Back in the game!

Posted on April 21, 2010

Warning: Geocache lingo and jargon ahead. If you need clarification, ask me, go to geocaching.com, or watch this quick video!

Got a little geocaching in yesterday! Our last cache was in November, so it was about time. We’ve been holding on to a travel bug since we came back from Florida (in October!!) The travel bug was a usb drive and its goal is to get pictures and trivia loaded onto it from all 50 states. We entered things from Florida, Georgia, Kentucky and Illinois from our trip. Then I put it in our cache bag and it’s been sitting there ever since. I felt so bad, but we set it free yesterday and I hope it goes to all 50 states!

We had a great time, found a couple of fantastic hides, got a couple of pathtags out there. I’m pretty proud of our first pathtag. Todd drew a funny pic of our family and we use it as a logo of sorts for our geocaching username, Geo Doodles. A couple of friends of ours from hapkido are geocachers too. They are lucky enough to get out to cache several times a week! We’re lucky to get one day a week, we’re so busy. But I’m happy. It’s so addicting!! I’d go every day if I could! Responsibilities…ugh.

We did about 7 caches, found 5 of them. One I think was muggled. The other was a little technically involved. We probably could have gotten it if we didn’t have two kids nipping at our heels. I love caching with the girls. Ava has fun with it and she tries to look for the cache. She mostly likes the swag and trade possibilities. Lily just comes along for the ride. She loves to be outdoors and free to roam. Plus, it just gets us outside, getting exercise, and doing something together as a family. We did get a chance to go get a cache without the girls last night though. My mom had the girls while we went to hapkido, and then we took the opportunity to find a cache near her house that we weren’t able to find last time we tried. I’m so glad we did, it was a fantastic hide, completely ingenious. I love the ones that you have to think outside the box for.

Anyway, got a few pics of our adventure. Hope to get more soon!





Adventures in Geocaching

Posted on September 4, 2009

Todd and I have had several different hobbies over the years. For me, its been photography (yes…photography is a hobby for me as well as my job), scrapbooking, Star Wars Galaxies MMO, and ghost hunting. For Todd it’s been mountain biking, rollerblading, and various video/card/board games. We sometimes get involved in each others’ hobbies. But most, if not all, Ava wasn’t really able to participate. And really, I don’t have a passion for any of his hobbies, and he doesn’t have a passion for any of mine. I don’t love mountain biking, but I’ll go with him because I know he loves it. And he might go on a ghost hunt with me, but he isn’t as excited about it as I am.

Insert Geocaching. I posted on a Facebook status that I am a total geek and that I was going to the Renaissance Faire. My friend Monica (whom I love dearly, and have yet to actually meet) agreed with my geekiness and said that she was surprised I wasn’t into geocaching. Monica doesn’t geocache. She just thinks it’s perfectly geeky for me. (She’s right!) I thought “What pray tell is this geocaching she is speaking of?” Ok, I don’t talk like that, but I DID think “What the heck is that?” I looked it up online, and came across www.geocaching.com. This is what I read:

Geocaching is a high-tech treasure hunting game played throughout the world by adventure seekers equipped with GPS devices. The basic idea is to locate hidden containers, called geocaches, outdoors and then share your experiences online. Geocaching is enjoyed by people from all age groups, with a strong sense of community and support for the environment.

You had me at hello. But I thought, “I wonder- I bet there aren’t any in our area.” Wrong. I typed in our home address and it came up with thousands, THOUSANDS, in our area. I was so excited! I signed us up and we went on our first geocache hunt.

We were able to bring both of the girls. (I sling Lily and she just comes along for the ride, inserting her very loud, unintelligible opinion when she is not sleeping)

And we got exercise, we were outdoors and away from the computer/tv/whatever, and we had a lot of fun. We had two caches marked to do. One is very close to our house. We went there and searched around. Nothing. We couldn’t (and still can’t) find it. We weren’t too discouraged because we had another bigger one planned. That first one was supposed to be a snatch and grab. But our second one was going to be a hike on a trail in a forest preserve.

So, with our Garmin in hand, we went to our first real geocache. Basically, on the website, you type in your address, or the town you’re going to be in, or even the route you’re going to be driving, and it will show you in a list and a map all of the caches in that area. You choose the cache(s) you want to find, and upload the coordinates into your GPS. And then you go. The cache is at the exact location on your GPS, but you have to get to that spot (sometimes, that’s the hardest part) and then you actually have to find it. And they’re tricky sometimes.

Yesterday, we went on one and we searched for a half hour and we couldn’t find it. But, that’s part of the fun is the search.

When you find the cache, you sign the log inside (there is always at least a log).

And sometimes there is “treasure.”

You don’t usually take anything, but if you do take something, you have to leave something of equal or greater value. Then you pack it back up, hide the cache in the same spot so someone else can find it. When you’re done, you come back online, and mark whether you found the cache or not, and you’re experience. I usually include a few pictures as well (as long as they don’t give away the location). That’s it!

On our first hunt, we went walking on a bike trail for a bit in the direction that our GPS said to go.

She (Our GPS is a she, ok? She has a woman’s voice. We call her Garminia. Yes, we’re geeks.) told us “arriving at destination, on right.” So we started walking into the woods to the right of the trail.

We walked, and walked, and hiked.

And backtracked, walked, and hiked, and searched.

And we were getting a little discouraged and tired. Todd went back to the spot that Garminia announced our arrival, and sat on the fence that was there.

He pulled out his compass, stared at the GPS, read the cache description over and over again.

And turned and looked at the fence. Huh. Curious. What was that doing there on the fence? It looked like an outlet cover mounted to the back of the fence. He opened it. Voila! Our first find.

And it was exactly where Garminia said it was. It really made for a fantastic first hunt.

(By the way, if I ever blog about geocaching, I might show pictures of the exact locations of the cache, something that I cannot do on the website, for fear of spoiling the fun for everyone who goes on that particular hunt, but I will not disclose the location on a map. If I do link the location on a map of a picture I have taken, I will not show a picture of the exact location of the cache. And I will never link the cache page for any of the hunts we go on. There has to be some mystery to it!)

So, we’ve gone on a few hunts since then, and we have a lot of fun. Some we’ve found, some we haven’t. But, that’s the fun of it. We’re together, doing something other than being cooped up inside. We’re on a treasure hunting adventure. Ava likes it, though she’s girly and doesn’t like going through the woods.

So we found her an “Oogway” walking stick and she seems to like it more.

She doesn’t mind puddles and getting dirty.

But she whines and cries over sticks and bugs and spiders. But, she still has fun, she learns a little about geography, and she finds ways to be girly.

Maybe most important, she’s playing outside. With us. Gotta love that.

So, I’m guessing we’ll be doing this a lot. You can leave your own cache, which I’m sure we’ll start doing once we’ve gone on a few more. You can form groups, or become a part of a group. You can find geocoins, which I haven’t yet figured out. You can go on event caches and “Cache in, Trash out” hunts. We’re planning on driving to Disney in October, so we’ll be mapping out some geocache hunts along the way. And I’m happy I can practice my photography and take pictures of everything I see.

So, we’re at the beginning stages, but I’m so happy we’ve found something we can all enjoy and we can do together as a family. There really is nothing like accomplishing a goal together as a family. I really hope this turns out to be a passion for us. If it isn’t already.

P.S. On a side note, the delicious texture on the picture above is courtesy of Totally Rad Actions.







copyright 2010 Christina Ragusin