Category Archives: Out and About

Sydney – here I am …

Some perfect weather for the drive through country New South Wales passing through a lot of small towns that were all unique in their own way.

In Urana, I managed to get swooped by a magpie while grabbing a geocache – the nesting season has started.

In Lockhart, the verandah town, there a number of sculptures using galvanised iron as well as a spectacular showgrounds entrance.

It was then time to join the Hume Highway to Sydney but no journey is complete without a stop at the “Dog on the Tuckerbox“, 5 miles from Gundagai.

Traffic was getting heavy and in fact 50 km from Sydney it came to a standstill.

I eventually made it to my hotel for the week – The Mecure at Ultimo. Went to park the car in the car park and kept going down and down as the car park went 7 levels under the hotel and was dripping water from the walls.

Road Trip Time – Day 1 to Sydney …

It is time for a road trip again. I am heading to Sydney for the AFAC Conference and rather than fly in, I decided to take a couple of days and drive across picking up some Geocaches and Munzees on the way.

Planned time of departure was 9:00 am and after dropping Bradley at Football umpiring, packing the car and saying goodbye to Jenny, Rachael and Molly, I was on the road at 9:01.

It was a good trip with a couple of stops before hitting the SA-Victoria Border then there were a lot of new caches to grab and I put out around 20 Munzee’s as well.

I was into New South Wales when it was getting dark and the wildlife was becoming restless. I was travelling on the southern edge of the Hay Plain and there were roos, rabbits, hares, sheep, cattle and owls (WTF). I hit a couple of rabbits but missed the rest.

Finally arrived into Jerilderie at 8:30 pm after 11 1/2 hours on the road. Tomorrow the trip continues into Sydney …

Checking out the stars at the Planetarium …

The world doesn’t stop on a Sunday but it was certainly a task to get the kids out of bed to head out to the Adelaide Planetarium.

It was this months trip for the High Range 4WD Club. It certainly wasn’t the usual trip testing out our 4WD’s but it took us travelling of another kind. We were taken on our travels by resident Astronomy Educator Martin Lewicki and was a very interesting morning. Even the kids thought it was worth the visit.

Time for some lunch at Caffe Primo Mawsons Lake then the waterbag trip back home.

Adelaide was very busy this afternoon with the Adelaide University Open Day and the Vietnam Veterans Day.

One last thing before leaving the city – chase some dinosaurs. As part of the National Science Week, dinosaurs were brought back to life sort of by the use of smart phone technology – Jurassic Science Week. It took a bit of time but we finally managed to grab a photo of one of the Dinosaurs roaming the city – lucky they were friendly 🙂

International Geocaching Day ….

International Geocaching Day nearly slipped by without me making a find as it wasn’t all that well advertised. If it wasn’t for me reading a reference to it on Facebook, I would have missed it all together.

There was a multi cache down at Frank Smith Park that I hadn’t done yet so off I went. The cache was Thanks Frank and involved finding 5 points while walking 1.2 km around the Park.

Geocaching initiated Challenges yesterday and although there has been a lot of discussion over their introduction, I carried out a couple of the Worldwide Challenges while on the walk – 10000 Fewer Pieces of Litter and Ecosystems Around the World.

I also checked up on one of my Geocaches here – 10 Years of Geocaching – Coromandel Valley as the council is doing some work putting in a cycleway right next to the cache. At this time the cache is still safe.

The last thing on the agenda was to deploy a Munzee called Frank Smith Park. What is a munzee you ask?

Munzee is a real world scavenger hunt game where items are found in the real world and captured using your smartphone and makes use of QR codes.

Alligator Gorge – what no gators …..

While the Scouts were out hiking through Mount Remarkable National Park, this left me at a loose end and an opportunity to head up to Alligator Gorge and Kingfisher Flat to grab a couple of Geocaches.

The only issue was that the legs were feeling a little sore after yesterdays trek up Mount Cavern. 🙁

Today was again overcast with the occasional rain shower which made for some good hiking weather.

First stop was up through Alligator Gorge to the Terraces and then the Narrows taking in two Geocaches on the way – Gators and Crocs! The Gorge was spectactular with a 4km walk up and back with the only issue having to walk up those stairs – sure felt those muscles 🙂

Next was an 8 km walk to Kingfisher Flat and back. With the rain over the last 2 days, the track was very muddy and I grew about 4cm higher on the walk. At Kingfisher Flat, there was a mother Emu with 6 chicks but they wouldnt stay still for a photo.

Oh, and of course there was Kingfisher Flats – a Geocache 🙂

I got back to camp around dark – it had been a good couple of days, caching and hiking but tomorrow was going to be a rest day to recover …. 🙂

 

 

Mount Cavern – five hours for one geocache ….

We have been heading to Mambray Creek for a while camping and hiking and there was always one Geocache that was atop Mount Cavern that was my nemesis. I always looked up and thought one day I would tackle this cache.

Today was that day. The weather was cool with misty rain every now and then so off I headed. I had no takers to accompany me 🙁

A few stops along the way to take in the view and I was at the summit after 3 hours.

