Living only a few miles away from Portsmouth, I think it's a bit of a crime that I haven't been up the Spinnaker Tower already, to be honest. I've certainly seen it from enough cache locations over the last few months.
I am a sucker for a skyscraper. Admittedly the Spinnaker Tower is a skyscraper in the very loosest sense of the word, but you don't get any taller in Hampshire. My true skyscraper dreams will become reality when I eventually get to visit New York and Dubai. I've been so close to the latter it almost hurts!
Tuesday, 27 December 2011
Monday, 26 December 2011
Football-themed cache...
I knew I was looking for a football-themed cache and the only conclusion I came to was that it was designed to look like a football. I was therefore surprised to find your bog-standard Tupperware box in a camo bag. But alas, remove the log book and what should you find but a pitch with two Lego footballers playing!
Friday, 23 December 2011
Treasured Trackables
Now I'm not massively into geocaching trackables. I enjoy finding Travel Bugs and Geocoins in caches and moving them on if possible, and if not, then just discovering them. I have to admit that I haven't found nearly as many trackables in Hampshire caches as in Welsh ones, but I don't really know why. Perhaps I was more likely to be a FTF, STF or TFT in Swansea so I would see trackables trying to get moving quickly.
Anyway, while I like to send off a Travel Bug or two once in a while - with or without a mission - I've learnt that Geocoins are more likely to go missing and so I only tend to buy coins that I want to keep hold of now. I'm not a Geocoin hoarder, by any stretch of the imagination, but I have twelve coins (well, two are tags) which I will not be parting company with. Cachers are more than welcome to discover them, however. Below is my rather pitiful collection!
1. 100 Cache Finds: to commemorate a wonderful cache I did in the United Arab Emirates at the heart of a maze in the city. It was called Amazin' Abu Dhabi.
2. 250 Cache Finds: not a particularly exciting cache itself, but I remember that I found it during my first ever geocaching event, Mollyjak Gets Her Bus Pass!
3. 500 Cache Finds: I will never forget the cache this commemorates - Wind Farm Wilderness with cheesescones and cloudspotter.
4. 1000 Cache Finds: To commemorate the 2011 Mega Event in my old home of Swansea. Fantastic in every way.
5. South Wales Geocachers Geocoin: I thought this coin was beautiful the moment I set eyes on it. I was a bit late in getting hold of one, but thankfully Matrix managed to get hold of one for me. Superb - not letting this one go, although I've seen one out on an adventure.
6. Mega Wales 2011 Geocoin: Pretty self-explanatory. Thanks to Daidragon for this one.
7. Dai Dragon's Marvin Geocoin: Again, thanks Daidragon. A stunning coin - very weighty! - with a photo of his gorgeous owl, Marvin, on the back. I've sent another version of this coin out on its travels.
8. X-Files Geocoin: Found a coin of this design in a cache down the Gower. As an X-Phile myself, I really wanted this coin! The reverse design is based on the famous "I Want To Believe" poster of Mulder's. I asked the owner where they got their coin and was directed to a German website from which I got my own copy.
9. Jeremy tag: Not letting this one go! Geocaching.com founder Jeremy Irish gave me his personal tag at Mega Wales 2011.
10. Raine tag: In conjunction with the Jeremy tag, this was given to me by Raine, another Groundspeak Lackey.
11. iPhone Geocoin: Discovered a coin like this at Mushroom Mike's Caching Foray and loved the design. Waited until I found a cheapish one on eBay and snatched one up for myself. I love the fact that instead of Apps, there are cache types! I use an iPhone for geocaching on occasion so it's particularly App.ropriate :P
12. BadgeGen Geocoin: To say that I am interested in my geocaching stats is an understatement. I regularly go back to BadgeGen to see how well I'm doing and which badge to focus on next. When I found they sold their own Geocoin (with free global postage!) I ordered one in from Canada immediately!
Anyway, while I like to send off a Travel Bug or two once in a while - with or without a mission - I've learnt that Geocoins are more likely to go missing and so I only tend to buy coins that I want to keep hold of now. I'm not a Geocoin hoarder, by any stretch of the imagination, but I have twelve coins (well, two are tags) which I will not be parting company with. Cachers are more than welcome to discover them, however. Below is my rather pitiful collection!
1. 100 Cache Finds: to commemorate a wonderful cache I did in the United Arab Emirates at the heart of a maze in the city. It was called Amazin' Abu Dhabi.
2. 250 Cache Finds: not a particularly exciting cache itself, but I remember that I found it during my first ever geocaching event, Mollyjak Gets Her Bus Pass!
3. 500 Cache Finds: I will never forget the cache this commemorates - Wind Farm Wilderness with cheesescones and cloudspotter.
4. 1000 Cache Finds: To commemorate the 2011 Mega Event in my old home of Swansea. Fantastic in every way.
5. South Wales Geocachers Geocoin: I thought this coin was beautiful the moment I set eyes on it. I was a bit late in getting hold of one, but thankfully Matrix managed to get hold of one for me. Superb - not letting this one go, although I've seen one out on an adventure.
