31 Consecutive Days of Geocaching? Challenge Accepted

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Nothing says we mean business more than an orange sweatband.

Some will call us crazy. Others will say we’ve lost our minds. Our grandmothers may even go so far to say we’re off our rockers. But we, the Geocaching HQ staff, consider ourselves audacious…with a sprinkle of scrappy thrown in the mix. Why? Because when asked about 31 days of (consecutive!) geocaching, we said “challenge accepted.”

Partner Programs Manager Annie Love (Username: Love) says, “My longest streak before this was 10 days so this is a good challenge to top that. If I can succeed that will definitely be a thumbs up moment! I will be setting myself calendar reminders everyday to be sure I don’t forget.”

For now, we’re busy plotting our strategy and mentally and physically preparing for the month of August (see video below). We can guarantee you that come Wednesday, when we are not in the office, we will be out frantically trying to log one…more…find. And we know that many of you will be doing the same!

Over the next four weeks, we will be sharing our stories – our triumphs and failures, bumps and bruises, and (of course) all the muggles and nanos – as we log our way one day at a time to success. We are proud to be a part of the global geocaching community and we are honored to  be able to share in this crazy month of geocaching with you …we just hope that we can keep up! Most of all, we are excited to hear your stories because we know they will help to inspire us when the going gets tough. Best of luck to you and yours.

Let the games begin.

– Geocaching HQ Staff

[youtube=(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=adp2jMfGQdI)]

50 First Dates: How to Hook Your Friends into Geocaching

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After an adventure like this, how could you not be hooked on geocaching?

Boy meets girl. Boy falls for girl. Girl forgets about boy. Boy asks girl on yet another ‘first’ date. Multiply this by 50 and you get the plot of the Adam Sandler and Drew Barrymore chick flick sensation 50 First Dates. Sometimes – between stumbling across a less-than-spectacular geocache and  landing a poorly-timed DNF – getting your friends and family to share your love of geocaching can also take 50 first dates.

Or at least it used to. We’ve asked the geocaching community for their best advice on how to turn 50 first dates into geocaching love-at-first-sight.

The first step is simple: Let us help you tell a friend! Because geocaching can at times be tough to explain (it’s…uh… finding tupperware in the woods?), we’ve created a tool that removes the awkward and allows you to send a message to all your friends explaining the game and inviting them to join you on your next adventure. Tell A Friend About Geocaching lays the groundwork to make your first geocaching outing together a success.

From here, the key is to plan well so that you know your friend’s first experience will be a great one! Geocachers (like you!) reported high success rates using the following strategies:

1. Go to one of your favorite geocaches. This guarantees the “wow” factor and removes the risk of  having a frustrating DNF experience.

2. Start off your trip by watching a few inspiring geocaching videos. Geocaching isn’t always easy to explain in words. Videos, like those on the GoGeocaching YouTube Channel, can help set the stage for your adventure.

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More friends means more fun! Increase your find count with the help of your friends. Sometimes it takes a village to find a geocache.

3. Combine geocaching with another fun activity. Casually guide your friends on a mind-blowing treasure hunt during your work lunch break or after a dinner party. Hint: Secretly plan out this adventure in advance so you know it will be a good one, but act like it’s no big deal (e.g. “What this? I do stuff like this all the time. Just comes with the hobby”).

4. Start ’em young. Kids take very little convincing….and their parents will naturally follow along.

5. Attend a geocaching event! What better way to introduce your friends to geocaching than to show them how awesome other geocachers are. You can check out the new Events & Groups tab on the Geocaching Facebook page to find an event near you.

Now that you have all these tips and tricks up your sleeve, we have one final (not-so-secret) secret for you. The timing is right! 31 Days of Geocaching kicks off in just 5 days. This is a golden opportunity to get your friends and family out geocaching…so get on it!

Did these strategies help you get others out geocaching? Do you have any pointers that we missed? Tell us in the comments below.

 

Introducing Gear Up for Geocaching: More Treasure Than August Can Handle

Win Grand Prize Packages Through Geocaching!

Geocaching HQ is helping outfit three lucky adventurers through Gear Up for Geocaching. We’re calling all geocachers, both expert and new, for a treasure hunting opportunity. Geocaching HQ has partnered with some of your favorite outdoor brands to offer you the chance to win some big-time swag.

Sign up here between August 1 and 31 to be entered to win one of three prize packages.

Each package will include treasure from brands such as Camp Chef, Mountainsmith, Greenlayer, 7eye, MHM, Kor and Skratch Labs. We couldn’t sit out on the fun, though, so we’re also giving free one-year Geocaching Premium Memberships to each winner, to help you find more geocaches than ever. See below for a full breakdown of what you could win!

