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PocketGPSWorld.com Event Article |
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The Big Geotrail: PocketGPSWorld.com team tackle High Spy
After listening to Peter we met up with Alex and Mike Alder for lunch. A short discussion ensued where the brave lads of PocketGPSWorld.com decided to take on the biggest, hardest, toughest geotrail. Off we set armed with a complete set of PDAs running Memory-Map, Anquet and Fugawi, a Garmin 60Cx, a Garmin Geko 201, a Garmin Edge 305 we were not intending to get lost…
Well we didn’t get lost, in fact between us our gear worked so well we didn’t even have any animated discussions on the routes we needed to take. The geotrail we were following was a multi-cache trail. This is where you find one cache and this then gives you the co-ordinates of the next cache. The caches also had clues to help us find the next cache.
We started off with a tricky one. The cache was hidden around a hairpin bend down a steep drop. It took us quite a few minutes to find it even with the supplied clue. Once started though we were on a roll. Except for Mike A that is. For some reason he was unable to enter the OS coordinates into his Memory-Map, despite it working in ours.
We trundled on to the second and third cache gaining in confidence, steadily gaining height. After finding the third we started up the mountain proper and the going got a bit tougher. The forth cache was secreted just off the path under a small cairn. I retrieved the cache and had a little slip on the way and banged the base of my right hand quite badly. It is bruised but functional now. Isn’t it funny how you always need to use a part of your body that you injure?
Cracking on the fifth cache was hidden within 400 feet (altitude) of the summit. It seemed a shame not to crack on and go to the top. It was a little disappointing when we reached it as the entire Derwent Water and the valley up to Kewsick was lying under a blanket of cloud. Never mind we made it…
We made our way back down to find the sixth cache near a climbing hut. This was where our early confidence was shattered. We searched and searched but could not find the cache. After about 30 minutes we had to concede and return to the hostel with our tails between our legs.
We thought that possibly the cache had been found and removed. The following day Tony (who had hidden the cache) climbed up to the hut and confirmed that it was still there. Even more embarrassment for the PocketGPSWorld.com team. However it was made good by Tony placing a card in the Geocache for a GlobalSat BT-328 bluetooth GPS receiver donated by Globalsat for the event. We thought as we had trouble finding the cache so would others…
Article by Mike Barrett on Sunday, May 14 @ 22:39:54 UTC
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