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Introduction to Geocaching

Introduction to Geocaching. Doug Earl (D of “ABCDMCachers”). Agenda. What When Where Who Why How Travel Bugs Resources. What. Geocaching – What is it?. An outdoor adventure game for GPS users of all ages GPS = Global Positioning System. What – In a Nutshell.

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Introduction to Geocaching

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  1. Introduction to Geocaching Doug Earl (D of “ABCDMCachers”)

  2. Agenda • What • When • Where • Who • Why • How • Travel Bugs • Resources

  3. What

  4. Geocaching – What is it? • An outdoor adventure game for GPS users of all ages • GPS = Global Positioning System

  5. What – In a Nutshell • Someone hides a weatherproof box in the woods. • The latitude and longitude of the box is published on the Internet. • Others go out and find the box using their portable GPSr. • Finders sign the log, trade trinkets. • When they get home, they log the find on the Internet.

  6. What – Boiling it Down “I use multi-billion dollar military satellites to find Tupperware hidden in the woods.”

  7. What Is a Geocache? • A weather-resistant container such as Tupperware, Rubbermaid, or surplus ammo box Usually

  8. What Else Can it Be? • Micro Caches • 35mm film canisters • Magnetic key holders • Or smaller! (Nano caches) • Camouflaged • Fake doggie doo • Hide-a-key rocks • Hollowed out rocks • Pine cones • Plastic spiders

  9. What Else Can it Be? - 2

  10. What Else Can it Be? - 3

  11. What’s in a Geocache? • Logbook • Trinkets to trade • Examples: toys, books, coins, tools, games, etc. • Information sheet that explains the container and has contact information.

  12. When

  13. Timeline May 1, 2000 Selective Availability Removed May 3, 2000 “Stash” hidden in Oregon Sept 2, 2000 Geocaching.com started with 75 caches Accuracy before: Accuracy after: 100 meters 10 meters or better

  14. Where

  15. Where are They Hidden? • All over the world • 479,372 active caches in over 200 countries (as of 11/1/2007) • Well over 500 in the metro-Milwaukee area

  16. The World

  17. United States

  18. Wisconsin

  19. Milwaukee

  20. Where – Kinds of Places • Places with natural beauty • Parks – state, county, city • Hiking and biking trails • Areas with historical significance • Urban areas • Park and rides, waysides • Interesting places you didn’t know existed even in your own backyard

  21. Where - Specifically • Hollow trees and logs • Handrails, fence posts • Hanging in trees • Usually under or behind something, but never buried

  22. Where Won’t They Be? • National Parks • Private property unless owner gives permission • Under bridges • Less than .1 mile from another cache • Less than 150 feet from railroad

  23. Who

  24. Who Participates? • All ages, walks of life • Singles, Couples, Families, Retirees • People who enjoy the outdoors • People who like technology

  25. Who Hides Them? • Anyone who has a geocaching.com account • All caches must be approved • Maybe you? • Get experience finding before hiding your own - find at least 20

  26. Why

  27. Why Geocache? #1 • The journey to the cache – beautiful areas and interesting places

  28. Why Geocache? #2 • Family activity

  29. Why Geocache? #3 • The challenge of the find, the thrill of the hunt

  30. Why Geocache? #4 • The numbers game

  31. Why Geocache? #5 • Read about others’ adventures

  32. The Packers: 8-1 OK, no caching Sunday afternoons Why Geocache? #6 • Turn off the TV and enjoy the outdoors! Get some exercise while you’re at it.

  33. Why Geocache - Different Ways to Enjoy Traditional Caches – Most common Like hikes? – Multi-caches Like puzzles? – Mystery caches Like socializing? – Event caches Like history? – Virtuals Like challenges? – Try higher difficulty Like traveling? – Try county or Delorme challenge

  34. Mystery/Puzzle Caches • Before finding the cache, you need to solve a puzzle, sometimes on the cache webpage, sometimes at the cache site

  35. Mystery/Puzzle Caches (2)

  36. How

  37. First Steps • Create a geocaching.com account • Buy or borrow a GPS receiver

  38. Find Nearby Caches • Search by zipcode or latitude/longitude

  39. Find Nearby Caches - 2 • Use Google Maps from geocaching.com or Google Earth

  40. Find Nearby Caches - 3

  41. Read About the Cache Cache type, name, Who placed it Size Difficulty/Terrain Unique Identifying code (AKA waypoint) Latitude, Longitude Distance from home Download Lat/Lon file (so don’t have to manually enter) Attributes Hints! Travel Bugs / Geocoins

  42. Enter the Coordinates into the GPSr Waypoint Name Waypoint Note (Optional) Latitude and Longitude(Coordinates)

  43. Follow the Arrow When the arrow points straight up, you are going in the right direction. How far you have to go Direction you are going(Typically only works while moving) Direction you SHOULD go(bear right)

  44. Look Around • Look for anything unusual or out of place. • Look in places that YOU think would be good to place a cache. • No luck? Enlarge your search area • Heavy tree cover affects signal • Use a compass – only high-end GPSr’s have a built-in compass

  45. Woo Hoo! Found it! • Sign the log book • Trade items if you wish • Family-friendly, no food • Leave something of equal or greater value compared to what you take • Re-hide the cache back in the same spot • Log your experience on geocaching.com and “collect a smiley”

  46. Hiding Your Own • Show off a favorite area • Show how sneaky and creative you can be • Get permission from land manager • DNR land - must fill out form • Be mindful of environment

  47. Travel Bugs

  48. Travel Bugs and Geocoins • Travel from cache to cache (not collectible!) • Usually have a goal, Examples: • Visit all baseball parks, all capitols • Have picture taken with <fill in the blank> • Final destination: Alaska, South Pole • Journey is tracked on geocaching.com

  49. TB Examples • TB Tag has a unique ID# • Attached to a small item

  50. TB Examples - 2 • From the “you gotta be kidding me” file

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