Sorry Mark,is that why you're archiving your caches? i would have liked to find them
Yep our trip to Margs next weekend is cancelled now.
That at least is saving David 400km+ fuel that he was bitching about.
some win some lose.
Life is like that
![Whistle :-"](./images/smilies/eusa_whistle.gif)
Sorry Mark,is that why you're archiving your caches? i would have liked to find them
Glad this one is official, but lets face it how else can you do it? Twice yesterday I bumped into eager Bingoees on the hunt chasing the same caches, so it makes a perfect opportunity to offload those large & cumbersome ones sitting in my boot (so I didn't have to figure out where to put themcaughtatwork wrote:Temporary moves "en route" while a mate picks up the cache is OK, but gross fake logs to accumulate distance points is not in the spirit of the game.
fluffyfish wrote:They cache like "Diemens" down there....Tuena wrote:I was being complimentary ................ strategies & tactics were superior to any I had seen in the other States. abel is a play on words based on the first name of your state's namesake, the Dutch explorer Abel (able) Tasman.nutwood wrote:Ouch!Tuena wrote:My initial observation:
The strategies & tactics employed by the Tasmanians seem the most abel.
"............seem the most abel". is a positive. Able according to my Macquarie Dictionary means: having sufficient power, strength or qualifications, showing talent or knowledge.
No Ouch! intended.
Ah-ha, that makes sense. Here's the co-ordinates of the cache that was sitting next to it. Thanks.caughtatwork wrote:The published log has no co-ords, so it doesn't know where it was to start with.nutwood wrote:Here's one that's puzzling me. We've found GA4926 and yet my #26 square is still open. When I looked at the log of when I shifted it, there's no distance shown which presumably has blocked the number being ticked off. Have I screwed up somewhere?caughtatwork wrote:Not too many problems. A few weird issues which I think are more human than technological. We're going out in a few minutes to try and nab some others that are hanging around.nutwood wrote:When did you find time to do that? I figured you were glued to the keyboard sorting out our little problems!caughtatwork wrote:Yay. I finally have a green box on my Bingo card. Yay for me
Good effort, on both counts. Thanks!
If you can give me the co-ords of where you picked it up, I'll fix it.
Sorry, I thought you were pun-ishing us.Tuena wrote:I was being complimentary ................ strategies & tactics were superior to any I had seen in the other States. abel is a play on words based on the first name of your state's namesake, the Dutch explorer Abel (able) Tasman.nutwood wrote:Ouch!Tuena wrote:My initial observation:
The strategies & tactics employed by the Tasmanians seem the most abel.
"............seem the most abel". is a positive. Able according to my Macquarie Dictionary means: having sufficient power, strength or qualifications, showing talent or knowledge.
No Ouch! intended.
All fixed.nutwood wrote:Ah-ha, that makes sense. Here's the co-ordinates of the cache that was sitting next to it. Thanks.caughtatwork wrote:The published log has no co-ords, so it doesn't know where it was to start with.nutwood wrote:Here's one that's puzzling me. We've found GA4926 and yet my #26 square is still open. When I looked at the log of when I shifted it, there's no distance shown which presumably has blocked the number being ticked off. Have I screwed up somewhere?caughtatwork wrote:Not too many problems. A few weird issues which I think are more human than technological. We're going out in a few minutes to try and nab some others that are hanging around.nutwood wrote:When did you find time to do that? I figured you were glued to the keyboard sorting out our little problems!caughtatwork wrote:Yay. I finally have a green box on my Bingo card. Yay for me
Good effort, on both counts. Thanks!
If you can give me the co-ords of where you picked it up, I'll fix it.![]()
S41° 14.172' E146° 58.515'
Why attach a bison tube? I'd paint concentric circles on it, call it the "Cachers target" and write it's GCA number on the reverse. Perfect cache. Why do you need a log when the finder has to move it 1 km?Bronnie_1990 wrote:So, there's been a hubcap sitting in the nature strip near my house for the last...month and a bit.
Is it wrong to attach a bison tube, and go publish it?
Hadn't even thought of that!nutwood wrote:Why attach a bison tube? I'd paint concentric circles on it, call it the "Cachers target" and write it's GCA number on the reverse. Perfect cache. Why do you need a log when the finder has to move it 1 km?Bronnie_1990 wrote:So, there's been a hubcap sitting in the nature strip near my house for the last...month and a bit.
Is it wrong to attach a bison tube, and go publish it?
Ha! Great minds!Bronnie_1990 wrote:So, there's been a hubcap sitting in the nature strip near my house for the last...month and a bit.
Is it wrong to attach a bison tube, and go publish it?
You have moved one of those caches that do not have coordinates on the publish logs. I looked up the cache on my initial download of all the moveables and the orginal coordinate was S35° 11.391 E149° 02.002 so if you ask caughtatwork to put that in the publish log it should correct everything.Bronnie_1990 wrote:Ok now i have a technical problem.
I have #87 on two of my cards, yet i've found (and moved) GA4887. It still hasnt ticked it off. Help?