THE GRAND STRAND GEOCACHERS POST
Transcription
THE GRAND STRAND GEOCACHERS POST
THE GRAND STRAND GEOCACHERS POST Vol. 2, Issue 1 January 28, 2009 Cache In and Trash Out with the USDA Forest Service and Palmetto Pride! IN THIS ISSUE: ►CITO Francis Marion National Forest ......pg 1 ►GSG Meeting .........pg 1 ►Cacher Profile: Shamanstorm ........pg 2 ►On the Road with Tweety & Coach .....pg 3 ►From The Steering Committee ............pg 5 ►FTFs & New Hides ..pg 5 ►Viking43 - Crazy for caching ............pg 6 ►Technically Speaking Easy Paperless Caching .................pg 8 ►Christmas Bash Photo Montage ....pg 10 On February 2, 2009, geocachers from the state are needed to volunteer for a day of litter clean up at Francis Marion National Forest. Volunteers will meet at Sewee Environmental Education Center, 5821 Hwy 17 N, Awendaw, SC, at 8 a.m. and will be given directions to cleanup sites. Cleanup supplies will be provided as well as lunch after the cleanup. The clean-up will last until 12 p.m. Please let Gone2theDogs know if you plan to attend. (GC1KHE8) ‘Litter has a serious, negative effect on the economy and the image of South Carolina, not to mention on the sport of geocaching. Litter control costs the state millions of dollars each year. PalmettoPride is an umbrella organization that is leading the effort to make the state litter free.’ Upcoming Grand Strand Geocachers Meeting ►Join the Grand Strand Geocachers Association for our monthly meet and greet. The Mackey’s Bunch is hosting a geocaching extravaganza on Saturday, January 31st, at 6 p.m. The event will be held at Surf’s Up Family Fun Center in Carolina Forest. There are several games and contests planned, as well as prizes, trackables, and geo swag up for the grab! Surf’s Up also offers laser tag and buffet style dining. If you plan to attend, please respond on the cache page! (GC1KGVC) See you there! CACHER PROFILE: Shamanstorm 1. Would you take a minute to introduce us to, and tell us a little about yourself and the rest of the Shamanstorm team? We moved from Virginia 3 years ago to Myrtle Beach. Geocaching makes this place fun! 2. Tell us how and when you got started Geocaching. While watching a program on TV I saw a clip about geocaching. Ran to the store and bought a GPS. I surprised Pete, Shaman and Cheyenne with the game- we were hooked. 3. What kind of GPS do you use? A Garmin GPS 60CSx. 4. How many finds and hides do you have to date? We have found 190 and 8 hidden. 5. We all know that guys you are big FTF Hounds. Do you keep up with how many FTF’s you have? And if so how many is that and which ones have been your favorites? We haven’t had a FTF in a long time. I never kept up with the number of FTF- I saw them pop up on the site and ran to get it. (Thanks Roger for keeping count for me) LOL. 6. You have been known to do some pretty crazy stuff trying for a FTF. Tell us about your most memorable experience trying for an FTF. When I almost got arrested for helping a murderer out (LOL)- too long of a story! I’ll tell ya’ll about it at a gathering one day. 7. Who is your favorite cacher to beat to an FTF. Why? PreachersPal and Digndirt...They were always my biggest competitors. 8. We know that you went to Canada on a fishing trip this last summer and we heard you did some caching while up there. Tell us about it. We had a FTF in Canada (I had to go out of the country to get a FTF at that time LOL). I climbed a mountain only get a DNF. I called redline while standing on the side of a cliff for a hint. I get home and found out I was standing on it the whole time. 9. What would you say is the most unusual and the most difficult cache you have found? Every one of the caches we do usually has a quirkiness story to it. I can’t pick just one. 10.What is the one thing that you like and dislike the most about Geocaching? I love the adventure behind it. I hate getting ate up by mosquito’s!!!! 11.When you first got started caching was the entire family on board from the start or did they have to grow into it? They weren’t as obsessed, but they were on board from the get go. 12.If there was a chance to do Geocaching for a living would you or anyone in your family go for it? The way I cache? (I turn a 1 into a 5) No way. It wouldn’t be as much fun then. However the company would pay for my gas huh? Continued... The Grand Strand Geocachers Post - Page 2 CACHER PROFILE: Shamanstorm (cont.) 13.One thing everyone seems to say is that the people are the best thing about Geocaching. What do you think it is about Geocaching that makes the people so special? It’s like a secret society and everyone winks when they pass someone caching knowing what they’re doing while everyone else thinks you have mental issues. LOL! 14.How would you describe Geocaching to someone who had never heard of it? All the time! 15.Shamanstorm is one of the family teams in the Grand Strand Region. Has caching had any positive influences