Geocaching 101 – Caching with Kids

Ask your children if they want to go outdoors for a hike, and you’ll likely hear moans of protest as they turn back to their screens. Invite them on a high-tech treasure hunt for a “geocache,” and they’ll start peppering you with questions as they put on their shoes and head for the door.

Geocaching has never failed to fascinate the kids I’ve introduced to it, and it’s a great way to get children out of the door and onto the trail.

Seven tips for geocaching with kids:

  • Engage kids in every step, from learning to use the GPS, to selecting and finding caches.
  • Bring water, bug repellent, and hats on cache hunts.
  • Let kids find the cache after arriving at the coordinates.
  • Educate kids on the “take one, leave one” ethic of cache treasures.
  • Pack out your own trash, or better yet, show the kids a great example by packing out other trash you may find along the way.
  • Bring a camera and notepad and pen (to write down numbers of trackable items).
  • Integrate science, history, geography, or geology lessons.

Geocaching 101 – Caching with Kids

There are a lot of resources out there for parrents who want to get their kids into geocaching, http://geocachingkids.com/,

GC23M7Z – Breakfast at Kay’s March 2010

Event CacheBreakfast at Kay’s March 2010

An Event cache by kfdcanada Event Date: Sunday, March 14, 2010 Remember This Date!

N 45° 19.015 W 066° 01.540 Other Conversions
UTM: 19T E 733126 N 5022461

Monthly Breakfast in Saint John. The 3rd LAST Sunday of every month from 9am -11am

NO DEBIT – CASH ONLY AT K”S RESTAURANT

A great location in the “Saint John, NB Region” to gather and show off what gifts you got. Bring along some TB’s or Coins to swap or discover too.

GC248KQ – Breakfast at Jives – March 2010

Event CacheBreakfast at Jives – March 2010

An Event cache by milosheart Event Date: Sunday, March 21, 2010 Remember This Date!

Who: All cachers from Fredericton and beyond. Newbies,
out-of-towners and kids welcome….the more the merrier!

What: Good food, good people and great geo-stories.

When: Sunday, March 21st, 9:00 – 11:00am

Where: Jives Restaurant & Bar, 86 Main Street, Fredericton North

Why: Because it’s spring and time to come out of hibernation.

Come on out to meet and greet your fellow cachers and enjoy a nice breakfast.

We now have a Facebook group – Fredericton Region Geocachers – so please check us out and feel free to join.

Also, check out the MGA and ACGA forums or FB group for info on the Winter Hide Challenge that’s going on for the months of Dec, Jan, Feb and March in the Fredericton area. A great time to hide some caches and win some prizes! (E-mail us if you have any questions about it or, better yet, come to the breakfast and ask in person!) Get yours hidden by the end of the month!

Happy Caching :)
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GC23Y3Z – Breakfast at Cherry’s- Feb ’10

Breakfast at Cherry’s- Feb ’10

An Event cache by Georard Event Date: Sunday, February 28, 2010 Remember This Date!

Size: Size: Other (Other) Difficulty: 1 out of 5 Terrain: 1 out of 5 (1 is easiest, 5 is hardest)

N 46° 05.732 W 064° 44.875
UTM: 20T E 364888 N 5106147

9AM-11AM, the last Sunday of the month in February, in the upper room of Don Cherry’s restaurant in Dieppe, NB.

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Geocaching Maritime Mega Event 2010

Well, it’s official! Nova Scotia, Canada will be hosting a Geocaching Mega Event on July 10th, 2010 in celebration of the 10th Anniversary of Geocaching and the 10th Anniversary of Canada’s First Geocache!

The ‘Maritime Mega Event’ (GC1P585) will be a one day event and held at the Municipal Activity and Recreation Complex , just outside of Bridgewater, Nova Scotia. The
MARC offers a 100 Acres of open space, which includes fields, woods, ponds, brooks and trails. It is only minutes from GCBBA&Submit6.x=15&Submit6.y=10" target="_blank">Canada’s First Geocache and hundreds of other Geocaching opportunites.

This event promises to be a great time! There will be Geocaching related educational opportunities, great food, swag vendors, entertainment and lots of socializing. (a Maritime tradition!). It’s going to be one big Cachin’ Ceilidh!

