Sunday, November 30, 2014

Hitting the Big 1000 and 5000!

On Wednesday, November 26th, I found my 5,000th cache on my 1,000th consecutive day of geocaching.


I'm lucky.  I did have many advantages to help me along.

  • I love to travel and I live in a cache-rich area (southeastern Michigan).
  • I have an adventurous sweetheart who caches, too.
  • And I did this as several other members of Team Free Range Lobsters were streaking, too.

I thought after one thousand days, I'd share what I learned. Here are my “streaking tips” especially for winter.

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Incorporate your cache-a-day as part of your routine.  I plan my target cache (plus a backup) as I get dressed in the morning.  Before long, it becomes second nature.  When planning your cache, consider what’s on your agenda for the day – last Thursday the family gathered for Kriket’s birthday.  She chose a restaurant in a very target-rich area so I saved my cache for later that night.

Download a weather app.  According to the weatherman, the warmest part of Monday was first thing in the morning.  By noon we would drop below -3° and have snow squalls.  Hence, I grabbed my cache on my way to work.  



On nicer days, drive a little to get your cache and/or pick a cache with more difficult terrains.  Save the ones closer to home for severe weather days or days packed with family commitments.  If I’m on the road somewhere with friends, I will ask them to stop for a few minutes so I can make my grab, saving the ones closer to home.

Sounds trite but it’s a “cache a day “ so pace yourself, even on a power trail.  Our local Cachers have setup a several mile-long power trail along the I-275 bike trail.  There are multiple places to park and access the trail.  If you grab a cache a day, you are set for the next 4 months (or so)!


If you need a “numbers run” (to reach a milestone or to complete a challenge), stay away from home.  Again, I’m lucky that I’m in a cache-rich area so I don’t have to travel far for a pocket of smiley-goodness.

FTF-runs are not “streak friendly”.  I know it’s a downer, but when you get the notification you may not want to run out and get that new cache 3.4 miles away.  Save it for a rainy day.

Know your local hiders.  In our area, we have some Cachers who turn over their cache hides every six months – make sure you grab them when you can.  There may be others where you have to grab their cache within the first week of publication before it disappears, never to be “maintenanced” again. Another hider nearby has an excellent history series with very basic hides (bringing you to the local site is most important) so his caches are excellent for very bad-weather days.  One puzzle-master disables his caches for the winter and another revels in particularly evil (and unsolvable) hides.

Attend events in inclement weather. I, personally, prefer to grab a physical cache on event day, but events are caches and will add a smiley to your streak. They are also a way to learn the local hiding habits (see entry above). Another reason to attend events…

Team Gates, Alona Spiegel, Caching Fire,
the Grundalows and afishoutawater
Make friends with other “streakers”.  They’re running out of caches, too, so help each other out!  If each of you hide a dozen or more P&G’s, you can get yourself through the winter.

Don’t assume just because it’s an LPC it’ll be a quick find.  Last year TaGeez and I were standing on 6-foot snow mounds, trying to dig out the skirt.  

It was in there.  Trust me.
Don’t assume because it is “high terrain” makes it unattainable in winter.  I can’t tell you how many times we’ve used a convenient snowbank to grab that tree cache!

Create a bookmark list.  You don’t want to be rushing to a family birthday or in the middle of a snowstorm and trying to think of a cache to grab.  Many of the items on my list were recommended by other Cachers on our local FB group in case I need a find in their area.

Speaking of bookmark lists, make sure you have access to an offline copy of it.  I have an offline list saved in Geosphere in case geocaching.com is down for maintenance or we have a severe windstorm, knocking out power and/or cellular service.

Expand your Cache Type repertoire.  Grab those Earth Caches on warm days. Many Virtuals are not weather-dependent.  There is such a thing as simple Multis, too.

TaGeez and scrapcat at the Great Falls of Tinker's Creek

Solve those puzzles.  I LOVE puzzles, but I know so many people who avoid them.  Winter is not only a good time to sit in your snug house solving puzzles, but, in many instances, a good time to go for the puzzle final.  For many creators around here, the puzzle is the interesting part and the final can be a simple park-and-grab.

Surround yourself with supportive friends and family.  Just shy of the first anniversary of my streak, my car died and I had to car shop, relying on others to get me back and forth to work and to the various dealers.  I had just as many offers from friends and family (Cachers and Muggles alike) to take me for my daily cache.  My Dad pulled over on the way to a memorial viewing at a funeral home so I wouldn’t have to walk to a cache in arctic weather.  This challenge is so much easier when surrounded by those cheering you on.

