After many months of hard work we are finally finished and completed our Gold Award Project. I am very proud of our accomplishment and I believe we have learned a lot. I hid a total of 30 geocaches all around the Camden County area. As a result of this project I have learned many things that I did not know before. I have learned all about the history surrounding me and everybody else that most people did not know before. That was my goal when starting this project and I believe that I accomplished that. I deffinately am leaving this project with more knowledge about my area then I started with. I hope everyone enjoyed this project and whoever did it with us learned some history about your town.
~k
Geocaching
Sunday, February 27, 2011
Friday, November 5, 2010
Wooden Nickel
Kathy and I decided to add something to each of our caches. We created a wooden nicklelthat says "Historic Places of Camden County". There a handful of these in each of our caches which are used as swag. We made the nickles from a website we found through google. There are tons of sites you can use to design youre nickel We used http://www.wooden-nickel.com/. From there we clicked on many different nickel options on the site. We finally decided to create the one pictured above. We got a ton of them for a great price.Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Common Abbreviations
CITO- "Cache in, Trash Out". The act of removing and desposing of trash you may find while searching for a cache. CITO is also a special type of event cache, where cachers get together to clean up a park or public space.
CO- "Cache Owner"
DNF-"Did not find"
FTF- "First to find" The person to first find the cache after it has been placed.
GZ-"Ground Zero" The point where the coordinates displayed on your GPS exactly math the coordinates given for a cache.
LPC- "Lamp post cache" A very common hiding place for micro-caches, this exploits the fact that the shround on a lamp post that cover the anchor bolts are usually not secured, and can be lifted
up to provide a hiding place.
P&G- "Park & Grab" A easy-to-find cache that you can get very close to your car.
SL- "Signed log"
SPOILER- An online log entry that may give away the location of a cache, or in some other way spoil" the caching experience for others.
SWAG- Free promotional items that you might get at a trade fair; trade items
TB- "Travel Bug" An item that travels from cache to cache and has a tracking number. You pick up the travel bug and continue to place it in other caches.
TFTC-"Thanks for the cache"
TNLN- "Took nothing, left nothing"
TNLNSL- "Took nothing, left nothing, signed log"
CO- "Cache Owner"
DNF-"Did not find"
FTF- "First to find" The person to first find the cache after it has been placed.
GZ-"Ground Zero" The point where the coordinates displayed on your GPS exactly math the coordinates given for a cache.
LPC- "Lamp post cache" A very common hiding place for micro-caches, this exploits the fact that the shround on a lamp post that cover the anchor bolts are usually not secured, and can be lifted
up to provide a hiding place.
P&G- "Park & Grab" A easy-to-find cache that you can get very close to your car.
SL- "Signed log"
SPOILER- An online log entry that may give away the location of a cache, or in some other way spoil" the caching experience for others.
SWAG- Free promotional items that you might get at a trade fair; trade items
TB- "Travel Bug" An item that travels from cache to cache and has a tracking number. You pick up the travel bug and continue to place it in other caches.
TFTC-"Thanks for the cache"
TNLN- "Took nothing, left nothing"
TNLNSL- "Took nothing, left nothing, signed log"
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
Missing Cache
Cachers call people who don’t geocaches a “muggle”. When a geocaches goes missing they say that it’s been “muggled”. I received a number of emails from people searching for three of my caches. I went out to look to see if they were accidentally moved and couldn’t find them. Rather than replace them I chose to “archive” the cache. That means that theses caches are no longer there so people won’t go look for them.
Saturday, October 2, 2010
Geocache Types
There are many different types of geocaches. Some are larger than others and some are virtual. A tradition geocache is the original cache type that consists of a minimum of a container and log book. Normally you'll find a tupperware container, ammo box, or bucket filled with goodies or a smaller container to small to contain anything but a log book. These caches have one set of coordinates. A multi-cache involves two or more locations, the last one being the container. These types of caches vary, usually the second gives hints about the third, and soo on. A mystery or puzzle cache contains a difficult puzzle that you will have to complete in order to find the coordinates. A letterbox hybrid is a mix between a geocache and a letterbox, which involves the passing of stamp prints. An event cache is ocassional organizations for local geocachers set at a time and location to discuss geocaches. A mega-event cache is similar to the last but much bigger and attracts geocachers from all over the world.
Monday, September 20, 2010
Annoyed
I’ve written letters to a bunch of mayors and companies asking permission to hide caches but have not heard back from a lot of them. I think that its rude. If they don’t want to participate in this project they could be nice and let me know. K
Friday, September 10, 2010
Logging a Find
After you have found a cache, you are going to want to log that you found it. This means that you let the owner of the cache know you found it.
1. Visit geocaching.com and log in using your username and password.
2. Visit the geocache detail pge for the geocache you found.
3. In the top right corner of the page, click 'log your visit'.
4. From the 'type of log' drop down menu, select 'found it'.
5. Eneter the date of your geocache find.
6. Enter any comments you wish to share.
7. Select any trackable items (from he inventory box) that you dropped off in the geocache with your find.
8. Click 'submit log entry'.
1. Visit geocaching.com and log in using your username and password.
2. Visit the geocache detail pge for the geocache you found.
3. In the top right corner of the page, click 'log your visit'.
4. From the 'type of log' drop down menu, select 'found it'.
5. Eneter the date of your geocache find.
6. Enter any comments you wish to share.
7. Select any trackable items (from he inventory box) that you dropped off in the geocache with your find.
8. Click 'submit log entry'.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)