Tuesday, 08 September 2009 11:49

The Maritime Mega Organizing Committee would like to hear from you if you plan to attend our Mega Event!  No need to log in or even register on this site — just fill out the form and tell us your email, caching nickname, and the number of people planning to attend under that name.

We need to hear from you to let Groundspeak know that this will truly be a Maritime MEGA!

If you wish, you can submit your home coordinates as well, so we can get an idea of where people will be coming from.

via

Theme

So since we’ve got this up and rolling, any opinions on the theme? Its one I grabbed from the wordpress themes gallery. WordPress is the blogging software my team uses and I have to say I’ve grown quite fond of it.

I hate unilateral decisions, so feel free to add comments on possible alternative themes and let me know whats you like. When we get a few options, I’ll throw a poll up and we can figure out what we want :)

Some wordpress themes can be found here.

I chose this theme because it reminded me of New Brunswick & PEI, both have really cool wind power plants with massive windmils :)

Its very outdoorsy, nature related, and very bright and happy :)

Five GPS games to play with your smartphone

Use your phone’s sat-nav system to hunt down prizes and more, with our guide to real-world GPS games

What’s the most exciting thing you’ve done with your phone? Rang your mum to wish her happy birthday? If your handset doesn’t get you out and about, tramping through mud, climbing over styles and hunting for hidden treasure, then something needs an upgrade. Your phone, your life, or maybe both.

The iPhone, Blackberry’s Storm and Bold lines, and many Symbian and Android handsets now sport GPS, which makes your smartphone the ticket to join a global movement of outdoor games.

These are outbound challenges that pit teams and solo players against themselves and each other in the search for hidden treasure, undiscovered landmarks and hidden spots all over the world.

Geocaching, by far the most popular, is a massive underground game being played all around you. Every day, wherever you live or work, you are sure to walk past, over or under the clues and caches with which its players conduct their business.

Here we lift the lid on this and four other smartphone-friendly real-world games, each of which is a bridge between the online and offline worlds.

And next week, we’ll launch PC Pro’s own smartphone treasure hunt, in which you can uncover our stash of free magazine subscriptions for you or your friends.

1. Geocaching

This is the king of smartphone games. Gamers have hidden close to a million caches around the world and posted clues and coordinates for each of them atgeocaching.com. Some are lunchboxes or ammunition tins filled with treasure and trinkets. Others are tiny paper slips rolled up in the head of a screw on the back of a road sign.

GeocacheYour task is to uncover them by downloading the coordinates and following the clues. When you find one, you take whatever contents you want and replace them with some of your own, then sign the paper and log your visit online.

With 55,088 caches in the UK alone – and that number grows by the day – nobody lives far from their local neighbourhood stash. City dwellers are spoilt for choice (there are 869 caches with a 10 mile radius of PC Pro’s central London office, for instance) but the real fun comes when you take advantage of your smartphone’s diminutive size and weight and head out into the country for a day-long treasure hunting trek through fields and woods.

You can find caches using nothing but your phone’s built-in GPS, but applications such as Blackstar for Blackberry, Geobeagle for Android and eitherGeocaching or Geocaching Intro from the iPhone App Store simplify the task of locating and logging your finds.

2. Geodashing

Geodashing is all about points, not prizes. Playing alone or in teams of five, the aim is to visit as many randomly selected locations as you can, each of which is picked by the Geodashing computer.

If you get with 100 metres of that a location, you score a find, but only if you can describe it in enough detail to prove you’ve been there – or, better still, post a photo. Each round of the game is open for a limited period, and Dashpoints visited outside of that time don’t count. The twist is that some locations – random points in the middle of an airbase or the ocean, for example – will be beyond the reach of almost all players. Visit the Geodashing website to join in the fun.

3. Waymarking

Totem poles in Essex, a ghost cafe in central London, a pet cemetery in Surrey… Waymarking is 21st century scavenger hunting, and the best way to find interesting places and unusual objects that you probably haven’t noticed before.

Waymarking.com lists 229,982 sites around the world that its users have marked as notable, with more than 15,000 in the UK. Each is logged with a photo, coordinates and a description of its stand-out features.

While Geocaching is all about heading out to find hidden treasure, Waymarking calls on your smartphone’s native GPS tools to help you learn more about your local area. You don’t need to install any specific software, and it’s surprising what it turns up.