The AWESOME members of
Team Free Range Lobsters!

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I hope this helps, and maybe I'll add more as I work my way to the next thousand.... possibly....



Thursday, November 27, 2014

Day 1000 And Cache 5000!


Yesterday was my big day! The one thousandth day of my consecutive cache-a-day streak! To top it off, I found my cache #5000! And the best part is sharing this adventure with my sweetie, TaGeez. And there's been many adventures since starting my streak on my birthday in 2012:

* Midwest GeoBash 2012-2014
* Port Clinton, OH
* Chicago Geocaching Podcast Sign-off
* Traverse City
* Power Island
* Excursions to Jackson, Port Huron, Windsor, Holly/Fenton, Lansing and Frankenmuth
* The Cleveland/Erie Adventure

We've come across some remarkable experiences especially:

* The Metroparks Geocaching Adventures
* The Historic Counties Challenges
* The Michigan Star
* The JASMER caches
* The historic cemetery caches

I love sharing these amazing experiences with my Love, TaGeez, my family (Team Free Range Lobsters) and my fabulous Geocaching friends.

A special thank you to everyone who has hidden a cache, hosted a meet, and joined us on this journey.

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Taco Tuesday - Scrapcat's 999th CaD


Do I have the best buds or what? In celebration of the 999th day of my caching streak (and my 4,999th find), they threw me a party!

Taco Tuesday - Scrapcat's 999th CaD

Thank you, BSW2010 and Team Gates, for the fabulous event! And thank you to all my friends for coming out to celebrate with me!

I am Scrap. Scrap the Cat.


I AM SCRAP.  SCRAP THE CAT.

DO YOU LIKE TRAVEL BUGS AND CACHE?

SAY! I LIKE TRAVEL BUGS AND CACHE!
I DO! I LIKE THEM, SCRAP-THE-CAT!
AND I WOULD FIND THEM WITH A BOAT.
AND I WOULD LOG THEM WITH A GOAT...
AND I WILL MEET THEM, IN THE RAIN.
AND IN THE DARK. AND ON A TRAIN.
AND IN A CAR. AND IN A TREE.
THEY ARE SO GOOD, SO GOOD, YOU SEE!

SO I WILL PLACE THEM IN A BOX.
AND I WILL HUNT THEM WITH A FOX.
AND I WILL TAKE THEM FROM A HOUSE.
AND I WILL PLACE THEM WITH A MOUSE.
AND I WILL FIND THEM HERE AND THERE.
SAY! I WILL GRAB THEM ANYWHERE!
I DO SO LIKE TRAVEL BUGS AND CACHE!

THANK YOU! THANK YOU, SCRAP-THE-CAT!

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Did I happen to mention that I was born on Dr Seuss's birthday
and have worked in the "book business" for over 20 years?




Sunday, November 23, 2014

MGA14: Earned My Path Tag!


Another year of the Michigan Geocaching Adventure completed! How many days until May 1st? #cannotwaitfornextyear #MGA15

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Sunrise on Grand River

The weatherman said the warmest part of the day was around sunrise (12˚ but “feels like” -3˚) with squalls later.  So I grabbed my cache first thing…. 


This was Grand River Boulevard around 7am.  I was freezing my butt off, but I had the camera in one hand and the cache in the other.



Friday, November 14, 2014

Elisa Street

I gave Commander Overlord a Fave point for the Stage One of his new letterbox!



1st Annual Plymouth Puzzler


Congrats to Team #2 - TaGeez, Scrapcat, ACLCoordinator and LincolnsAunt - on the 2nd place win of the 1st Annual Plymouth Puzzler Road Rally. Fabulous time had by all!

Monday, November 10, 2014

Geocaches as Memory Tools

Many a moon ago, I married my high school sweetheart and moved away.  We were a military family, and our first duty station was in Jacksonville, NC.  I loved the area, and I loved my new job…. for the most part.  I was hired into an art gallery to work in the framing division which consisted of 50% military wives and 50% locals. 