on your family? Pete lost some weight. I had something to look forward to after a bad day. 16.Is there anything else you would like to say about Geocaching or about Geocachers? YOU ALL ARE AWESOME! ON THE ROAD WITH TWEETY & COACH Well here we are in Carrabelle, Florida, at the Ho Hum CG sitting right on the Gulf of Mexico and we can see both the sunrise and sunset out the front window of our coach.......and it’s AWESOME. The morning of our first full day here we were off to look for some of the local caches. One nice fun cache located in Carrabelle was GC10GZR “World’s Smallest Police Station”. In the 1960’s, the Carrabelle police phone was located in a call box that was bolted to a building on the corner of the main street. They were having trouble with tourists making long distance calls from it so they moved it, but the problem persisted. When the phone company decided to replace an old phone booth, with a new one, they decided to put the phone in the old booth and move it to its present location. Unfortunately, the calls still persisted, so they removed the dial from the phone. The booth has endured many hardships over the years: vandals ripping phones from the booth, holes shot through the glass, being hit by a truck, damaged by hurricane Kate, and once a tourist asked a gas station attendant to help him load it in his truck so he could take it back to TN. The booth has been featured on the Today Show, Ripley’s Believe It or Not and Real People. The next day we visited Tate’s Hell State Park and did the cache GC12B3K “Gary’s First Cache”. It really wasn’t the cache that we were interested in, but the park itself. This park covers 202,437 acres and got its name back in the late 1800’s when a farmer named Cebe Tate journeyed into the Big Swamp. Armed with only a shotgun and accompanied by his hunting dogs, he set out to track down the panther that was killing his livestock. Tate never planned to venture very far into this uncharted land, however following the baying of his dogs and feeling he was close to cornering the panther, Tate went deeper into the swamp. After a couple of days, he had lost sight of both the dogs and the panther. For several more days Tate wandered aimlessly in the swamp. During the ordeal, he lost his shotgun and was bitten by a water moccasin. Delirious, Tate stumbled out of the swamp in front of a couple of woodsmen near Carrabelle. When asked his name and where he came from, the disoriented man simply replied, “My name is Tate and I’ve just Continued... The Grand Strand Geocachers Post - Page 3 ON THE ROAD WITH TWEETY & COACH (cont.) been through Hell”. The main reason we made the visit back into the park, which by the way was an 8 mile drive, was to see the several unique stands of Dwarf Cypress tree wetlands, which are located within the forest. These cypress trees are documented to be over 150 years old with some of them more than 300 years old. They only reach a mature height of approximately 15 feet, with many of them only growing to 6 feet or less. They have a unique area of the forest which is the elevated Dwarf Cypress Boardwalk and observation tower. At this area we walked out on the boardwalk to view the trees. It was quite a sight and the only thing is that it is winter here and most of the trees were bare, but it still was worth the drive and walk. The next day we visited St. George Island and did several caches. This island is a barrier island and was practically destroyed by several hurricanes and is known for its secluded beaches, Apalachicola Bay oysters, and abundant local seafood. One cache we did was GC13T5K “Gone With the Next Storm?” which was located where they are presently building a new lighthouse to replace the old lighthouse, which was built in 1852, and collapsed into the ocean on Oct. 25, 2005. Then it was on to St. George Island State Park and GCZTBR “Oyster Boat”. The oyster skiff as they are called is a reminder of a very important way of making a living in this area. The skiffs vary from 19-25 feet long with flat bottoms and wide decks and a small cabin at the stern. They stand on these decks to operate the tongs which are 15’ scissor like rakes that scrape the bay bottom and collect the oysters into the tong’s attached baskets. The oysters are then hauled to the surface and dumped onto a sorting table called a ‘cull’ board. When the culling board is full, clumps of oysters are separated with a culling iron, and the 3” local sized oysters are bagged. The remaining shell and undersized oysters are then raked back overboard to be harvested another day. Oysters were first harvested commercially in 1850. Oyster harvesting reached a peak in 1981, when approximately 6.6 million pounds of them were landed. In 1985, two hurricanes hit and almost wiped out the oyster harvesting business as it covered the beds with sand and silt. Apalachicola Bay provides 90% of the oysters harvested in FL and 10% for all