What started out as an innocent enough Saturday ... visiting
a cache in Battle Creek with
RJ-Toot
and
BinderyGuy,
... began with a 9 AM start time at a park and ride in Portage, MI and ended 25 (yes, twenty-five) hours later
with us pulling into that park and ride at 10 AM on Sunday! Towards the end of the adventure I began to
wonder, “What is it about having a map and a GPS in hand that makes all common
sense fly out the window?” You might
think that with three adults out caching we would be capable of rational
thoughts, but I beg to differ!
Thanks for allowing me to be a guest blogger!
My name is Sara and my caching name is
RomanTwins. I have been caching sporadically since 2010
and really started caching when I introduced my friend to this awesome hobby in
2013. The geocaching adventures that
have ensued since then have been amazing.
Our adventure this weekend started with a few goals in mind,
including
Luandry Time in Battle Creek
and 3 night caches in Coldwater, MI. In
between those caches we decided to go where the GPS led us.
Luandry Time is a Challenge cache in Battle Creek with 4
stages hidden on a hiking trail. Each
stage in itself is cache worthy, but added together made it quite the
challenge. Stages included picking up
number clues for the final, carrying a key from one stage to the next to unlock
a stage and carrying water with us to discover a set of coordinates hiding down
a PVC pipe. I am still amazed at the
fact that BinderyGuy had DENTAL tools with him to help get a camo-covered pill
bottle from the bottom of a 6 inch round PVC pipe. This pipe had random cutouts from bottom to top
so that you could get tools or perhaps sticks to work the pill bottle to the
top. Had I been there alone I probably
would have given up early on, but we made it to all the stages and then rescued
a few travel bugs that had been stuck in this cache for over a year.
I pushed RJ and BG to make it to Coldwater before dusk
because of two caches in a Coldwater cemetery I wanted to find.
Michigan
Spirit Quest #2 No horses allowed told the story of Henry Clay Lewis who
decided NOT to leave his art collection of 1000 pieces to the city of Coldwater
upon his death because they refused to let him bury his beloved horse in his
family cemetery plot. Inside the final
for that cache was a laminated three-page story of Old Sam.
Old Sam, I learned, was a horse who served for 4 years in
the Civil War. They say his work on the
railroad as a young horse is what kept him alive in the war for 4 years when
most horses only lived 3-5 months in battles.
He was accustomed to the loud clanging noises of the railroad which
meant that the sounds of battle didn’t faze him much. After
the war, Sam returned home and had a position of honor in Coldwater. When Sam died, certain people decided he
needed a burial with honor. He was buried
in an unmarked grave in the cemetery under cover of darkness and buried with
military honors. Information from this
story led us to the gun in the middle of town that Sam actually pulled in
war.
Hero
Horse is a challenge cache all about Sam and the gun he pulled. It was made all the more fun because the town
square was lit up with Christmas decorations when we visited the park just
after dusk!
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We enjoyed dinner and the talk focused on night caches. I think they are awesome! Using flashlights to follow reflective tacks
through the woods after dark just adds to the adventure of caching! I joked that the night was so beautiful and
mild for this time of year that it would be a waste to head home after we got
the three night caches in Coldwater. Why
don’t we head to Fort Wayne, IN and get three other night caches in that area. I
was kidding, really! Little did I realize that RJ-Toot and
BinderyGuy would take me seriously!
Rotary Park at Night and
Land
of the Homeless are night caches in the same park. The second cache started within 500 ft of the
final for the first one. Both were well
done caches with very little bushwacking.
We even got to cross a stream on a makeshift bridge of logs to get to
the final for the second cache. I will
admit I was glad to be in the company of my partners in crime. There were no homeless people, but the
thought of it made me a little leery about being in the woods for the second
half of the walk.
The last night cache in Coldwater was
A Short Walk in the Woods. This was truly a short walk in the woods
behind a coffee shop and would be a great first night cache for anyone. It is located in the middle of the city so
there is civilization around and you are never more than 200 feet away from the
parking lot.
It was after this cache that we realized RJ was going to log
cache #3000 on this trip and I was going to log #1700. We made sure to stop for several Park and
Grab caches to make sure he hit #3000. I
also realized that we were seriously heading south to Fort Wayne, IN…at 2am!
BG took over the driving while RJ took a power nap in the
back of the geomobile. I kept BG awake
on our drive south. We arrived at Chain
of Lakes State Park around 3am to start
Night
Chain.
We started out by walking along the trail next to a
lake. Suddenly I heard a loud splash
close by. I immediately turned to RJ and
BG to see who had thrown something in the water to freak me out. They claimed innocence. We began walking and shining the flashlights
towards the water and were surprised to see a few BEAVER swimming around! Looking back I think we may have heard a tree
falling and splash into the water. Along
the walk I spotted several stumps that had obviously been felled by the busy
beavers.
This cache was a Terrain of 4, so when I swept my flashlight
up a hill it didn’t really surprise us that the trail led us up a very steep
hill. Then we started bushwacking
through waist-high thorns and going for very long distances between spotting
tacks. When we got to a tree with 3
tacks on it we figured we had found the final…except there was no final
there. We looked for quite a while for
another tack and came up empty. Then we
pulled up the cache page on our phones and saw that recent finders did NOT have
the same experience we had. In fact, it
sounded like they hadn’t bushwacked much at all!
We headed back to the main trail, thanks in part to the
tracking that BG had on his GPS and in part because the cache owner had
included a waypoint on the cache page.
The waypoint said “If you get to this point, turn around because you
missed it.” We made it back to the trail
via a deer path that was much less thorny and followed the fire tacks PAST the
up-the-hill-turn-off we followed previously to the final location that involved
very little bushwacking. Leave it to us
to turn a 30-45 minute night cache into a 90-120 minute walk through a gauntlet
of thorns and “Devil Trees” (Honey Locust).
We still aren’t sure what that other trail was from. An old night cache? A hunter’s trail?
We then headed toward Columbia City, just west of Fort Wayne. By this time it was 6am and I was a little
worried about getting to the last two night caches before dawn. We stopped at McDonalds for sustenance and
COFFEE for me. Then drove to
The Morsches Park Night Cache and
Morsches Park Bonus Night Cache. The last two caches were in the same park. In fact, the instructions for the bonus cache
simply said “While finding the markers for the Morsches Park Night Cache, Keep
an eye out for a distant marker that will reveal the location of this bonus
cache.” RJ spotted the Bonus cache on
our way along the trail. It wasn’t as
“distant” as I was expecting.
Back on the trail we made our way to our last night cache as
dawn was beginning to break through the woods.
Fog was also happening in the wetland area where the fire tacks were
leading us and this made the flash light beams bounce a little. The Final was found without trouble and by
the time we made it back to the geomobile the sun was up.
At 7:30am the GPS was set for home. I will admit, we did make a few stops on the
way home. I asked to find a cache in a
county that was new to me. RJ pulled
over a few times so that BG and I could find some caches with lots of favorite
points that RJ found on a previous trip.
We pulled into the Park and Ride in Portage at 10am, exactly 25 hours
after we started our adventure the previous day.
What is it about having a map and a GPS in hand that makes
all common sense fly out the window?
I think the answer has to do with the potential for
adventure waiting at the next set of GPS Coordinates!
Next destination? The
Greater Detroit Area!
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Thank you, Sara, for sharing your adventure.
I’ve added many of these geocaches to my bookmark list!