Forum Discussion
camperpaul
Dec 30, 2013Explorer
It seems to me that most of the people responding here have never been Geo-Caching.
To find a cache, you enter the latitude and longitude in degrees minutes and seconds (accurate to 0.01 seconds) and follow your GPS to the cache.
Up to date road maps are useless when the cache is two or three miles from the nearest road (those are the easy ones for beginners).
One of my most memorable finds was in the middle of an open field; when I reached the lat/long coordinates the published altitude of the cache was 35 feet above the elevation (MSL) shown on my eTrex.
You may have guessed it; I had to climb the one tree in the middle of that field.
Hit "Ctrl+A" to see how I found that cache.
To find a cache, you enter the latitude and longitude in degrees minutes and seconds (accurate to 0.01 seconds) and follow your GPS to the cache.
Up to date road maps are useless when the cache is two or three miles from the nearest road (those are the easy ones for beginners).
One of my most memorable finds was in the middle of an open field; when I reached the lat/long coordinates the published altitude of the cache was 35 feet above the elevation (MSL) shown on my eTrex.
You may have guessed it; I had to climb the one tree in the middle of that field.
Hit "Ctrl+A" to see how I found that cache.
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