of the United States. The park is nine miles long with only four miles of it accessible by road. The other five miles is accessible on foot or bike and is a protected area. The park covers 1,962 acres of the east end of the island with no homes at all along the beaches. It is so peaceful and quiet except for the waves lapping, the wind blowing, and the birds chirping. There were several other caches we did on the island, but they were really P&G caches. This area is still feeling the lingering effects of the damage caused by Hurricanes Frances and Ivan in 2004. You wouldn’t believe the homes that are still sitting on the shore and are falling into the ocean, new developments that evidently was started before the hurricanes hit and were never reopened. Numerous lots and property are for sale, new roads that were replaced when the old ones were completely washed away, buildings that were destroyed by the hurricanes and are still sitting there completely demolished and piles and piles of concrete and tar from the roads, buildings and sidewalks that were destroyed. While we were in Carrabelle we met another of the cachers in the area while we were out caching one day. Her caching name is Bluet and she was the most active cacher in the area as she has right now 843 caches found and 90 hidden. She is an entomologist and also writes for the Apalachicola newspaper. We went caching with her a few times and took her out for dinner one night. We enjoyed meeting her very much. Seeing as this is such a beautiful area we decided to extend out stay here to 2 weeks! So next month, we will write again from our caching adventures in Apalachicola and Panama City. Take care and happy caching. Tweety & Coach, Dori & Dick Read more about ftjak’s adventures on their blog: www.2lostsoulsotheroad.blogspot.com The Grand Strand Geocachers Post - Page 4 FROM THE STEERING COMMITTEE Hey, all y’all Grand Stranders! I hope that the New Year finds you all well. Although the SCGA didn’t have any “official” events in the month of January, we’re now kicking off the New Year with the 2008 “Best Of” Awards. I invite you to check out the SCGA website at www.iscga.org. In the forums you will find the categories listed as well as the nominations thus far for those categories. Nominations will be open from January 1, 2009 until January 31, 2009. Voting will take place from February 1, 2009 until February 28, 2009. The awards will be presented at the SCGA meeting in March. There’s still time to nominate your own personal favorites. At this time of year, many people set goals for various aspects of their lives, and geocachers are no exception. With the gas prices being relatively lower now (compared to last summer), some people are thinking that it’s the perfect time to attempt the various Challenge Caches that South Carolina has to offer. Throw in the fact that most of SC is bug-free and snake-dormant at this time of year, and now is certainly a great time. I encourage you all to think about it. Personally, I like the challenges (or as some call them, compilation caches). Blue Blazes (cacher from Florida) has a cache that commemorates and shows links to the DeLorme Challenges, the Counties Challenges, and the Fizzy Challenges for each state. GC link to the Challenges (GC1FE1Y). There’s Alphabet Soup - South Carolina Style (GC1HE4Y) which I completed this past weekend. There’s also the 101 Things To Do In South Carolina (GC15Q7T) which requires a variety of cache finds to qualify. All of these Challenge Caches offer the opportunity to see what’s out there in various parts of the state. Our first “official” SCGA event will be the February SCGA CITO at Dreher Island State Park (GC1M421) on February 28 just northwest of Columbia. It’s not one of those crack-of-dawn CITO’s so that everyone in the state has a chance to make it if they wish. If you are looking for something a little closer to the Grand Strand, there’s the Francis Marion National Forest Clean Up (GC1KHE8) on February 7 approximately 70 miles south of Myrtle Beach. Although it’s not an “official” SCGA event, it is being hosted by SCGA members in conjunction with Palmetto Pride and the United States Forestry Service. All cachers are invited to participate in these events to help make our state more beautiful. So as you see, we’re off to a good start this year. I hope to see you all out on the trail. Semper Fidelis, Ken Tallman (llatnek) First to Finds & New Hides - November & December November: 4 New Hides by 4 Cachers Most Hides: 4-Way Tie 1 Cache hidden in November not found until December. Marvin J 1 FTF One Stands Alone by: Datafin SleepyRN 1 FTF Island Shops Cafe - A Table For Four by: Digndirt Digndirt 1 FTF Lift Your Feet, Loris by: Sleepyrn December: 12 New Hides by 5 Cachers Most Hides: 7: SemperFi5862 1 Cache hidden in December. not found until January. KohlMom 3 FTFs Weetee State Forest, 17A by: Dataware Weetee Lake North (Santee