Geocaching
Some of you will know what Geocaching is,
others will have no idea until now. Basically it's a game of hide and seek
using GPS units to find the hidden treasures. Typically Tupperware style
containers but sometimes large ammo boxes or tiny vials like you might use on a
carrier Pigeons leg.
I've got just over 100 Geocaches hidden in Southern Australia which help to make up the over two million
worldwide.
This latest cache is the hardest I've made
and easily the hardest to find in this area.
Carefully bored into a rock and covered
with an *auto filler cap held in place by a super magnet, this rock is then
placed among many others in a typical bush fireplace. The whole thing is then
blackened with flat black paint (it's total fire ban here so I'm not allowed to
light even a small fire) to make it look used. To add further to the difficulty
there are an array of camping items for potential finders to search. To make it
worthwhile there is a dry milk tin full of trinkets and swaps and a hidden
bottle of (fake) gold nuggets so Geocachers can take one as a memory. Add a
plastic snake and centipede to make you jump and lots of bits for you to
search, with the area cleared a colony of ants moved in and made it home adding
further to the difficulty.
I've built the entire camp in the local
fauna park, carting in every single thing to make it look entirely authentic.
It's a copy of an historic camp now on army land and therefore out of bounds
for Geocaching. The Honeymoon Hilton was used when the 85km trip from the next
town was a two day Bullock cart ride through the bush, the camp was once the
overnight resting place.
The cache became active a few days before
Christmas 2012 and has caused much head scratching and more than a few phone
calls from people looking for clues. The first finders took 71/2 hours to find
it and two calls for clues
*car bog
Even things like this Shotgun cartridge is there because I placed it there and must be searched. One of my other caches is a Shotgun cartridge so this makes a few people think they have found it.
An old milk can full of swaps, bottles and a fire blackened fire prod. (Painted not actually fire blacked)
On the log above the can you can see the small plastic snake.
Even a bottle cap is a possible Geocache, every piece of wood may have a drilled hole for a tiny cache and must be searched.
An old roll of Barbed Wire to search, under the bark is a small container with my phone number for clues and the special tool for opening the cache when you find it
The Gold is stashed in the crook of this tree
The real hiding place.....
Under a lower rock here. Again painted rocks and sticks to make the fireplace look used.
This rock.....
Turn it over..
Can you see the Geocache?
How about now the special tool is inserted?
..and now the cap is removed?
The hard sandstone rock was drilled out and the cap moulded to fit exactly. (What do you know, those years of moulding my own fishing lures finally paid off)
The metal rod holds it firmly in place with a super magnet glued into the bottom of the hole.
.
13 comments:
My husband and I geocache. We look for stuff every time we are on vacation. It is so much fun. Your cache here is elaborate and exciting! It is great you actually made a replica of an historic site.
I think I created a monster. That's one of the best I've ever seen. Have you set up a multi-cache yet? I can see you sending people 25 places before they finally get to the end.
Hi Belle, Ive done a few historic sites,2 ancient hidden Aboriginal waterholes and even an underwater cache (wade not swim)and many more. 102 all together.
Yes Jen, it's all your fault. Sometimes people ask me how I got into Geocaching and I tell them I was introduced by someone in America. (Many puzzled looks)
My fav is Dropbear Sanctuary, an 8 stage multi that you must do at night by following glowing eyes in trees with a torch. Great for freaking out friends and kids. http://www.geocaching.com/seek/cache_details.aspx?wp=GC2NDBC
I'm not sure if I think that sounds like fun or a lot of work. I'm going with work in the summer and fun in the winter. I couldn't see the rubber snake at all, but I saw the circular cache before you pointed it out with the tool.
Hi River, not all caches are hard like this one, in fact most are lunchbox type plastic boxes simply hidden. I'd bet there are at least 100 close enough to your place to walk. (I dont need to know where you live, theres just that many in Adelaide)Why not have a look for yourself at
http://www.geocaching.com
Wow! wow! this is such a heavenly place for honeymoon .. wanna go there
Thanks, I'll check that out.
I've never heard of this before. Why do it? I am confused or old, or both, perhaps.
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