Even my FTF geocaching nemisis gave up on it yesterday because of the smell. Just goes to show you that just because you can place a geocache does not mean that you should.
HeadHardHat's Award Winning Geocaching Blog is a geocache treasure trove of geocaching information. Years of searchable geocaching insights await you here. HeadHardHat's GeoSnippits Geocaching Videos series can be seen on You Tube. You can also find him on his new GeoSnippits Reboot Podcast series and the Geocaching Podcast. Geocaching the outdoor treasure-hunting game which the participants use a GPS receiver to hide and seek containers called "geocaches" or "caches" anywhere in the world
So, what was the point of interest that the CO was trying to show you? Sounds like a real head-scratcher.
ReplyDeleteAnd thus the pair of ducks....
ReplyDeleteIf he wanted to find a more dangerous place he would be hard pressed. I kid you not there were old canisters of propane, gasoline cans, every kind of broken bottles and torn metal laying around everywhere. He actually marked the cache as kid friendly! Friendly how, to explain to your six year old how Bambi died? Dunno.
The cache site was even more scary where it was hidden. Picture a large truck tire with no rim. The inside of it is filled with trash, broken bottles and other crap. So you start off having to sort through the crap and look inside the tire. Can we say snake hole? Still no luck so you have to physically lift this dirty truck tire up to find the cache underneith. Talk about an accident waiting to happen. The thing is going to get muggled anyways because the hunters us it for small pit fires or to dump their garbage.. What a joke.
I'd send a note to the reviewer, not requesting that they do anything, just a note reporting the dangers around the hide. And I'd put a long post on the "Found It" cache page, warning of others of what they will run into.
ReplyDelete