Road) by: Dataware Santee River Geocache Re-Supply by: Dataware Preacherspal 3 FTFs Nichols Park by: GordonTheKing Pretentious E with Supplement P by: AussieYanks Semperfi by: SemperFi5862 AussieYanks 2 FTFs Justin by: SemperFi5862 Jacob by: SemperFi5862 PIBeachBums 1 FTF Tyler by: SemperFi5862 Joshua by: SemperFi5862 Canontreker 1 FTF Meghan by: SemperFi5862 Chiciolina 1 FTF Help I’ve fallen and I can’t get up by: Canontreker The Grand Strand Geocachers Post - Page 5 VIKING43 - Crazy for Caching The following excerpt was taken from Canada’s The Daily Gleaner. Thanks to Queezy for sending us this article on our geocaching friends Viking43! Wayne and Paula Tomilson are crazy for caching - geocaching, that is. Wayne and Paula Tomilson, with their dog Jessie, have become avid geocachers in the last year. This geocaching adventure took them to Prince Edward Island, where they found their 1,000th geocache. The local couple has searched out more that 1,800 of these treasures around New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island, through the states on their way to South Carolina, even some on a visit to Australia. They’ve even creatively hidden a few geocaches of their own for others to find. “We’re viking43, Mr. and Mrs.,” says Wayne Tomilson, sharing their online geocaching names. “And geo-dog.” Their dog Jessie has been with them on most of their geocaching adventures. The couple was first introduced to this hobby by their son who lives in Tokyo. “A couple years ago he was home in the summertime and he talked to me about this geocaching. I’d never heard of it,” he says. His son had a GPS and took him over to Odell Park to find one of the caches hidden there. “We bought our own system and it just grew,” says Wayne Tomilson. The couple really got into it a year ago after they both retired. “It’s a great pastime for retirees,” he says, but it certainly isn’t limited to that. It’s also a lot of fun for kids, students, families and more. “There is absolutely no one that can’t do it.” The caches are rated on a scale of one to five, based on the level of difficulty and the terrain. If it is rated a one, that means the site is wheelchair accessible. As for equipment, you need a GPS system, one that gives longitude and latitude, plus a good pair of boots are helpful for the spots you have to hike into, says Wayne Tomilson. Access to a computer is also necessary, as all the information about this hobby can be found at www. geocaching.com. While geocaching is something you can do on your own, it’s also a sport you can enjoy with friends or family. Plus there are meetings and get-togethers that give participants a chance to meet. When you’re on the search for geocaches, you can stick close to home or head to exotic locals. It’s truly whatever you want to make it. Continued... The Grand Strand Geocachers Post - Page 6 VIKING43 - Crazy for Caching (cont.) “It’s a world-wide sport. There are (almost) 700,000 of these hides worldwide,” says Wayne Tomilson. And these hidden caches are unique. Some are cleverly hidden, some in scenic locations, some giving you a history lesson, others requiring a puzzle be solved or a series of clues be found before you can find the cache. Though there can be various things inside a cache, the most important is the log sheet, which you sign. “That proves you were there,” says Paula Tomilson. Once you do that, you can go online and mark the cache you found and leave a message for others to read. As for what appeals to them about this pastime, she says, “we love a lot of things about it.” It’s great exercise, says Wayne Tomilson. “We love the outdoors, both of us, and it gets you to places you’ve never seen before,” he says, including some in your own area you might never have known existed. “You hear that from every cacher,” agrees Paula Tomilson. When they’re exploring these places, geocachers have a tendency to clean the environment. “There is a big thing called CITO - cache in, trash out,” says Wayne Tomilson. The people involved with this tend to be nature lovers, after all. “My favourite part is going out in the woods,” says Paula Tomilson. “There are tons of caches, for example, in Odell Park.” She enjoys getting out in nature, going for a walk and finding those caches. “You can do it on top of mountains and you can even do it under the ocean,” says Wayne Tomilson, noting this can be an extreme sport if you want it to be. “It’s totally up to you.” A month ago, the couple went to the Moncton area for a power caching trip, one they had trained for all summer. They were up at 4:30 a.m. and over the course of 17 hours, in which they biked, hiked and drove, they found 102 caches. Though the Tomilsons don’t always go out for that long, they do try and get out geocaching for a few hours every day the weather is good. “And it’s a learning process,” says Wayne Tomilson, which is something they both enjoy. They’ve gotten friends involved