GAGA In the News
& other Submitted Geocaching News Stories
 
1 April 2006, Fort Worth Star-Telegram - Arlington Section (submitted by Steve's (of the3defaus) mom!

When scavenger hunts go high-tech

By AMBER CHISHOLM
SPECIAL TO THE STAR-TELEGRAM

On this beautiful Saturday afternoon, conditions are perfect for a hunt. With the sun out and temperatures hovering above 70 degrees, groups of about five people each make their way along dirt trails and through tall grass, hunting for something no bigger than an aspirin bottle.

The hunters aren’t just using their eyes and ears as they wander through River Legacy Parks.

They are carrying Global Positioning System devices to zero in on the hidden item.

“I found it,” someone declares. The rest of the group converges around a small cache containing a curled-up logbook and nothing else.

Geocaching, a worldwide scavenger hunt of sorts, is the game at hand. Enthusiasts from all over the globe search for caches hidden by other geocachers. They look up the coordinates on the game’s official Web site, www.geocaching.com , and then use their GPS units to conduct the search.

The discoverer enters information (usually the person’s name and the date) into the cache’s logbook. The cache may also hold items placed by the previous finder, such as compact discs, books, toys, software and occasionally money. Finders may take something out of the cache but must leave something in return.

And the caches can be anywhere. The game at River Legacy Parks was designed to introduce the game to newcomers, or “muggles.” “Advanced” geocachers serve as guides. Several caches were hidden throughout the park for participants to find.

Carol Counts, a volunteer for the day, said the unknowing public wanders by caches every day.

“More than likely you’ve passed by them and didn’t even know it. They’re in parking lots, guardrails,” she said. “I’ll be driving around like ‘Oh, there’s one right there!’ ”

Geocachers go to great lengths to hide their caches. Some hide them on the sides of cliffs or underwater. The more deceptive, the better.

“Caches are literally everywhere,” said Susan Head of Fort Worth, who plays the game regularly with her husband, Nathan.

“I saw one disguised as a sprinkler head in a place where there shouldn’t have been one,” said Nathan, smiling.

The game wouldn’t be possible without GPS and the Internet.

According to the geocaching Web site, the first cache was hidden and found May 3, 2000, in Portland, Ore., two days after the removal of the GPS signal degradation called Select Availability. The first finder was Mike Teague.

In July 2000, after finding his first cache in Seattle, Jeremy Irish met with Teague to make the official Web site. Since then, as GPS availability has grown, geocaching has exploded. Now thousands of caches are hidden in more than 220 countries.

Wandering through the park searching for more caches, Susan Head explained how she and her husband got into the game 3 1/2 years ago.

“I was introduced to it by my father, and then Nathan got into it. After that, he pretty much became obsessed with it,” she said in jest.

Geocachers, most of whom have an almost unsettling zeal for the game, brave nature and other perilous situations for the thrill of the hunt. Cold, heat, rain, snow and even quicksand don’t stand in the way.

“Nathan got stuck in quicksand once,” Susan Head said. “And he’s been bitten by a snake and was in the hospital for 48 hours.”

For geocachers, it’s not all about finding goodies in dangerous environments. Cache In Trash Out, an annual event that promotes the cleanup of the environment, allows cachers to clean up trash scattered in parks. North Texas will have three events on April 22. (More information is available on the geocaching Web site.)

Merl Pohler of Arlington tried geocaching for the first time at River Legacy Parks with his two children, Ryan and Hannah. “I think it’s beneficial because it teaches kids about technology and lets them experience new things,” he said. “Plus it gets them outdoors and away from the TV and video games for a while.”


 

- 17 Apr 2005, Abilene Reporter-News "Older Adults Find New Games to Play" (click to open .pdf file)
  
- GEOpoppy & Agape featured in this nice article by the Reporter-News
   -
DOWNLOAD ADOBE ACROBAT (.pdf) READER HERE
    


 

- 14 June 2005, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, "BOMB SCARE:  Road Closed After Ammo Box is Found"


 

- September, 2005 issue of Texas Parks and Wildlife magazine, p. 14, "High-Tech Hide-and-Seek"

- Your fellow GAGA members 9key (Will Neinke) and the3defaus (Steve & Trish DeFau) are quoted and the Greater Abilene Geocachers Association is mentioned as a Texas' regional caching group.

 
 
 

 


[www.gaga-tx.com]   [Feedback / Comments]

All custom images, links, and information cannot be used without the express consent of the Webmaster
© 2005-2008; Greater Abilene Geocachers Association (GAGA), Abilene, TX