[GeoStL] Re: Competition for BruceS

  • From: "Tim and Pam" <timpam2mocachers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <geocaching@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Fri, 25 May 2007 10:01:38 -0500

-
Laura said 
" That's the fun part about caching. That and the trinkets.
;-)"

I thought the eating was the fun part:-)

Tim

www.tueltzen.smugmug.com 

-----Original Message-----
From: geocaching-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:geocaching-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Laura Million
Sent: Friday, May 25, 2007 9:58 AM
To: geocaching@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [GeoStL] Re: Competition for BruceS

-
You could always step down to the eTrex basic unit and still print out the
coordinates and hand load them (OK I usually use the cable, but sometimes I
forget to add them). I'm too cheap right now to upgrade.

When working with new cachers I tell them the GPS is a tool that takes them
to the vicinity and then they need to look and think to find the cache.
That's the fun part about caching. That and the trinkets.
;-)


Laura Million
2_Cats 




-----Original Message-----
From: geocaching-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:geocaching-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Glenn
Sent: Friday, May 25, 2007 9:43 AM
To: geocaching@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [GeoStL] Re: Competition for BruceS

-
You are correct. People didn't just "load the Coords" and go. 

Loading the coords was a feature that came about a little later on. I 
didnt have a printer so I would just write a bunch of coords down on a 
sheet of paper. I would hand load them (ofter incorectly) into Magellan 
1200xl and then later on into my Street Pilot GPS which is not well 
suited for geocaching.  When I got within 300 feet it would tell us that 
we had arived. Then we would write the last 3 digits of the lat and 
longitude on my walking stick. Using my trusty compas we would then 
slowly walk  about until the numbers on my  gps matched  the ones on the 
walking stick .  Simple as can be once we got the hang of the 
"geocaching thing".  Is was as reliable as anything now a days. When I 
got my Vista, with good maps and the ability to download waypoints, it 
was almost like cheating.  I knew what roads to go on to get to the area 
(but no auto routing, we just drove on big streets in the direction that 
the arrow was pointing), the gps would just lead us right to the cache 
spot. No more compass fiddling or number writing. 

With auto routing, I dont even have to know where I am going.  (I 
usually don't anyway).  The whole process is much easier now but a lot 
of the adventure of finding the park is gone.

Stephen Martin wrote:
> -
>
> I bet people didn't load just the coords via a cord then.  The cache pages
were probably always viewed prior to hunting. I wish I had known about this
pastime in 2001.  I moved back to St. Louis in Aug 2001.
>
>
>
>
>  
>   

 

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