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So, I bought a gps about three years ago because.....um.....well,
because a boy NEEDS a gps.....right? Turns out to be very handy. A bit cumbersome for road trips (this is a handheld, presumably designed primarily for foot travel, bicycling, kayaking, etc....at which it excels), but very useful nevertheless. Becky thinks it's the cat's ass. Becky gets a gps. Last October I suddenly find myself on the road a lot in unfamiliar turf. The gps is not designed for this. Time to get another one.....a dashboard mount, this time. Works splendidly. Becky adores it. Becky gets another gps. Nine days ago we are chatting: "Blah." "Ibbity." "Blah." "Yadda." "Geocaching." "Hm?" So, eight days ago, off we go. I google "geocaching." First hit is http://www.geocaching.com/ Somewhere in there it says that there are more than a million geocaches worldwide. ****.....subsequent research (entailing all of three minutes) reveals that there are fourteen thousand within a hundred miles of where I sit typing.....and that's just the ones registered on this particular site (oh yes, there are others). Saturday, the 24th, Becky and I venture forth, gps in hand, and actually manage to find.....not just ONE, but SEVEN of the ten we search for, all within the city of Burlington (well, actually, one is technically outside the city limits by a couple hundred feet, bfd). So? So, Burlington is where Becky grew up and where I've spent a great deal of time over the last forty years, having grown up about 25 miles from there. One could honestly boast that we are both intimately familiar with the environs. And over the course of little more than half a day, we BOTH went to half a dozen places we'd never been to before.....and this in a town of about ten thousand people! So? So, geocachers will hide their little log books and trinkets ANYWHERE!......but, not so surprisingly, they tend to prefer out of the way places which, not so surprisingly, tend to map pretty closely over the kinds of places preferred by.....wait for it.....hunters, hikers, skiers, bikers, climbers, birders, canoers, and......fly fishers! And, to top it all off, geocachers have their own little insular world, replete with arcane terminology, convoluted ethics and etiquette, thinly (if at all) veiled contempt for the rest of the world ("muggles", not so surprisingly), a keen conception of and appreciation for their own worth vis a vis the rest of the world, and an agenda that doesn't actually promise but somehow or other nevertheless manages to convey the notion that they will, in the long run, single-handedly save the world......just like.......yep, you got it.....fly fishers! Huzzah! ![]() giles who, due to schedule differences, has fallen behind Becky by about twenty caches or so.....but plans to make up the difference in the next 5 days. |
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On 05/02/2010 08:32 PM, Giles wrote:
So, I bought a gps about three years ago because.....um.....well, because a boy NEEDS a gps.....right? Turns out to be very handy. A bit cumbersome for road trips (this is a handheld, presumably designed primarily for foot travel, bicycling, kayaking, etc....at which it excels), but very useful nevertheless. Becky thinks it's the cat's ass. Becky gets a gps. Last October I suddenly find myself on the road a lot in unfamiliar turf. The gps is not designed for this. Time to get another one.....a dashboard mount, this time. Works splendidly. Becky adores it. Becky gets another gps. Nine days ago we are chatting: "Blah." "Ibbity." "Blah." "Yadda." "Geocaching." "Hm?" So, eight days ago, off we go. I google "geocaching." First hit is http://www.geocaching.com/ Somewhere in there it says that there are more than a million geocaches worldwide. ****.....subsequent research (entailing all of three minutes) reveals that there are fourteen thousand within a hundred miles of where I sit typing.....and that's just the ones registered on this particular site (oh yes, there are others). Saturday, the 24th, Becky and I venture forth, gps in hand, and actually manage to find.....not just ONE, but SEVEN of the ten we search for, all within the city of Burlington (well, actually, one is technically outside the city limits by a couple hundred feet, bfd). So? So, Burlington is where Becky grew up and where I've spent a great deal of time over the last forty years, having grown up about 25 miles from there. One could honestly boast that we are both intimately familiar with the environs. And over the course of little more than half a day, we BOTH went to half a dozen places we'd never been to before.....and this in a town of about ten thousand people! So? So, geocachers will hide their little log books and trinkets ANYWHERE!......but, not so surprisingly, they tend to prefer out of the way places which, not so surprisingly, tend to map pretty closely over the kinds of places preferred by.....wait for it.....hunters, hikers, skiers, bikers, climbers, birders, canoers, and......fly fishers! And, to top it all off, geocachers have their own little insular world, replete with arcane terminology, convoluted ethics and etiquette, thinly (if at all) veiled contempt for the rest of the world ("muggles", not so surprisingly), a keen conception of and appreciation for their own worth vis a vis the rest of the world, and an agenda that doesn't actually promise but somehow or other nevertheless manages to convey the notion that they will, in the long run, single-handedly save the world......just like.......yep, you got it.....fly fishers! Huzzah! ![]() giles who, due to schedule differences, has fallen behind Becky by about twenty caches or so.....but plans to make up the difference in the next 5 days. Cool! I started Geocaching several years ago just on the edge of when that kind of thing was cool to my kids. When kids become teenagers different things become cool--geocaching fell off of the list. We also had a number of bad experiences with caches that had been muggled which also dampened the enthusiasm. I've gone an found a few by myself, but it's more of a group sport. One geocache did lead me to one of the best streams I have ever fished. Have fun. I think it is a great activity. Russell |
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On May 2, 11:18*pm, "Russell D." wrote:
Cool! I started Geocaching several years ago just on the edge of when that kind of thing was cool to my kids. When kids become teenagers different things become cool--geocaching fell off of the list. Teenagers.....terra incognita. If you understand them you've never been one. We also had a number of bad experiences with caches that had been muggled which also dampened the enthusiasm. Hm.... Seems to me that's part of the allure. I mean, if it's a dead certainty that each and every one will ALWAYS be there.....well, you might as well be looking for mountains or oceans or continents. I've gone an found a few by myself, but it's more of a group sport. As you like it. Some people ALWAYS fly fish alone.....others NEVER do. One geocache did lead me to one of the best streams I have ever fished. Serendipity, coincidence, dumb luck.....call it what you will, one thing leads to another.....and who would have it any other way? Have fun. We most certainly will. Thanks. I think it is a great activity. Agreed. Russell giles |
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