6. Mega Wales 2011 Geocoin: Pretty self-explanatory. Thanks to Daidragon for this one.
7. Dai Dragon's Marvin Geocoin: Again, thanks Daidragon. A stunning coin - very weighty! - with a photo of his gorgeous owl, Marvin, on the back. I've sent another version of this coin out on its travels.
8. X-Files Geocoin: Found a coin of this design in a cache down the Gower. As an X-Phile myself, I really wanted this coin! The reverse design is based on the famous "I Want To Believe" poster of Mulder's. I asked the owner where they got their coin and was directed to a German website from which I got my own copy.
9. Jeremy tag: Not letting this one go! Geocaching.com founder Jeremy Irish gave me his personal tag at Mega Wales 2011.
10. Raine tag: In conjunction with the Jeremy tag, this was given to me by Raine, another Groundspeak Lackey.
11. iPhone Geocoin: Discovered a coin like this at Mushroom Mike's Caching Foray and loved the design. Waited until I found a cheapish one on eBay and snatched one up for myself. I love the fact that instead of Apps, there are cache types! I use an iPhone for geocaching on occasion so it's particularly App.ropriate :P
12. BadgeGen Geocoin: To say that I am interested in my geocaching stats is an understatement. I regularly go back to BadgeGen to see how well I'm doing and which badge to focus on next. When I found they sold their own Geocoin (with free global postage!) I ordered one in from Canada immediately!
Saturday, 17 December 2011
FTF Trophy!
Thought I would be particularly generous this time round and leave an engraved metal FTF trophy in the Half-Jasmer cache for the first finder. I am just hoping that this one doesn't go and get muggled straight away like my Cache of the Day underwater one. Absolutely gutting, especially the time and money I spent on it. I also hope there's no reason why it can't get published. I'll be off at the crack of dawn tomorrow to hide it, anyway, so all should go well!
Wednesday, 14 December 2011
Half-Jasmer ammo can contents
Just received permission from the Woodland Trust to place my cache in their land! Now this is where I can start getting excited - I've found a suitable (I hope) spot for my huge ammo can, and today I got myself several "stocking fillers" for the finders, to lure them into taking on the challenge. Just need to get myself a big Geocaching sticker and perhaps a trophy for FTF, then I can sneak out at the crack of dawn and place it!
Friday, 2 December 2011
Half-Jasmer ready to go!
To be totally honest, it's been great fun doing my Jasmer - it's taken me to some fascinating places and most of the caches have been very good ones (hence why they have survived so long).
My plan is for cachers who want to claim this "Half-Jasmer Challenge" to find at least one cache from every month from January 2002 to December 2006 inclusive (60 months). It's a tough challenge, but I have found examples of caches from every required month in and around Hampshire for my challengers to go after, should they need inspiration.
Here's a map showing such examples of possible cache locations:
So the only thing standing in my way now is finding somewhere to actually put this cache!
Thursday, 24 November 2011
Blue belt!
Well it has taken a while but I've at long last earned my BadgeGen blue belt in Geocaching! If GSAK is a geocacher's stat heaven, then BadgeGen is their raison d'etre. It's just a very colourful checklist and every new badge earned feels like a little victory to simple people like myself! Here is our checklist/trophy room.
So with the publication of my 20th cache hide, I have now met the requirements for the blue belt in geocaching: 1000+ finds, 20+ hides, 3+ events attended.
These belts grade in the same way karate/judo belts do (white, yellow, orange, green, blue, purple, red, brown, black) minus the purple and red. To go up another level and get my brown belt, I will first of all need to find 2000 caches, so perhaps I won't be earning this for a few months yet!
Tuesday, 22 November 2011
Growing fungi
Saturday, 19 November 2011
Seven snails sleeping
Thursday, 17 November 2011
The quintessential toadstool
Wednesday, 16 November 2011
Stonehenge / Woodhenge
I decided to pay a visit to the internationally famous Stonehenge in Wiltshire today and get a virtual cache there while I was at it. Now loads of people have heard of Stonehenge, but how much do you know about Woodhenge? If you're like me, the answer will be "very little"! There was a virtual cache there too though so I decided to learn about that site as well. Obviously the wood has had years to rot away (4000 approximately - some of it even pre-dates Stonehenge) but the site has been rebuilt with concrete posts instead. It's not quite as jaw-dropping as Stonehenge, but it's still worth a visit.
The cache listing for Woodhenge tells us a little about the history of this place: "Unlike Stonehenge, there was no central [altar] stone although this particular circle had a much more macabre centrepiece. One and a half metres from the actual centre, the skeleton of a child of about three years of age was exhumed from the chalk, its skull cleaved open in what was almost [certainly] a predetermined act. This, according to experts, is one of the very few pieces of evidence of human sacrifice in prehistoric Britain."
To make the visit more atmospheric, I saw both Stonehenge and Woodhenge in quite thick fog.
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