Thursday, October 1, 2015

Frustrations abound

The feeling of failure is one I am all too familiar with. It is a feeling I hate. Most of my life I have strived to be perfect: the perfect girlfriend, the perfect daughter, the perfect employee. Failure is not an option.

Which is why yesterday's geocaching adventures frustrated me to tours. I had a plan. Finish work early, go home, find my daily geocache, run 8 miles to train for my marathon on Oct. 18, do laundry and go to bed.

Instead I spent 3 hours geocaching. This was not a "I'm on a roll and want to keep going" expedition. This was a "I cannot believe I have logged 4 DNFs, I need a gosh darn geocache or my more than 6 month streak will come to an end" expedition.
Up a tree, searching for my cache of the day

Cache 1: GZ took me to a creek bed with a metal tube. Since I knew it was a magnetic one, that left only one place it could be. I braved the creek bed with my hiking boots, even though the water soaked through. I went through the tunnel TWICE, braving the spider webs, and found nothing. I eventually gave up.

Cache 2: This was a previous failed find. It involved climbing across a fallen tree trunk, approximately 10 feet in the air. I made my way to the likely place, and after rooting around with a stick through the gunk, found nothing. No other place made sense, so I had to log my second DNF on this cache.

Cache 3: This one was nearby and of far easier terrain and difficulty. However, I approached from the wrong direction and soon found my dress and tights COVERED with those tiny cockleburrs. And I do mean covered...with hundreds of them. If anyone has an ideas on how to remove those guys from clothing, I am all ears. No cache in sight, and by now the daylight hours had retreated and it was the twilight before the darkness.

Cache 4: I make my way through a wooded path, and it is now dark outside. I make my way down a steep hill to the base of a very large tree. I am looking for a regular size cache. Despite searching all around GZ by my flashlight app, I spot nothing. Nada. Zilch. This is about a 2 for both terrain and difficulty, so nothing too bad.

The likely spot, but nothing to be found
Cache 5: Finally, at about 8:30 at night, I found my cache of the day. A very quick and easy one in a high traffic area, I was flooded with relief to keep my caching streak alive, although still very irritated and frustrated to log 4 DNFs in one afternoon.

I found out today that caches 1 and 2 were gone, the first one completely gone and number 2 had fallen out somewhere. Apparently both have been restored, so I will have to return to at least one of them today. The owner said I was spot on for cache 2, so maybe I will go for that one today and get in a run with my caching buddy, Artemis.

Sheer dedication would not allow me to go home empty-handed. I celebrated 6 months with a geocache every day this past Sunday, and I was determined to keep it going, even if I had to make a trek to a nearby city. Luckily, there are a few easy ones still in the area.

Geocaching can be a lot of fun, but make no mistake, it can also be frustrating. There are a couple of other caches in the area that have plagued me for months, caches that I have made multiple trips and spent hours searching, to no avail. Life is not easy, and neither is geocaching with a goal, but you must soldier on.

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

Caching at the dog park

The cache hound Artemis finds treasure
I love it when I can kill three birds with two stones. Yesterday the sun was beginning to go down when I got off work around 6:30. I am due to replace my phone this Saturday, and in the meantime geocaching after dark is getting more and more challenging. 

The dog needed to get some exercise, I needed to find my daily geocache, and I was out of cat food, much to my Calvin's frustration. How to accomplish all three before darkness set in...Well, I remembered hearing of a dog park in Shakopee, and that there was a geocache in the park. Off to Shakopee we went. 

Caching buddies Rachel and Artemis
I had never been to this dog park before...so of course I missed the entrance by about 50 feet. For about 15 minutes Artemis and I took a walk before we realized we were not in the dog park, but rather the walking/biking path on the other side of the fence. Back along the path we go.

We finally found the entrance to the dog park and I used my Garmin to get me close to the cache. After about five minutes of searching, we found the treat! 

Artemis enjoyed running and playing with the other dogs and worked up quite a pant by the time we found the cache. 

As fate would have it, a mere half-mile away was the shopping district and I was able to grab Calvin's cat food, as well as some acrylic paint for an upcoming project.

MISSIONS ACCOMPLISHED!

Beautiful flowers line both sides of the park

Thursday, August 27, 2015

A Geocaching Journey


Today's cache was a dead end!
Five months ago, I departed on a journey.

On March 7, I officially left my keys in my apartment in Edgerton, Wis. and made the 5.5 hour drive to my new home in Chaska, Minn. After 28 years in my beloved Wisconsin, I was moving into Gopher territory.

I had a great job opportunity, a decent apartment, and best of all...undiscovered geocache territory. The only geocaches I had unearthed were the five I logged during the initial job interview.
What better time to attempt the 365 day geocaching challenge?

There were some bumps in the road. I made it a week and a half and then, having a late meeting that had me working 9 a.m. to 11 p.m., missed a day. The clock started over.

