote Link to comment
enziarro Posted July 23, 2004 Share Posted July 23, 2004 The cache I have most recently placed is flat black. I do, though, have some paint left over from my hubcaps. Perhaps I will use it on a cache. Quote Link to comment
+Zartimus Posted July 23, 2004 Share Posted July 23, 2004 I custom paint all of mine to match the surroundings. lately going with the Zebra thing . Quote Link to comment
+ADKcachers Posted July 23, 2004 Share Posted July 23, 2004 I painted this one metallic silver & with some cushioning inside, use as a camera case. Quote Link to comment
nifty950 Posted July 25, 2004 Share Posted July 25, 2004 I've seen a couple of nifty ones: One at Lake Allatoona, GA called Heat Miser's Hideaway. The theme is that Atlanta has been far too hot and dry, so the ammo can has flames like a hot rod and it has a little aquarium thermometer inside to let you know why you're sweating so much! The other was called Ice Station Zebra in Verdi, NV. It was of course, zebra striped! But it was extremely well hidden, so it didn't matter. There's some cool ideas on this thread, though. Maybe my next one will have to be plaid or something, just to be different! Quote Link to comment
BCR Posted August 12, 2004 Share Posted August 12, 2004 This one of mine (now archived) was painted flourescent orange and consequently was easy to spot. However, it was not necessarily easy to retrieve. Quote Link to comment
+CompuCash Posted August 12, 2004 Share Posted August 12, 2004 (edited) I like cow spots hidden log book - I am considering a cache that has a decoy cache - imagine a hollow tree trunk (upright) cache goes in first - then the decoy on top - open the decoy and there is a note saying - this is not the cache but you are close too mean? Edited August 12, 2004 by CompuCash Quote Link to comment
+WaldenRun Posted August 14, 2004 Share Posted August 14, 2004 Here's one whose owner is a firefighter type: -WR Quote Link to comment
+Night Stalker Posted August 15, 2004 Share Posted August 15, 2004 I found one that had mirrors glued all over the outside. You may think this would be easy to find, but it was placed in heavy brush so that it did not reflect sunlight. Instead you saw refelctions of the plants around it making it very well camoflauged. Quote Link to comment
+MarcB Posted August 15, 2004 Share Posted August 15, 2004 I've painted one light grey before... that's as exciting as it gets I'm afraid! MarcB Quote Link to comment
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