We got along well… for the most part.  As long as Mae was having a good day.  Mae was a local and could be quite cantankerous.  My most vivid memory of her was her proud declaration that she’s never been outside her birth county.  What?  Never outside Onslow County?  Furthermore, she hadn’t been to most places IN Onslow County!  Never a need. Never a desire.  She wouldn’t even visit her kids as they had moved “away”.  Even two decades later I still can’t fathom that. I’m sure you can imagine the contempt she spewed when the military wives would tell of our travels after a particularly glorious weekend. Mindblowing… we lived along the Crystal Coast and not far from the Outer Banks.  So much beauty…. Wasted on her.

I love being a tourist, even in my own hometown.  For each of our birthdays, my sister and I take the day off and explore.  Downtown Detroit.  Hamtramck. Frankenmuth.  Ann Arbor.  We’ve taken trips to DC, Chicago, and Missouri. On weekends my family takes tours and day trips and field trips, too. And thanks to geocaching, my Sweetie and I have explored most every nook and cranny of Southeastern Michigan plus Grand Traverse Bay (while also dipping our toes in Ontario, Ohio, Indiana, Pennsylvania). As this blog attests, we appreciate all the history and artistry and beauty around us.

As the November wind has swept into Michigan, this past weekend’s adventures were closer to home.  On Saturday members of Team Free Range Lobsters headed to Wolcott Mill (Huron MetroPark) to grab another cache in the MGA14 series. 
 
TaGeez, WikidKriket and SnakeyLicks at Wolcott Mill

And on Sunday, we made it over to the Eleanor and Edsel Ford house along Lakeshore Drive in Grosse Pointe Shores.  
 
TaGeez, WikidKriket and SnakeyLicks at the Ford House


So, what do I mean about “geocaches as memory tools”? Simple.  We made a point of saving our cache-a-days to grab nearby caches, ones that were significant to the locale.  After grabbing the MGA14 cache, we visited the nearby farm to pet the animals (and grabbed the Victory Gardens cache so we can upload our farm pics to the log).  Upon completing the Ford House tour, we moseyed across the street to the Ford Forest cache.  Now, every time we see those smilies on our map or come across those logs, we will remember the wonderful adventures we had nearby.  

I really wish I had known about geocaching when I first returned to Michigan.  All those adventures!  Can you imagine the scope of all those smilies?!?

Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Monday, November 3, 2014

The Causeway is A'blaze!

First time I cached at Bald Mountain State Park... I'd only been caching a few months. I toddled across a field, grabbed a cache and tumbled into a hunter's blind on the way back. It was a full blind, and they had watched me stroll across the field and grab the cache.

They explained that hunting was legal here, and then escorted me back to the car for safety. Along the way I explained geocaching to them. They were incredulous that I would hunt for something, find it, and then put it back!

Last week a group of us drove to Pennsylvania to find State Game Land #109 (Sept 2000 cache). Signs all over the parking lot warned, "Hunters wear orange and so should you." We didn't. We wore bumblebee yellow, moose brown, forest evergreen and beer black. We could hear the gunfire in the distance.

Yesterday we were heading out to Three Ponds Causeway (March 2001 cache). The last finder reported that in the time he walked the half mile out and back, hunters had dropped off a new blind.


We're a little slow, I guess, but we finally got a clue! Stopped at Dunham's and these vests were on sale for $18. I appreciated them as we walked to the cache, gunfire booming over the ridge. It sounded like the hunters applauded us!

Saturday, November 1, 2014

OH/PA Adventures: The Virtual Caches

This is a great way to cap off the week of posts: The Virtual Caches.  These were fun and varied – many with the highest Favorite points.  Because they are still active, I will omit any pictures that give answers to the verification questions.

I Saw the Light GC7923 – 48 Faves

Ratspazum

TaGeez

On the shores of Lake Erie

Beetle People GCCC89 – 82 Faves

 
Passing the library  - heading to the Virtual

Beetle People

Causing Mischief throughout the park

Ratspazum and TaGeez - exploring the park


TaGeez and Ratspazum

scrapcat and TaGeez

Heading back to the car





Auto Art GCJ8M8 – 305 Faves











“Don’t Give up the Ship!” GCAE4F – 107 Faves

Perry Monument





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I think it’s only fitting to share the sad end to my little ghost buddy.  All summer long, this Virtual Ghost Micro Geocoin has visited Virtual to Virtual with me and my family.  Unfortunately, my “Virtual” Geocoin is now a “Virtual Geocoin”.  While visiting the mounted brass plaque at the Beetle People, he fell behind it and is lost forever.




I take comfort knowing that every Cacher visiting this site will spend a few moments with this little guy. RIP.