Look ma, a triple bagged pill bottle!
There were a couple of other times when I logged my cache of the day between 11:50 and 11:59 p.m. Talk about nail-biting. Seriously, those late night meetings make things challenging. However, when I found one around 11:58 at night, I figured, “there are a couple others in the area. I might as well take advantage.” Sure enough, I found another cache around 12:30 a.m. and was at least satisfied to scratch off that day’s find.

Today, I am celebrating five months with a cache a day. That is right, I have not missed since March 27, despite those close calls. Some caches have been tricky, even more so by flashlight app at 10 p.m.
The cache hound Artemis and I!
I have found pretty much all of the caches in Jordan, where I work, with the exception of a couple that recent logs indicate are probably missing. I have even found most of the caches within a couple mile radius of the city. I have found many in Chaska, where I live. When my work required a trip to Shakopee or Savage, I took advantage and found a quick cash there. I have found caches in nearby Belle Plaine, Chanhassen and Eden Prairie.

There are still many more to find, and I am confident that I will be able to keep my streak going for another 7 months.

It will not be easy, but I will continue to share my journey here.

Feel free to follow along if you will, and remember, “Keep on Cachin’ in the Free World!”

Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Bountiful beauty

The pond near the Light My Fire cache
Today I was reminded why I not just like but LOVE geocaching. It opens your eyes to the beautiful blessings that surround you. It introduces you to things you might not otherwise see or even notice.

Take yesterday and today for example.

Yesterday I found Light My Fire in Belle Plaine, Minn. When I got there, I was struck by the picturesque scene: the yellow flowers and the tall grass gracing above a calm, smooth pond. I swore to myself to return with my camera in tow to capture the scene.

Happy pollinators
Today, after work I made the trek back to the area and low and behold, bees are busy flitting to and fro among the flowers. What delicate and dedicated pollinators! I found myself trying to zoom in and capture nature's gardeners in action.

Upon finishing, I found myself heading back down the road to capture another beautiful scene. As I turned onto Old Highway 169 Boulevard, a row of bright, vibrant flowers lined the right side of the road. Tall, large sunflowers extended above the eye-popping flora. What beauty!

Beautiful Monarch butterfly
As I exited my car to take some more pictures, my breath was taken away. It was a sight I was used to seeing as a child, but has become more and more scarce over the years. MONARCH BUTTERFLIES! Yes, real and true Monarch butterflies, not the impersonator viceroy butterflies you sometimes see. While they look similar, the Monarch butterfly does not have a black line crossing the postmedian hindwing. That, my friends, is a viceroy.

Oh, but there were Monarch butterflies galore, flitting and flapping from flower to flower, soaring in the wind. I let my gaze travel down the flowers and saw dozens of Monarch butterflies. Capturing them in flight was very tricky, and they did not rest on a flower for very long, but I managed to capture some real beauties.
"How's it going George? Great nectar over here Bud!"

Perhaps my next geocache will be in this area, to hopefully bring more people out to eye the wonderful beauty nature provides for us. And to think, if it was not for the geocache less than a mile away, I would never have known about this beautiful area. That, my dear readers, is why I love geocaching. It will bring you to places unknown, show you sights you may never have discovered, even in your own community, and brings a touch of beauty to an otherwise dreary day.

Life is too short not to notice the wonderful bounties and beauty around you. Open your eyes, live, love and geocache!
The Monarch's eye-popping, beautiful home

Saturday, August 22, 2015

You might be a geocacher if...

Those sneaky logs...
You might be a geocacher if...

You use vacation with friends or family as an opportunity to find some geocaches. What better way to explore a new area, right?

You go for a nice leisurely stroll through the woods and find yourself thinking, that is a nice spot for a cache!

You keep your old, washed peanut butter jars to transform into new caches. Let's face it, no one likes those micros anyway.

Cache hound to the rescue!
You rope your dog into geocaching with you. His nose will sniff those tricky ones out!

You have contemplated getting a pet monkey to reach those tall caches.

You have contemplated dating a tall person to reach those tall caches.

You have ever stuck your hand down a hole that you are pretty sure was animal made, on the off chance that some crazy person has hidden a geocache down there.
Screws are also highly suspicious

You have ever gone through a sewer or similar pipe to nab a geocache.

Climbing trees is a skill you perfected, because you never got around to dating a tall person or training a chimp to do your dirty work.

You look at logs with a new eye.

You look at fake rocks with new respect. They are not just for hiding keys, people.

Your phone has a flashlight app in case you find yourself doing some night caching.

Travel bug eyes!
You know that a travel bug is not an illness.

You find that long-time fears, such as spiders, conflict with your desire to log that cache, which you can see, gosh darn it, and I will be damned if I have come this far to turn back now! Watch out, 8-legged freak, the day of reckoning is upon you if you come one step closer!

You find yourself nodding along with all of these.

What makes you a geocacher? Post in the comments!