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Hints
and Tips for those Seeking Geocaches in Delaware
(For Hints and Tips for those Placing a Geocache,
click Placing a Geocache at the left.) Be
sure to read the full description of the site including the encrypted hint, and
the logs. Often you will find additional information about the site
in the comments.
The
Title of a cache site often contains hints. There may a pun
or two in there that add clues to the site location.
Don't
forget to have fun! Yes, finding a geocache is a challenge.
But take time to look around at the area your find yourself in.
The creator of this geocache site picked it for a good reason. Maybe
this is someplace you'd like to visit again just for the sheer pleasure
of being there.
Track
Up Map Orientation is sometimes easier to use than North Up
orientation. Track up puts your direction of travel at the top of
your GPS display window. Some people find this helpful since
it make the orientation of your GPS window match the actual
surroundings.
Bring
along a good compass. Even though your Gps has a
built in compass, many of them work only while you are moving.
If you need to stop the compass disappears. Also if you need
to into a forest or any place where there is some kind of
"roof" over your head, your GPS may not be able to receive
a signal. A regular compass can keep you headed in the correction
direction.
Leave
the geocache site area as undisturbed as possible. You
had a lot of fun finding the cache. Leave the site so that
others will not know you've been there unless they read the
log book. Then they can have as much fun as you did
When
choosing an object to leave as a trade in a cache container
never leave food or objects with food-like odors. Animal
noses are much more sensitive than humans noses. Animals
in the wild have
to hunt for everything they eat. They will do amazing
things to get at something that appears to be tasty. The
cache container might become a casualty.
Sign
both the cache site log book and the on-line log book.
After a day's geocaching get in the habit of logging in to geocaching.com and posting your finds.
The
next four hints were submitted by Joe Wessels
Put
cell phones in your pocket, carry bag or on
a lanyard when caching in the woods. I
was out looking for the last part of the "Points
at Stratham Farm" cache yesterday and walked back to a
spot I had been and discovered my cell phone on the ground. Without
my being aware of it, at some point in my search, the cell phone
holder belt clip slipped off my belt and the cell phone had
fallen to the ground - unnoticed. This
is the 2nd time this has happened to me over a 2-year period.
The
1st time, another geo-caching came along after I had left the
area. He found it laying there. When he got to the parking
lot, I introduced myself and asked him what he thought of the
cache. I was the FTF and only beat him by a few minutes. He
surprised me by holding up my cell phone and saying he found
it at the cache so it
must be mine. I thanked him and we chatted some about
caching and then left.
My motto is "two is a trend", so with this being the
2nd time I have had a cell phone come off my belt, I figure
it's time to do something different. I can always use
the money I'd have to spend for a replacement cell phone for
something else instead (more geo gear).
Allow
ample time to find the cache. The GPS
distance indicated is straight-line and many times there
are twists & turns and other features that will
add to the time to get to the cache (not to mention the
time to find it once you are in the area).
Have a spare set of batteries to offset Murphy's
Law.
Mark the location of your car before you leave for
the cache.
Sounds simple, but glad I did it on a couple of occasions when my batteries died on me (see above).
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