Added a rock to the cairn, found the cache and took the steep descent to the north.

I am not sure what was harder the ascent or the descent. My legs were sore for days after.

Total trip was 5 1/2 hours but it was worth it with spectatular views both up and down.

June 12 of 12 – Copper Coast Caching …..

The hardest part of this month was actually picking 12 photos for the day. We were over on the Yorke Peninsula in the Copper Triangle (Wallaroo, Kadina & Moonta) for the June Long Weekend Copper Coast Caching Geocaching Event.

This was Day 2 of the Event which started with an Egg & Bacon BBQ and Group Photo with 66 teams and around 250 geocachers heading out at 9:30 am to try and find the 80+ caches that were hidden by everyone on Day 1, with a few bonus caches and other tasks.

Our day started well with Rachael being able to solve the 2 Mystery Caches in the first half hour but as it would happen we would only have time to find one of them (much to her disgust). We did find the 2nd one on the way home on Monday.

We started on some of the Kadina caches before heading down to Moonta then up the Coast to Wallaroo grabbing as many of the northern caches as we could before 3:30 pm. After that time we had to pick up our 2 temporary caches and return to the start point at 4:00 pm which we made with 30 seconds to spare.

We didn’t pick up one of our temporary caches and took a 5 point penalty but we probably would have ended up with a 30 point time penalty if we did get it. (I made the hour round trip after to grab it). This temporary was published as a permanent.

At each of the events we have attended, we have left a permanent cache which is a letterbox out in the middle of nowhere. The three caches are:

Official GPS Mail Only

Official GPS Mail Only II

Official GPS Mail Only III

There were a number of clever hides as well as some frustrating hides. The kids liked the Owl in the tree, Split log and Spooky Skull. The most frustrating one was the one hidden in the 10m x 5m pile of gravel which we didnt find. Rachael also enjoyed the tree climbing caches which there were a couple of. My favourites were those that involved some 4WDing to get to.

The day finished with a spectacular sunset over Wallaroo then the Presentation Night back at the Harness Club.

We didn’t win the Event with our score about middle of the pack. Jenny and Rachael blame me for stopping at too many “real” caches instead of the “event” caches. What we did win was the best themed table which was “Red” and also the Jim Beam raffle which was a 4.5 litre bottle of Jim Beam. 😀

After the Presentation finished and we did our bit to clean up the hall, I dropped Jenny and the kids back at our Office Beach Cabin and then headed out for some night caching with a group of other Geocachers ending up at 2:30 am. It was a big day considering we started at 7:00 am.

Until next month ….

The Border Track and 5000 Geocache finds ….

A few of us were having birthdays in May and why not go somewhere, camp and celebrate. I had my birthday last year at Red Bluff in Victoria so it was decided to go again.

Friday night had many camping at Pinnaroo with an impromptu Dinner at the Golden Grain Hotel followed by some planking in the Main Street.

A group of 18 vehicles descended Saturday morning to tackle the Border Track. The convoy looked impressive with a few Nissan Patrols, Toyota Landcruisers & Hilux’s and even a RAV4 and Suzuki Vitara. This was the Moderately Old Farts Birthday Bash which was to be my 5000th Geocache find.

The new Patrol tackled the sand dunes with ease compared to the Frontera last year. Conditions were a little different with a lack of rain this time round, which added to the fun. Not all made it over the dunes and many of the chicken tracks were taken (but not me :-)).

After 6 hours on the Track we arrived at Red Bluff (it was even in daylight). Camp was set up quickly – afterall I was camping in my roof top tent.

It was time for the next event – Moderately Old Farts Birthday Shindig. With the campfire going well from all the firewood we had brought and the beverages starting to flow combined with clear skies, the night was a great way to celebrate the many milestones.

The party wound up late when the clouds arrived from the west and it started sprinkling.

Sunday morning and the group split up with some heading south and west while I joined up with a couple of vehicles and headed into Big Desert Wilderness and Wyperfield National Park. There was more sand driving and also some mud as well.

After geocaching for the day, we finally stopped at the Hales residence in Dimboola for a BBQ and bed for the night.

 

Getting my kicks on Route 66 …..

This has been a big couple of days. It started yesterday morning at 4:30 am, getting on the road to make it to Barstow to meet up with Kay and Bob from Washington State. We were on a mission.

The mission: to complete the Route 66 Power Trail from Barstow to Needles over 2 days. What is this Power Trail I hear you say.

The Route 66 Power Trail is 800 geocaches hidden by Team Stevecat on the Route 66 Highway over a 126 kilometre section between Barstow and Needles, California.

The trip up to Barstow for me was uneventful but for the LA bound traffic it was a carpark due to a crash and fire on the inbound lanes of the I-15 near Cajon Junction. In another hour the sun started to come up.

My first stop was to Lenwood to pick up Kay. Her truck had suffered mechanical issues with a broken drive shaft so she was camped in her caravan at the Repair Shop. Repairs were going to take a couple of days so perfect timing to tackle the trail.