New to geocaching? No problem! Geocachers of all experience levels are welcome to participate. By filling out this form before the end of August, new and existing Geocaching members in the U.S. are eligible to enter using their Geocaching username. There is only one entry per person, and the deadline to enter is midnight on August 31. Three winners will be drawn and notified in early September. In the meantime, you can share stories or photos of your August finds on Twitter with @GoGeocaching using #GearUp or connect on Facebook. Also, you can participate in the 31 Days of Geocaching: every day you find a geocache in August, you will earn a unique calendar-style Geocaching souvenir.

So grab your GPS or smartphone, sign up to win some great gear and find a geocache near you!

 

Prize Package Contents

 You can win one of three prize packages – each containing a product  from every brand listed below plus a Geocaching.com Premium Membership!

Greenlayer makes exceptional sports apparel developed with a variety of sustainable materials that provide a lower environmental impact, without compromising style, performance, and affordability.
Greenlayer makes exceptional sports apparel developed with a variety of sustainable materials that provide a lower environmental impact, without compromising style, performance, and affordability.
Camp Chef
Quality outdoor cooking equipment designed to cook anything, anywhere, no matter the size of the group.
Forged in the Rockies since 1979, Mountainsmith builds products that make it easier to bring the outdoors into your life.
Forged in the Rockies since 1979, Mountainsmith builds products that make it easier to bring the outdoors into your life.
MHM is a Colorado-based company that designs some of the best technical backpacks in the world. Learn more at www.mhmgear.com or contact us by email at info@mhmgear.com
MHM is a Colorado-based company that designs some of the best technical backpacks in the world. Learn more at www.mhmgear.com or contact us by email at info@mhmgear.com
7eye by Panoptx is the original "windless eyewear" that delivers the finest optical-quality lenses in frames designed to maximize protection from sun, wind, dust, pollen and other airborne irritants. It is ideal for motorcycle/motorcross riding, high altitude climbing, watersports, horse-back riding, and dry eye treatment. We are known for the premium craftsmanship on eyewear that are expected to last for years to come for outdoors.
7eye by Panoptx is the original “windless eyewear” that delivers the finest optical-quality lenses in frames designed to maximize protection from sun, wind, dust, pollen and other airborne irritants. It is ideal for motorcycle/motorcross riding, high altitude climbing, watersports, horse-back riding, and dry eye treatment. They are known for premium craftsmanship on eyewear that are expected to last for years to come for outdoors.
Kor celebrates and treasures water by creating the world’s most stylish, functional personal hydration products.
Skratch Labs's mission is to use real world science and practice to create the very best nutrition product. Products that taste great, that are made from real all-natural ingredients, and that are designed to optimize performance and health for both sport and life.
Skratch Labs’s mission is to use real world science and practice to create the very best nutrition product. Products that taste great, that are made from real all-natural ingredients, and that are designed to optimize performance and health for both sport and life.

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.  ONLY LEGAL RESIDENTS OF THE 50 UNITED STATES (D.C.) WHO ARE 18 AND OLDER AND MEMBERS IN GOOD STANDING OF GEOCACHING.COM AS OF THE DATE OF ENTRY ARE ELIGIBLE TO ENTER.  ONE ENTRY PER PERSON.  VOID WHERE PROHIBITED.  Sweepstakes starts August 1, 2013 and ends August 31, 2013.   For Official Rules, visit http://support.groundspeak.com/index.php?pg=kb.page&id=418. Sponsor: Groundspeak, Inc.

Name that geocache: What size is this?

CacheSizeAnswers

Deciding the size of your geocache can be a bit like ordering a coffee drink from your local coffee-snob barista—overwhelming!  Before you’ve even had your caffeine pick-me-up, you are forced to decide whether you would like a Short, Tall, Grande, Venti, or even Trenta (yes, “Trenta” is now a real size). Choosing the correct size for your geocache can be just as tricky. What is the difference between “Regular and Small”? What in the world is a “Nano”? What does it mean when a geocache is labelled as “Other”? Knowing the answers to these questions can make all the difference in getting that smiley, so we’ve created the following geocache size-guide to give you the answers to the ultimate questions of life, the Universe, and geocache sizes. And no, the answer is not 42.

Traditional Sizes

While these may seem straightforward, it can be a tough call when your geocache falls somewhere in between. CacheSizeborder2.0

Micro –  Tiny containers that most likely will only hold a log sheet, e.g. a film canister.

Small – Just big enough to fit a sandwich. Holds only a small logbook and small items, e.g. a small plastic container. Note: Please don’t put a sandwich in your gecoache.

