Hello
Every remote cache around here I do naked. I go during weekdays and have never found them crowded. Even so, its been weeks since I have had time to do any significant caching. Last one was a park and grab 2 miles from my house - no nudity on that one
We cached nude a couple of weeks ago, went to a new preserve and took the bikes. Once past a few water holes we knew one one was that far out. Even posted a nude photo on the cache page since the cache was in a swamp, teasing if we had to skinny dip to get to it.
Looking forward to a week of a lot of nude caching next month out west.
I haven't been nude caching in a while just wondering how long it's been for you?
I finely started caching in a nearby park this year. went 3 times. I have about a dozen nearby cacheson my GPS . There are two in the WMA where I do some nude hiking.They are off the hiking paths a ways soI think I can look for them nude. I'll try those after deerhunting season. If the weather keeps having these warm spells , that could be mid Jan. I have a question. My Garmin gets me close but as I walk a grid around the area it seems to lead me several feet in different wrong directions. Is that normal?
When caching under trees it is possible to get signal interference from the tree cover, same when under or near power lines. Some gps's are more accurate than others, we use 62s, 62st and just got a 64st that we haven't tried yet. All of ours have a calibrate compass button, and we do that every so often. We have found caches where the gps shows 0 feet and 40 feet away. Experience in caching and reading the hint if there is one and if a container size is listed will help you find those caches. Reading previous logs is good too, they might even indicate the cache is missing and you would be wasting your time. We have one cacher that hides caches and they are always about 20 feet off. His gps compared to ours.
When caching under trees it is possible to get signal interference from the tree cover, same when under or near power lines. Some gps's are more accurate than others, we use 62s, 62st and just got a 64st that we haven't tried yet. All of ours have a calibrate compass button, and we do that every so often. We have found caches where the gps shows 0 feet and 40 feet away. Experience in caching and reading the hint if there is one and if a container size is listed will help you find those caches. Reading previous logs is good too, they might even indicate the cache is missing and you would be wasting your time. We have one cacher that hides caches and they are always about 20 feet off. His gps compared to ours.
Thanks, this answers a lot .