It was next into Barstow to the Days Inn to meet up with our driver, Bob. After a quick meet and greet, we were on the road to the first cache which was still 45 kilometres away past Newberry Springs.

It was time to start caching after some photos at Cache #1.

The weather was perfect for a run like this with the temperature around 20 degrees, overcast and a slight breeze. It would stay like this most of the day but on Day 2 the temperatures were slightly higher and less cloud.

It didn’t take long and we had a system running with Bob driving to as close as possible with Kay and I alternating going out to grab the cache while the other wrote on the log.

It was made easier by us finding duplicate cache containers in some of the early caches. The extras would have occurred when teams on a quick run through not finding a cache within a couple of minutes putting out a replacement. Some of the extras were within one metre of the original. At the end of the 2 days we ended up with 6 extras which have come back to Australia to form a mini Route 66 Power Trail.

The route paralleled the I-40 as well as the Union Pacific Railroad – both of which were very busy with “tractor trailers” and freight trains respectively.

By the end of yesterday we had passed through Ludlow, Bagdag and Amboy stopping at Amboy Crater on the way. The whole area around Amboy was volcanic in days gone by. These towns are near on ghost towns now as most of the traffic moves through on I-40.

Just after Amboy, we found cache #500 and since it was now dark decided to call it a day and head back on the I-40 to Barstow and crash for the night – we were exhausted. We had found 508 caches for the day and there were still 300 more caches to find with 150 kilometres to drive back to the hotel.

Today was Day 2 on the Trail and we were not as enthusiastic as yesterday. With 150 kilometres to drive to pick up the Trail, we stopped off at a few other geocaches along the way to break up the journey, finally arriving at Cache #501 around 11:30 am. Today was a little warmer and the sun was out but it was still pleasant caching weather.

There were a few side journeys to pick up other caches but most of the day was spent doing the 300 caches left to go. Again there were a couple of towns of years gone by to go through – Cadiz and Essex, traffic was light and once again it got dark before we had finished.

Cache #800 was found at 7:45 pm. We had not finished yet as there were a number of thankyou caches to do before getting back on the I-40.

There was also the drive of 180 kilometres to pick up my car at Barstow then drive another 160 kilometres back to Placentia. I slept most of the trip back to Barstow, farwelled Kay and Bob and returned to Placentia just after midnight.

Team Stevecat has put together a video of the Route 66 experience found here – Route 66 – 800 Caches

It had taken two days but what an adventure. I met up with a couple of Geocachers I have never met and spent 2 days traveliing and caching on Route 66. It was a blast with a couple of very enjoyable days with a couple of great people.

I have now ticked this one off my “Bucket List“. I havent got the T-shirt yet but have picked up a couple of Geocoins. Would I do it again – not sure but probably would ……

 

Stepping back in time at Virginia City …

First day off after 7 days and it was time for a road trip to get out and smell the roses but we didn’t find any but did find geocaches.

Peggy and her kids of 4McElfish fame offered to take me down to Virginia City to experience Nevada as it used to be.

Virginia City is one of those Wild West towns you see in the movies and of course, Bonanza. Its main claim to fame is the Gold and Silver mining in the 1800’s and that is the main draw card for tourists. The main street still has many of the old buildings of the time and some of the shop keepers dress up in period costume.

We walked around town taking in the sights including the cemetary which had a section for Firemen. Seemingly back when, people couldnt afford to be buried with a headstone and the like but the Unions and organisations of the time paid for the burials. Other sections included the Masons and Oddfellows.

The further we drove into the back blocks the more little groups of graves appeared on the hillsides. It would have been tough times back then but every second building seemed to be a saloon and there was a thriving red light district.

Further south and we had a run in with an old time prospector. In an area that looked more like a dump than anything else with old tin cans spread all over, we were hunting a geocache, when an old beat up jeep turned up with a prospector sporting a long scruffy beard telling us that here was active gold mining going on and we were on private land (you could have fooled us).

We left without the find as he wasn’t interested in what we were looking for as long as his gold wasn’t in jeopardy. He would have made more money from recycling the iron strewn around all over the place.

Next stop was Dayton where I was to experience the seedier part of life. Peggy said that no visit to Northern Nevada is complete without breathing the air in the Red Light District. Prostitution is legal in this area and even TV series have been made of the area.

Heading out of Dayton there was a Sherrif parked on the side of the road (obvious speed trap) – Peggy missed it. It wasn’t long before the Cruiser was behind with the lights flashing.

The Sherrif came up to my window and while Peggy looked for her paperwork, I started a conversation with him (out came the Aussie card). He had actually spent time in Melbourne (12 months actually) and had come through Adelaide to go to Alice Springs.

Next he asked what I was doing in town, telling him for a Firefighter Conference (bingo – the Aussie Firefighter card).

He took the paperwork back to the cruiser and returned, saying that it was on him and enjoy the rest of my stay. Peggy now wants an Aussie Firefighter in the car everytime she hits the road.

It was an uneventful trip back through Carson City to the hotel. We made 34 geocache finds for the day.