Friday, August 19, 2011

Challenges.

Challenges have taken the Geocaching world by storm, whether that's in a good way or bad way is up to you. But they're here and let's take a look at what they offer us. First let me deal with some of the reasons people hate them.
  •  They aren't challenging
Okay, this is Groundspeaks fault. If they had just named them Virtuals and then Photo Caches, Action Caches, etc. This wouldn't be an issue. Naming them Challenges obviously brings up images of "Geocaching Challenges that relate to getting a certain number and/or type of geocaches."
  • I can't believe they count towards you finds! That really waters down actually caches.
Really? Oh and how are things like the E.T. power trail any better? This goes into the "they aren't challenging" argument as well. Not all geocaches are challenging, are they? What about people who already have Locationless challenges on their account, should those be taken away? How is one challenge worth less then finding 1000 micros in a row?
  • This has nothing to do with caching, get rid of it!
First off it obviously does have something to do with caching as many are GPS based. Locationless caches were once a part of caching and now those have been returned via worldwide challenges. Challenges also replace virtuals which were (and still are) a part of geocaching.
  • Well Locationless and Virtuals were archived for a reason!
Yup, Jeremy Irish actually discusses this in a Latitude 47 post that the reason Virtuals were retired is that it became too hard for reviewers to manage. This has been solved with a rating system. It has nothing to do with them not being fun.
  • Geocaching is using a GPS to find a container, that's it.
Yes but my problem with that argument is that I could care less. If I can get equally fun games like Virtuals and Webcams and Locationless caches on Geocaching.com, then why the heck not?
  • Kiss a Frog? Challenges are stupid
Okay someone could easily say the same thing about LPCs. But the great thing is that Groundspeak isn't afraid of getting rid of downvoted challenges and the fact that you can only post one per day and only from premium members. No virtual power trails here!

Let's get into the things I don't like now
  1. The new log system, right now some idiot named Comatose is spamming the Kiss a Frog one with messages. Hey idiot, being an ass is still being an ass. Anyway, they look more akin to a forum which is not what people want, getting rid of the dates is a horrible idea too. My question is why didn't Groundspeak give this a trial run? Let Premium Members sign up for a beta and then get their feedback! 
  2. Photo caches should be: "Take a photo with yourself or GPS in front of this object." Not: "Take a photo of you doing something near said object" THAT'S WHAT ACTION CACHES ARE! 
  3. Searching isn't working properly. Fix it.
  4. There currently isn't a minimum distance between challenges. This could lead to the Waymark problem where I'm logging a challenge for being on the Empire State Building, another one for  throwing a coin off of it and another one for throwing a paper airplane off of it. 
I think the worst part of this "fiasco" is that it really shows what spoiled brats geocachers are! You'd think there would be some measure of maturity for something that is (as of this second) only TWENTY FOUR HOURS OLD! But no, people are as I said above, spamming the logs, setting up facebook pages against it, disabling their actual geocaches, leaving for other geocaching websites! Are you kidding me? Honestly when PS3 players were having their credit cards stolen and online not working it wasn't this bad! It goes to what I've thought for a long time, many geocachers want to TELL YOU how you can play. To them I say "Don't let the door hit your whiny ass on the way out!".

"I've always loved a good challenge" - Lana Turner

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Finally Done...

My 100 Days In A Row of Geocaching is done. I ended my streak yesterday with 101 days caching from May 5th to August 14th. I chose not to go on simply because it isn't really necessary. Beyond 100 days I would have to go for the 365 challenge, the problems with that are:
  • Cache density in my area isn't high enough. 
  • I will have to make it through the winter months, and my experience from Valentine's Day earlier this year (trudging through a huge snowstorm to get a cache) was not fun.
Instead I want to focus on making caches. I have 7 cache ideas that I need to put in motion. My time geocaching will be spent on filling up my calendar and finding more on specific days. I want to start a vlog and I'll also try to post more here.

For some reason, July/August have been pretty quiet, geocaching event wise. (Odd because it's peak summer months) Walking Woody's Event is this weekend and there is another event in south Haldimand near the end of the month. September will be much busier with GAGAFAP and then hopefully a triple event on the 10th-11th weekend, that's not mentioning my job and starting school!

I should also mention that I'm waymarking. Yup I know, hypocrite. But it's mostly for some geocaching challenges that require waymarking (example1 and example2), so I've just started taking pictures of everything with my cell phone and if it has a waymark I log it, if not I'll try and make one quickly. I'm almost to 200 visits and have close to 50 waymarks.

