Captain
Final Approach
I just started last summer. It's a great activity that gets me out of my hotel room and to some pretty neat places. I was wondering if anybody here does it. Seems a natural fit for outdoorsy people who like to travel.
Sounds like the sort of cache I'm into. What's the GC code? If I'm in town with time to hike ill go get it.
What are some of the cooler things you have found?
I never took anything, just signed the log books.
That's optional.I thought you were supposed to take a "treasure" and replace with something of equal or greater value.
Most recently we started doing it with the helicopter on SAR training missions in St. John's. It made for a more realistic 'lost hiker' scenario plugging in the coordinates to the FMS, flying an appropriate search pattern over the area, choosing a suitable insertion point for our rescue specialists and then extraction point to hoist them back up.
I started a couple years ago in Newfoundland. Great way to explore the area and the thousands of hiking trails and an even better way to get off those trails and really explore. I never took anything either, just did it for the challenge of finding, though my caching partner was hardcore. He was always on the hunt for travel bugs, which we did find occasionally. He had geocached on 3 continents and not sure how many countries.
Most recently we started doing it with the helicopter on SAR training missions in St. John's. It made for a more realistic 'lost hiker' scenario plugging in the coordinates to the FMS, flying an appropriate search pattern over the area, choosing a suitable insertion point for our rescue specialists and then extraction point to hoist them back up.
I just started last summer. It's a great activity that gets me out of my hotel room and to some pretty neat places. I was wondering if anybody here does it. Seems a natural fit for outdoorsy people who like to travel.
OMG that's the coolest caching story ever! Others would be so jealous. Do you actually get out and go find the cache?
I should have mentioned this before. I'm a ham radio operator, and run a sideline business dealing with other hams around the world. One of my customers, with whom I've exchanged emails a few times, asked if he could have some gear shipped to me -- he was planning on flying to Omaha and riding his custom, folding bike across Iowa to a big geocaching thing in Lake Rathbun. He arrived last night, and today I took all his stuff down to his hotel. Aside from a few things for his bike and a new portable ham radio rig, there was a 30# or so box of custom made geocoins, most of which he plans to give away at the event in Iowa. Gintas has done several of these geocoins, some of which are trackable -- I have a couple of them I've been meaning to drop in chaches. The last one I did, though, disappeared permanently after the first or second person logged it.
i like it. i discovered it last august. its a great excuse to get out of the hotel room and see a new city.
its basically a hobby made for pilots! lol
the travelbugs are my favorite! i move them around all the time!
I'm impressed there are so many here that do it. I'm not a charter member nor an expert but 2001 was my geocache.com start.
There's got to be a "virtual" geocache for flying. Something seen only from the air. I'll have to see if that exists or maybe someone here knows.