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@LostBoys5 wrote:
Wausau has lots of caches too, including the Battleship series, which I believe has over 100 caches.
106 altogether. Most (99/100) of the “grid” caches are park n grabs. Could easily be done in a day.
@Walkingadventure wrote:
Eeekk…wouldn’t that be a whoopin’ for the Ba$h. 2000 DNFs
I’m really hoping that there won’t be 63 nanos on sign posts for the bash 😆
@labrat_wr wrote:
@sweetlife wrote:
@JimandLinda wrote:
Short cache pages, huh?
GC1CY6G 😉
And not one of the last 5 logs was TFTC
in fact only 3 TFTC only logs out of 178 finds.
question: do you just put TFTC if it is really a crappy cache? or do you post TFTCC?
LMAO 😆 😆 😆 😆 I definitely am going to do that from now on.
@Walkingadventure wrote:
Some crappy caches were missing, too.
Well, I don’t know if those were crappy or not, since they were missing. Maybe they were great caches when they were there 😆
I wrote some crappy logs yesterday. I found some crappy caches yesterday 🙄 Kept hoping they would get better.
@Sloughfoot wrote:
No one needs to be an English major to write 2 sentences about their caching experience. I have never heard of anyone correcting someones grammer in a log.
grammar 😆
Congrats on the milestone, Brian. That was a fun cache.
Yes, well-done caches can lead you to some pretty interesting places. I’ve seen a lot of interesting things in cemeteries. But poorly-done caches can have you standing on graves, digging in bushes, etc. Those make me uncomfortable.
@Todd300 wrote:
I’m probably the only one here in the WGA that feels this way, but just google “geocaching in cemeteries” and you will see that it is a controversial issue so obviously others feel the same way.
IMO, caching in cemeteries should be banned.
I could live without cemetery caches.
@gotta run wrote:
Ah-course, if you’re looking for the wow factor with camping noobs or kids, make some omelets in Ziploc bags, or cook some eggs & bacon in a paper bag over the coals.
Or baked potato omelets. Wrap potatoes in foil and cook in/over fire until soft. (we usually do this the night before, so the potatoes are ready to go in the morning.) Cut a hole in the potato and scoop out potato to make a cavity large enough for an egg + fixin’s. Crack egg into potato, add fixin’s (ham, cheese, onion, whatever you want) and mix together. Replace foil around potato and set back in fire until egg is cooked.
@amita17 wrote:
Yeah, I was just confused on the “next”, and how some people use it. To me, this means Aug. 10-12, where “this” would mean today through Friday, but sometimes people use next to mean “the next”.
I looked at their website. It is Aug 10 – 12.
GC28W63 is the first cache that I saw using a QR code. It was published over a year ago.
Congratulations HP2 on your amazing month hunting lonelies. It was a pleasure meeting you and sharing one of your last lonely cache adventures for the month at Scooby Doo and the Mystery of Half Moon Lake.
@David Cantrell wrote:
Wausau area has there first Munzee. That sounds funny. It’s called Gaska Park 1 (something like that.)
Looks like there’s more than one. I know what you’ve been doing today, David.
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