Tap in your postcode at waymarking.com to see what you’ve been missing and, if you’re looking for somewhere to walk this weekend, subscribe to its RSS feed for a stream of the latest additions to its global database.

4. Travel bugs

Geocaching, Geodashing and Waymarking are quick-hit smartphone games, but Travel Bugs are an ongoing project. Each is a dog tag to which you assign a mission before dropping it into a Geocache stash. The next Geocacher to find your bug in a cache takes it out, logs their find at geocaching.com and reads the bug’s mission, which could be anything from travelling around the world heading east or west to visiting capital cities or staying near water.

Their finder’s job is to help your bug on its way by moving it to the next logical cache on its route. When they do, you’re sent an email, and you can plot its journey on Google Maps.

Travel BugTravel Bugs are bought in pairs, of which one half goes into the cache while you hold onto its twin. A single pair costs £4.59 fromAboveandbeyond, and you can buy five pairs at a time for £19.75 from Geotastic.com.

Sign up for a free account at geocaching.com and click click here to track the progress of a travel bug that to date has travelled more than 1600 miles from Lizard Point, Cornwall, to the Netherlands, by way of Germany and Scotland.

5. Degree Confluence Project

What is a confluence? It’s the point where a line of latitude meets a line of longitude. Think back to your school room globe and it’s the spots where the horizontal and vertical lines cross. Each of these is a zero point without minutes or fractions of a degree. A perfect coordinate.

The Confluence Project sets players the task of visiting every single confluence, from which they post a photo at confluence.org. Often the result is a stretch of water or an empty field, but plenty fall amid cityscapes, and with 10,510 still to be found around the world there’s plenty of gameplay left to be had.

Even if you don’t want to take part, check out the massive (and growing) online gallery posted by other players for some unexpected finds. Brunei’s one and only confluence, for example, isn’t sandy at all, but lush green jungle.

Author: Nik Rawlinson

Talk about a find!

Memorable seizures from 2009 include women who found more than a kilogram of cocaine during a GPS treasure hunt known as geocaching and man who left more than $100,000 in suspected drug money at the Timber Cove Lodge.

Law enforcement collected more drugs in 2009 than any year prior, except 2008 …
Tahoe Daily Tribune

Geocaching: Social Media in 3D

Today, I met with the “creative folk” over at Groundspeak and was excited to hear more about their company (and play with their multi-touch Google Earth screen!) Their company focuses on bringing the tech savvy and adventurer together in a form of treasure hunting called ‘geocaching.’ The same sense of adventure is still present today as when pirates hunted for gold…but the reward now is the hunt, not booty and a case of Scurvy.

One of Groundspeak’s main goals is to bring “online communities together in physical locations.” What does this mean? Well, it’s exactly like hide-and-seek…someone hides something in a park, in the city etc, then posts the coordinates online for people to go out into the world and find. By logging your geocache find online, you’re sharing your experience with other’s and building a stronger community.

So I’m curious to learn about people’s geocaching experiences; what have you found, where have you gone, what crazy situations did you find yourself in?

Courtesy of mishy79.wordpress.com

Calling all would-be Writers!

Hey Again all.

As you can see, the site is pretty slim, I’ve been copying over the old content, but old content is that, old :)

We need some updated content, please feel free to register / contact me and we can get any new reviews, articles, funny stories about caching posted.

Pictures!

I’ve always been a big beliver that a picture is worth a thousand words, and in websites taht holds especially true.

Any awesome posts of just your favorite cache related phones would be more then welcome!

-Rob

Introduction to Geocaching

Brief introduction to the sport of Geocaching with Team Tiki.

This tutorial features a hunt for “Koz’s Kliffside Kache” in the Hemlock Overlook of clifton Virginia.

Site Live

Hey All!

Greetings from the Updated MGA site.

I’m sorry that the domain hasn’t been moved over yet, there’s been a little bit of an issue of reaching FarsideX (Dave). I”ve got his number and we should be moving the domain over shortly as long as he’s all good with it.

There should just be a few other technical hurdles to clear up, but I’ll be more then glad to help out where I can.

The first thing I need is a list of active MGA council members. I Know FunkyNassau is still around, Argus as well. Any others who’d like to work themselves out of the woods for a moment if you could contact me that’d be awesome.

For now though, I’m going to be moving content over from the old site to the new site, and such.

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