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.