I'm actually kind of excited to see what the upcoming challenges feature turns out to be, I'm going to try and post one on the first day.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Update

I haven't posted in awhile but I'm still alive in case your wondering. Most of my time is being spent on another geocaching related project which is nearing completion. The rest of it is spent Geocaching, here's an update on my current status:

  •     I was able to attend GeoWoodstock, which was great fun. I even got an autograph from HeadHardHat
  •  I recently attended the Niagara region's Cachey Awards. 
  • Released 4 new caches
  • I'm on day 75 of my 100 days challenge
  • I recently did a 25km hike
  • I'm 5 away from 1200
  • I'm close to breaking the record for most caches in a year (in my first year I had 604, this year I'm at 591)
  • I'm still going on my FTF streak
More posts coming soon, happy caching

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Multi-Record Breaking Day

Last Saturday was the COG (Central Ontario Geocachers) Mega Event in Barrie, Ontario. I set several personal records there:
  1. 1000th Geocache
  2. First Mega Event
  3. Continued my Streak with 37 Days in a row
  4. New Best Day Record with 42 caches
  5. Farthest North: Old Smokey
  6. Oldest Cache Found: Water Spout (July 26th 2001)
I'll post more on my experiences at 007 COG Mega Event soon!

    Monday, May 30, 2011

    Geocaching Bucket List

    Here are some of my top goals:
    • Find 10,000 Caches
    • Go to a Megaevent
    • Complete the Geocaching Triad (APE cache, HQ and Original Stash)
    • Find both remaining APE caches
    • Find a cache on all 7 continents
    • Find a cache near all 14 wonders of the world (natural and man-made)
    • Find a cache in 50 different countries
    • Go to an event in a foreign country
    • Get a cache in every state of the US
    • Get a cache in every province of Canada
    • Find a true 5x5 cache
    • Do a scuba diving cache
    • Get the ISS cache!
    • Fill out my Difficulty/Terrain Rating Chart
    • Fill out my Date Chart
      What about you? Do you have any big geocaching dreams?

      Sunday, May 1, 2011

      Trying Waymarking

      Today I decided to try out Waymarking again. Let me just give the problems.
      • Categories. There are FAR too many. I'm just going to pick a few at random:
      1. 7-Eleven Stores
      2. Dedicated Benches
      3. Butterfly Gardens
      4. Wikipedia Entries
      5. Traffic Parks
       By having sooooo many categories they completely water down what waymarks are worth. I probably went past 100 on my way home today. Think about FTF hounds and how many times caches are found. Would you be surprised to learn that some waymarks are never found at all? Or haven't been found in 6 years? And these are in communities, not mountain tops.
      • Finding Waymarks.  Why isn't there a map function like Geocaching.com? Oh this is why...
      • Only one Category per waymark. So for, lets say, the Empire State Building. There is probably 10 different waymarks, at least. One for wikipedia, one for New York Skyscrapers, one for New York Buildings, one for Famous Landmarks, one for 1930s architecture, etc. etc. (I'm just guessing but wouldn't be surprised at all).  I've already got 26 visits for only doing Niagara Falls, Hollywood and the Queen Mary.
      • Waymarks. Can someone tell me what the difference between Beverly Hills, California and Beverly Hills, CA.? Because they're both waymarks.
      •  Categories. Did I talk about this before? It needs repeating. Here are the sites own statistics: Over 1000 categories for over 300,000 waymarks. Geocaching meanwhile has over a million caches and only 15 categories. Most of which are barely used.
      There has been chatter that waymarking and geocaching are going to be merged. That obviously cannot happen. There's just way to many categories now. The question then becomes: Can Waymarking be saved? The answer: Probably not. The first thing they'd have to do is make multi-categoried Waymarks but from my experiences in web development it seems like that would require a huge change of the websites mechanics. As it stands now the site has barely any use, ask yourself: Am I going to go and log all the 7-Eleven Waymarks?

      Either the site is going to evolve and jump onto handheld devices or its going to die. That's the only way. Especially with Virtuals coming back to Geocaching as early as this Wednesday.

      In depth comparison of Geocaching.com to Waymarking.com
      The bounce rate is the number of times a person goes to one page and then doesn't come back.

      Okay. This is not promising.
      Oh god.

      Thursday, April 21, 2011

      May I Present: The American Civil War

      Last week I read a newspaper article about the 150th anniversary of the American Civil War. Nothing interests me more than history, especially military history. So immediately I wanted to know if Geocaches were in proximity to the battles. This somehow led me into making a bookmark list of them. Ten minutes later I'm opening wikipedia to do every battle. There is a LOT of Civil War battles, little did I know. It took me about 4 days to go through them all but I finished it with a total of 617 geocaches.

      Bookmark List

       I made sure all of them are searchable by state (search Ten. if you looking for Tennessee) or battle name (Gettysburg or Antietam for example). There's also specific keywords like Cemetery, Tour, submarine, museum, and naval. Currently I have found zero of these caches. But someday hope to have all of them.

      Some interesting ones:

      GC563E The H.L. Hunley submarine cache

      GCVCHC The High Bridge

      GC123C One of my favourite quotes