Buchanan Family Posted March 17, 2005 Share Posted March 17, 2005 We are getting ready to go on a long car trip and have been trying to find a way to easily look up caches along our route. I've tried typing in the zip of towns near I-40, but have no idea if what I'm looking at is close to the interstate or not. Would appreciate any help! Quote Link to comment
+Sputnik 57 Posted March 17, 2005 Share Posted March 17, 2005 Start by looking at this thread. Have a great trip! Quote Link to comment
+jimmyreno Posted March 17, 2005 Share Posted March 17, 2005 I've looked at "the thread" not much help. I don't think there is a good (easy) way. For the time being, the best way is probably for people to share lists they have used with others. Quote Link to comment
+GeoTeam Maggi Posted March 17, 2005 Share Posted March 17, 2005 As there's no easy way to find caches along a route, I have manually used the geocaching.com maps. Starting at one destination, I locate a cache near there and map it using geocaching.com maps. I zoom out on the map and follow the highay to my destination. It can take some time. I once pulled caches from Southern California to Northern Oregon in that fashion. Quote Link to comment
+briansnat Posted March 17, 2005 Share Posted March 17, 2005 If you have a mapping program you can determine the coordinates of any exit, then run a PQ to find the 5, 10, 50 whatever nearest caches to that exit. It would be a pain to do it for every exit, but it works for well selected exits in areas that you are likely to stop. I've also done the same thing as GT Maggi and panned the GC.COM map along my intended route. Quote Link to comment
+orome Posted March 17, 2005 Share Posted March 17, 2005 I just did this for a trip up US441 from Orlando to Bryson City. I found seven cities between the two, got their ZIP codes from the USPS website, and generated pocket queries for them with restrictions to make them drive-and-grab friendly (no micros, found relatively recently, etc). Once those GPX files arrived, I used GSAK to combine them into one, then transferred the mass result into MapSource (I have a Garmin GPSr). I used select-and-delete in MapSource to remove the ones clearly too far from the route to be likely stops, then sent the remaining coords into the GPSr. The combined GPX also went into CacheMate on my Palm for details once we got to a cache. Setting up the laptop on a camp-table in the back seat of my Element, plugging in the Garmin to it using the USB cable and having the non-driver watch for caches etc as the mood struck made for a smooth journey! Quote Link to comment
+GixxerUT Posted March 17, 2005 Share Posted March 17, 2005 GSAK has an ARC filter flag two caches at each end of a line, and go Quote Link to comment
+Markwell Posted March 17, 2005 Share Posted March 17, 2005 I've looked at "the thread" not much help. I don't think there is a good (easy) way. For the time being, the best way is probably for people to share lists they have used with others. Must not have read the whole thread. It can be done. It's not point and click, but it's darn close. Quote Link to comment
+CaptainQuack Posted March 19, 2005 Share Posted March 19, 2005 not all of us use Microsoft... Quote Link to comment
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