in the sport and would love to bring others into it as well. To do that, they’re holding a geocaching information session on Nov. 29 at the Fredericton Inn. Breakfast is from 8-10 a.m., with a presentation on geocaching at 10 a.m. After, they plan to set up a buddy system so novices can learn from the more experienced geocachers, then give participants a chance to try the sport. The Grand Strand Geocachers Post - Page 7 EASY PAPERLESS CACHING By: Marvin J A typical paperless caching setup involves 4 pieces of software: GSAK, GPX Spinner, Plucker, and synchronization via HotSync... a very lengthy procedure. This is especially true if you attempt to sync all of the caches in GSAK (Currently, I have almost 7,000). In fact my current database crashes Plucker altogether. So when I thought about the current process, I noticed one important thing: GPX Spinner converts all of the caches in the .GPX file to a set of web pages. All Plucker does is compress the huge HTML ball into something more manageable for the Palm. But what if you had something portable that could read HTML files and had plenty of storage space? The solution to this is a laptop, Netbook, or Pocket PC. Laptops have come down dramatically in price over the years, which make this method economical. A Netbook is a smaller laptop designed to do basic tasks and not much else. They are not near as versatile as a fully fledged laptop, but are much smaller and more convenient. Finally, a Pocket PC has the same form factor as a Palm Pilot, but is a bit more adaptable. These tiny devices usually have Bluetooth and WIFI connectivity. You can learn more about these devices at the links below: Netbooks: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Netbook Pocket PCs: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pocket_pc Here comes the easy part, setting it all up. What you need: 1. Desktop / Home PC (This is whatever your GSAK database is on) 2. A Mobile PC (a Netbook, Pocket PC, or Laptop) 3. GSAK Here’s how to do it: 1. Update your GSAK database and filter your results for your desired output. 2. In GSAK, Click File>Export>HTML Files 3. General Tab – Select an output file folder, the other default options are fine. If your laptop is networked you can select a shared folder on the laptop to output the files directly to it. If you are using a Pocket PC and it has a memory card, you can insert it and send the files directly to it. This eliminates step 7, and greatly reduces the time it takes to update your device. 4. Advanced Tab – I usually uncheck defaults and check ‘Include current details’ this adds the last GPX timestamp to the page so you know when the cache was last updated. Otherwise the defaults are fine. 5. Save your settings for later, and Click Generate. 6. After a few minutes, once GSAK is completed, copy the final output folder to your portable device. 7. Open the index.htm file (located in the output folder) on your portable device. Chances are it will launch the default web browser, and you will now have ALL of your cache information at your fingertips. Using this method I can easily update my Pocket PC with 990+ caches from the Myrtle Beach area in less than 5 minutes with one step. My entire database takes about 1.25 hours. Taking this one step further, I created a small macro that selects a saved Myrtle Beach filter, and updates both my GPS & Pocket PC with one click. The entire process takes less than 6 minutes. This all means less dead trees, less time in front of the PC, and more time caching! Continued... The Grand Strand Geocachers Post - Page 8 EASY PAPERLESS CACHING By: Marvin J (cont.) Some Helpful Tips: Laptop Use: 1. For an all day cache run, pick up a vehicle power inverter. This little box plugs into your car cigarette adapter and allows you to plug your laptop in to charge the battery. 2. You can also write up your logs in the field while it is fresh in your memory. When you get back to an internet connection, logging is as easy as cut and paste. Pocket PC Use: 1. Pick up Opera’s mobile browser. This is much faster than the default Internet Explorer one. 2. Depending on your cell phone provider, you may be able to tether your pocket PC to your cell phone via Bluetooth. This will allow you to have internet wherever you have a cell signal. You can even log your caches in the field! Notice TBs & Archived Caches. Alphabetical Listing By Name Notice TBs & Archived Caches. Listing By Cache Owner Cache Page Full Logs & Decrypted Hints This is a very daunting topic and can be very confusing to most everyone. If there is enough interest, I will gladly sit down after a meeting with a laptop and demonstrate how to do this and some other GSAK tips as well. Hands on is always the best approach. The Grand Strand Geocachers Post - Page 9 GRAND STRAND GEOCACHERS CHRISTMAS BASH Thanks to EZtrack and ftjak for a memorable event! 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