Here's a collection of those stories.
1. Nanos. For a multi this is pretty straight forward. For someone who is not familiar with nanos and having some GPS bounce on the scene trying to look non-chalant in the midst of a wedding and/or graduation party.... not as straight forward. On my second ever nano. The first one was traumatic enough. My fingers frozen and trying to roll what I have come to call the worlds smallest joint without losing any pieces in the pine straw or down the edge of the cliff. This second nano didn't have frozen fingers but trying to traverse some semi-urban landscape and look like I really needed to be walking in that flower bed (which wasn't heavily bedded with flowers or I wouldn't have even tried). Not my favorite cache type. but when you daintily pluck one off any any hiding spot be it pine tree or signage you can't help but have a moment where you feel like Horton from Horton Hears a Who holding that little tiny flower puff with an entire world inside. In case anyone was wondering the house in question in multi is Bob Dylan's childhood home.
Bob Dylan's Childhood home |
2. Puzzles. My first true puzzle cache. I am limited on my ability to solve puzzles but when this logic puzzle dropped on my radar I got right to it. I can logic puzzles right? Of course I can. So after talking it through many times trying ot find that one clue that I just wasn't seeing I finally solved it. I felt like a golden princess at that point. Dropped it into a trip with my mom. Planned some caches in this area in the early morning. Who would have thought that it was going to be like 88 degrees in the early morning with incredible humidity and not a darn cloud in the sky. Entered the coordinates into my unit and took off toward an obvious beacon only to be told the cache is in the middle of the parking lot. Well how could this be? After considerable searching.... gave up. Maybe I wasn't a princess after all. Tried again about a week later in slightly less heat. Sat in the parking lot and entered the coordinates and suddenly was sent 600 feet elsewhere. And up a hill. Well that's strange. Who would have thought something as a simple a miskeying of the coordinates would be such a problem. Found the cache and thusly walked uphill both ways (towards the cache and then back towards the car after another cache. Another phenomena I was not aware was possible.
3. Poison Ivy. And/or mud. First trip out here in the spring in the rain. Nice little walk along the steep edges of the river and a nice steep hill with heavy tree cover to navigate in the rain and mud. I gave up after the second near death experience on the hill. Second time out there mom came with to assure I could find my way out. The weeds had grown considerably. But I wasn't going to just give up this time. I was going to find it. I zig zagged my way down this messy hill. In and out of dead fall. Finally in the humidity and after having to pee for quite some time I found it. I had given up on the GPS long before that. I march out covered in dewy wetness impressed with my cache prowess. But oh. Something is awry. Something is itchy. So I blow it off. It must be mosquitoes. Right? Wrong. Sometime in the middle of the night I had a full on outbreak of poison ivy (or oak but more likely ivy) on the lower half of both of my legs. It would probably be most accurate to say I had 2 giant welts. One fully covering each leg. I stocked up on all that was anti-itch and incredibly smelly in the coming days. Sweated it off at work since I couldn't wear the short pants there with all that going on. Finally cleared up mostly. Showed a coworker who duly noted I should have probably got a shot for that.
4. Migration. Sometimes caches move. One person moves them a little. Then another person. Some people think they shoudl be hidden differently and suddenly you are 40 feet away from where it should have been. Such is the case with this one. Beautiful area. If it was so pretty and relaxing I would have given up on this long before I did. We searched for sometime. In a last ditch effort I made one large circle around ground zero and from a slight hill I saw it. I saw the pen sitting on the log and saw the duct tape in the log. Called mom over and we figured out how to get the log open only to find a massive geocache. A huge pvc pipe with a non-threaded end. Lessons were learned. There is a suction when you place such a lid on a pipe. Folks with small hands can't manipulate the lid to get it off. But I wasn't going to give up. Threw down the jacket. Wrapped my legs around that beast and proceeded to use a full body effort to remove the lid from the cache because no way was I going to log a DNF on a cache I had in my hands. The owners subsequently brainstormed some ways to make this easier to open and placed the cache back in its original hiding spot.
5. First Multi. My first attempt at a multi did not go so hot. Started in the swamp in the spring before the bugs really came out in force. Spent much time laying on the trail. It said your feet didn't need to leave the trail after all.... made no mention of the rest of your body. This was an important cache for me. This was a little less than half a mile from where Paul Wellstone's plane crashed and the memorial to him.
I spent much time here at one particular sign getting to know that small part of his history intimately. the hours I spent looking at the sign. Looking at the bench. Looking at the path. Looking in the trees... amazing. After a small shove in the right direction for the first step (which is where we were predominantly stuck) we were able to locate it and head off to the next step. The next step had me laying in a bog. Thank goodness it was well after snow melt and pre-heavy rain bog but it was still a bog and it was still moist. And by this point the bug were starting to become bothersome. And what's more fun than a bog on a pseudo-rainy day than one with a burgeoning population of little tiny biting insects. But we found it and laid on the boardwalk elated that we finally found "Paul" as we came to call this cache. Some people said step 2 was harder but we found it easier as we were more familiar with looking for caches than steps at this point. Not to say that it didn't get harder as it got wetter this year.
Paul's log being signed. |