Today was another great day out and about doing the Geocaching.com thing. It was a chilly afternoon and 6 hours of hunting them down provided plenty of reason for a hot chocolate and warm fire at the end of the day.
Today's treasures were scattered amongst cemeteries, church lots, urban community centres, neighbourhood forests, and shopping mall parking lots. We found everything from the very small nano sized with log only up to the regular sized with plenty of room for goodies.
Here are today's geocaching photos:
There was a light dusting of snow both on the ground and in the air which provided for plenty of picturesque photos of frozen creeks and snow swept grounds.
For one stop with two geocaches in one forest it took 20 minutes to travel between them. Not because of the distance, but because of the landscape of fallen trees, creeks, and plenty of bush wacking. What a joy to spend the afternoon in the forgotten forests of the neighbourhood.
Over the past month I have gone from "muggle" (someone that does not know about the game) to someone that can't wait for the weekend to start a new journey in search of treasures. If you haven't already it is time for you to learn about Geocaching.com and get outside and enjoy your surroundings!
Mashing up the latest Geocaching finds with some tips on getting the most of out of your GPS while Geocaching.
Sunday, January 31, 2010
Sunday, January 24, 2010
Sixteen Xbox 360 Games that Rock plus guides for full 1000K achievement points in under 20 hours
If you happen to play Xbox 360 just for the 1000K achievement points then you have played some awful games (e.g. Darkest of Days) and some games that rock (e.g. Jericho) plus games in between. Games have varying degrees of difficulty in achieving the full 1000K while others are not difficult but take 20 or more hours to complete.
Here are some great games that have achievable 1000K, require less than 20 hours and they Rock:
Here are some great games that have achievable 1000K, require less than 20 hours and they Rock:
- 50 Cent: Blood on the Sand (guide)
- Clive Barker’s Jericho (guide)
- Condemned: Criminal Origins (guide)
- CSI-Hard Evidence (guide)
- CSI: Deadly Intent (guide)
- Fight Night Round 3 (guide)
- Ghostbusters: The Video Game (guide)
- Gun (guide)
- King Kong (guide)
- Lost: Via Domus (guide)
- Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End (guide)
- Saw (guide)
- Sherlock Holmes vs Jack the Ripper (guide)
- Silent Hill: Homecoming (guide)
- TMNT (guide)
- X-Men: The Official Game (guide)
Saturday, January 23, 2010
Another great day of Geocaching.
Another great day of geocaching with a variety of cache types in Mississauga:
- Micro caches (really small ones with only a log),
- Small caches (small one with small pencil and few trickets), and
- Regular caches (larger ones with plenty of trickets, travel bugs and geocoins to trade)
- deep in forests
- city parks near homes
- back streets in bushes and trees
- cemeteries in trees
- public spaces (e.g. paper box, trash containers, guard rails)
- urban streets amongst landmarks
Saturday, January 16, 2010
Geocaching in Mississauga
Outside today with the trusty Magellan Triton 400 GPS looking for geocaching treasures. For the muggles out there that do not know about geocaching check out the Wikipedia entry:
Geocaching is an outdoor activity in which the participants use a Global Positioning System (GPS) receiver or other navigational techniques to hide and seek containers (called "geocaches" or "caches") anywhere in the world. A typical cache is a small waterproof container (usually a tupperware or ammo box) containing a logbook. Larger containers can also contain items for trading, usually toys or trinkets of little value. Geocaching is most often described as a "game of high-tech hide and seek", sharing many aspects with orienteering, treasure-hunting, and waymarking.
Here are some snapshots of the adventures today:
Geocaching is an outdoor activity in which the participants use a Global Positioning System (GPS) receiver or other navigational techniques to hide and seek containers (called "geocaches" or "caches") anywhere in the world. A typical cache is a small waterproof container (usually a tupperware or ammo box) containing a logbook. Larger containers can also contain items for trading, usually toys or trinkets of little value. Geocaching is most often described as a "game of high-tech hide and seek", sharing many aspects with orienteering, treasure-hunting, and waymarking.
Here are some snapshots of the adventures today:
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