Regular – Think shoe box. If you could fit a pair of shoes inside, you’re golden, e.g. an ammo box.

Large –  Think Bigfoot’s shoe box. If he could fit his hiking boots inside, it should probably be labelled as a Large, e.g. a 5 gallon bucket.

Other Categorizations 

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A camouflaged Nano cache container.

For times when the traditional categories simply aren’t enough, you might need to use the following:

Nano – For the very tiniest of geocaches. ‘Nano’ is not officially listed on geocache pages, so players should mark Nanos as Micros, e.g. a fake bolt.

Other – Unusual geocache containers that just don’t fit into other categories, e.g. a magnetic strip.

Unknown – For when a little extra surprise is needed, e.g. when knowing the size of the container would completely give away the find.

What benchmarks do you use to size out your geocaches?  Tell us about them in the comments below.

 

4 Tips to Avoid Getting ‘Hangry’: Snacks for the Geocaching Trail

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Reid’s Personalized Nut Jumble (Note: Clearly snacks do not belong in geocaches unless you’re actually using them as Tupperware.) 

Geocachers are always prepared. GPS? Check. Pen? Check. But wait! What should you bring to combat the growling stomach that inevitably follows a finding frenzy on the geocaching trail? To answer this most important of questions, we decided to ask our fellow geocachers here at Geocaching HQ for their top remedies for an empty belly. Here are their top tricks and tips for a great geocaching adventure!

Tip #1: Avoid getting ‘hangry’ (hungry + angry)

Family and friends can take the geocaching fun-o-meter to a whole new level, but hungry people can sometimes be cranky people. Geocaching videographer Reid Kuennen (Username: reidsomething) advises always keeping snacks on hand. She says, “One thing you should know about me before we go geocaching together is that I have a tendency to get hangry (hungry + angry) if I don’t bring snacks. Over the years I’ve learned never to navigate too far from home without my trusty bag of trail mix.”

Geoacching HQ User Experience lead Nick Botner (Username: Whiskey Bones) suggests a similar tactic to maximize your find potential and reduce the need to exhaust your carefully honed geosense scrounging for food in the forest. “If you’re going out into the wild, make sure you bring a little more than you might need. I know I can tend to get a little carried away with the whole ‘just one more cache’ so it’s nice to have the extra food and more importantly water to enable me to enjoy my time out there and not be reduced to eating the surrounding vegetation.”

Tip #2: Stay hydrated

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Nick in his must-find-one-more-geocache mode. Good thing he’s prepared with apples and beef jerky!

Staying hydrated is key to keeping in tip-top geocaching shape. While drinking water is great (we highly recommend it!), there are other ways to keep hydrated as well. Nick likes to eat apples while out on the trail: “This not only stops the hunger but also helps hydrate me. Plus, the natural sugar gives me a little pick me up.” Power geocaching couple Jayme (Geocaching Community Manager) and Ben Hewitt (benandjayme) always make sure to have a good day pack with a hydration reservoir. “Sometimes we even add lemonade powder to one of our water bladders.”

Packing in snacks is useless if nature gets to them first! Nick says, “It’s not often I go into bear country. But when I make my way into the swamps I make sure I bring a backpack that has a compartment on the top so in case I get too deep. Food and electronics can stay dry in their respective compartments.” Reid also reminds us that weather can be important when packing and snacking: “I recommend sealable plastic bags or light-weight Tupperware, both can be washed and used many times! You probably already know this, but chocolate melts, and it’s something to think about on hot days.”

Tip #3: Cache in, Trash out

Anything that you pack in should also be packed out (unless it’s in your belly of course!). Jayme and Ben warn that this is often easier said than done and can sometimes require a bit of hunting: “After we are done eating we always check the area to make sure we’ve gathered any rogue baggies that the wind has picked up.”

Tip #4: DIY Snacks with Reid

Personalized Nut Jumble:

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Reid hunting for the perfect trail mix ingredients.
  • Roasted almonds (a little salty)
  • Roasted cashews (also salty)
  • Pumpkin seeds
  • Sunflower seeds
  • Dried cranberries (preferably not sweetened… nature has sweetened them plenty)
  • Dark chocolate chunks 

How to: The fun thing is that you get to put whatever you like in it! Above are some of my favorite ingredients.

Surprise Dates:

  • Dates
  • Chocolate
  • Almonds

How to: Putting these together is simple and sticky – pit the dates & shove (gently) an almond and hunk of chocolate inside.

Now it’s your turn! What are your favorite snacks to bring out on the geocaching trail? Tell us about them in comments below!