The Geocaching Handbook

by ;
Format: Trade Paper
Pub. Date: 2004-07-01
Publisher(s): FalconGuides
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Summary

This book introduces the reader to the fast-growing outdoor sport of geocaching, which combines aspects of treasure hunting, high-tech navigation, and exploration.

Author Biography

Layne Cameron is an avid outdoorsman who has authored or coauthored four books and more than 300 articles for national magazines and newspapers. The Hoosier native has enjoyed assignments ranging from riding and mapping Indiana's mountain bike trails, ballooning New Mexico's red rock canyons, ice fishing Minnesota's walleye-laden lakes, and barefoot water-skiing Florida's tea-colored waterways. His first exposure to geocaching was a January 2001 brief in Outside magazine ("If You Hide It, They Will Come.")

Table of Contents

Foreword viii
Acknowledgments xii
Introduction xiii
1. Geocaching: The Global Sensation 1(10)
GPS: A Twentieth-Century Miracle
1(3)
With the Flip of a Switch, Geocaching Is Born
4(7)
2. Let's Go Geocaching 11(10)
Step 1: Visit the Web
11(1)
Step 2: Select a Cache
12(1)
Step 3: Gather Your Equipment
13(1)
Step 4: Find the Stash
14(2)
Step 5: After You've Found It-Geocache Etiquette
16(5)
3. GPS Units 21(10)
Purchasing a GPS Receiver
21(5)
GPS Navigation
26(5)
4. Creating Caches 31(10)
The Hiding Spot
31(2)
The Treasure
33(5)
Making It Public
38(3)
5. Geo-Games 41(26)
Are U Nuts?
42(1)
Armchair Treasure Hunting
42(2)
Benchmark Hunting
44(1)
Bingocaching
45(1)
CacheAcrossAmerica
46(1)
Chicken
46(1)
Cloo
47(1)
County Highpointers
48(1)
The Degree Confluence Project
49(1)
EcoScavenger
50(7)
Event Cache
57
Garmin Games
52(1)
Geodashing
53(1)
Geoteaming
54(1)
Hide-and-Seek
55(1)
Just4 Openers
55(1)
Letterboxing
56(2)
Letterbox Hybrid
58(1)
Maze
58(1)
Microcaching
59(1)
Minute War
59(2)
Multicaches 6U
Orienteering
61(1)
Poker Run
62(1)
Project APE
62(1)
Story Cache
63(1)
Stampin' Fools Game
64(1)
Tag
64(1)
Virtual Cache
65(1)
Volksmarching
65(1)
Web-Cam Cache (or Cache Cams)
66(1)
6. Backcountry Safety and Outdoor Etiquette 67(10)
Some Preparedness Guidelines
67(2)
Clothing for Geocaching
69(1)
Food for Geocaching
70(1)
Group Geocaching
71(3)
Zero Impact
74(1)
Cache In, Trash Out
75(2)
7. Geo-Happenings 77(6)
Real-World Events
77(3)
Internet Events
80(3)
8. Clubs and Web Sites 83(18)
U.S. Clubs
84(9)
International Clubs
93(2)
General Web Sites
95(2)
GPS Units and Software
97(2)
Mapping Resources
99(2)
9. Cachionary 1.0 101(13)
Welcome to Geo-Speak
101(13)
About the Author 114

Excerpts

Brief History of Geocaching:

In 1996, President Bill Clinton penned Presidential Decision Directive NSTC-6, America's GPS policy. As a result of that directive, President Clinton ordered the Defense Department to turn off Selective Availability (the jamming signal) that prevented recreational users from receiving accurate positioning. On May 1, 2000, the White House announced that it would "stop the intentional degradation of the GPS signal available to the public beginning at midnight tonight. This will mean that civilian users of GPS will be able to pinpoint locations up to 10 times more accurately than they do now."

As history was being made, self-professed techno-geeks like Dave Ulmer, an electronics and software engineer from Portland, Oregon, followed the announcements. After brainstorming new ideas for this budding technology, Ulmer came up with the idea of a treasure hunt.

On May 3, just two days later, Ulmer placed a five-gallon bucket near a wooded road about one mile from his home. Inside the bucket were a logbook and some trinkets for trading. He dubbed his game The Great American GPS Stash Hunt.

Ulmer posted a message on the Usenet newsgroup sci.geo.satellite-nav announcing the inaugural stash and its GPS waypoint. He noted only one rule: "Get some stuff, leave some stuff."

Less than five days after setting out the inaugural cache, other caches were set out in states from California to Illinois and as far away as Australia. Today, there are more than 65,000 active caches in nearly 200 countries across the globe.


Tips:
Once you get within 25 feet of the cache, it's best to really turn up your sleuthing skills. You need to remember that the waypoint can be either the location of the cache or a vantage point from which to spot the cache. Look for places that could hide a five-gallon bucket, an ammo box, or a foot-long plastic tube, such as hollow stumps, clumps of cattails, in the nooks of boulders, or under a pile of pine needles.

If you are seeking out micro caches in cities, think to yourself, "Where
would I hide a small tin?" Your search may have you peeking under park
benches, loitering around alleys, or, in the case of "Chief Muncie," wading through hedges.

Excerpted from The Geocaching Handbook by Layne Cameron
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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