Transcript Slide 1

Geocaching Merit Badge
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The Plan for Today
What is Geocaching?
Safety
How to Find a Geocache
Mapping: GPS, UTM, Compass
How to Hide a Geocache
Geocaching Terms
CITO
Leave no Trace
Geocaching Game
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What is Geocaching?
“Geocaching is a sport where you use a multi billion
dollar satellite system to locate a rubbermaid
containers in middle of the woods.”
~~ Anonymous
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What is Geocaching?
• Nature meets Technology
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GPS (Global Positioning Device)
Maps
Hidden Containers
Latitude/Longitude
Friends and Family Time
geocaching.com
Adventures
Slideshow: geocachinpictures.ppt
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History of Geocaching
• GPS was developed by the US Dept of Defense
• May 1st, 2000 the Government made these GPS
signals available to the public
– Removing “Selective Availability”
• On May 3rd, Dave Ulmer hid a 5 gallon pail out in
woods in Oregon
– Called “The Great American Stash Hunt”
• The first finder, Jeremy Irish, created
geocaching.com to document geocaches
• Today over 1 Million are hidden around the world
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Global Positioning System (GPS)
• What does a GPS Do?
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Tells you where to go
Tracks where you have been
Stores maps: topo, trails, street
Stores coordinates (waypoints, points of interest)
Communicates with Satellites out in space
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How does it work?
• Three Segments
– Space
• 24-30 satellites orbit around the earth at an altitude of about 12,550
miles
• Transmits position, orbit and location, and altitude
– Control
• Satellites are tracked by US Air Force Monitoring Stations scattered
throughout the US.
• Ground stations will send navigation updates to the satellites
– User
• GPS
• Uses data from satellites to calculate user’s position, altitude and
other data
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How does it work?
• To sum it all up:
– The GPS uses the time it receives the signal from the satellites
to determine location and altitude
– The GPS only needs to receive data from 4 satellites to
determine location. The more received, the better the accuracy
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Interference and Accuracy
• Interference: Factors that prevent GPS from
receiving information from satellites
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Weather
Buildings
Trees
Canyons
• Takes longer for GPS to receive satellite signal
• No GPS is 100% Accurate
• Most GPS units will get you within 20 feet of a
Geocache
– Use “Geosense” when hunting for a cache
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How to use a GPS
• Get to know your GPS before you head out
– Where is the Enter button, move up or down, zoom in or out, find
the menu, turn on backlight
• How to switch between the map and the compass
• Check battery levels
• “Mark” a Waypoint
– A waypoint is a location entered in your GPS
• “Find” a waypoint (location) or point of interest
• Edit/Change coordinates
• The Compass
– The arrow will not move until you begin to move
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GPSr
Demonstration
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GPS Safety
How to NOT get lost or run into barriers:
• GPS “where to crow flies”
– Always look at a map of area first to determine your best route
– Obstacles: rivers, streams, swamps, cliffs
• Always carry extra batteries
• Mark your car or trailhead
• Have map and compass
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Map and Compass
• Why should you bring a Map and Compass with
you?
– GPS batteries go dead
– Satellite signal is not good
– Accidently enter in the wrong coordinates
TIME FOR QUESTIONS….
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How to Determine Coordinates
• The globe is comprised of vertical and horizontal
lines called: Latitude and Longitude
• Latitude (parallels)
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Horizontal lines around the globe
North to South position between the poles
North Pole is 90 degrees north
South Pole is 90 degrees south
• Longitude (meridians)
– Vertical lines around the globe
– East to West
– 0 degrees = Prime Meridian and goes through Greenwich
England.
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Latitude and Longitude
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Latitude and Longitude
• Each degree is divided into 60 minutes
• Each minute of latitude and longitude = 60 seconds
• Format used for Coordinates:
– Degrees, Minutes, Seconds
– Coordinates at Baldy Mountain at Philmont are
• N 360 37’ 45’’ W 1050 12’ 48’’
• Geocaching.com and most GPS uses different
format: Degrees and Decimal Minutes
– Coordinates above would read:
• N 36 37.750 W 105 12.800
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Universal Transverse Mercator
(UTM)
• Rectangular grid-based map overlay
• Divides Earth into 60 zones
– Each zone = 6 degrees of latitude
• 20 Latitude bands, each 8 degrees high
– Each band is lettered from C to X (no I or O)
– Ends at 84o N Latitude
• “Easting” – measured from central meridian
• “Northing” – measured from the equator
• Always read coordinates East and then North
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UTM
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UTM
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UTM Excercise
Questions or Break…..
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Types of Geocaches
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Traditional
Multi-Cache
Puzzle
Virtual
Earthcache
Event
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Letterbox
Wherigo
Webcam
Benchmarking
Waymarking
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Geocache Sizes
• Micro
– Nano, film containers, magnetic key holder
– Typically only a logbook
• Small
– Sandwich size lock-n-lock, decon containers, small peanut butter
container
– Can fit logbook, pencil and small trade items
• Regular
– Ammo can, large lock-n-lock, think “shoebox size”
• Large
– 5 gallon pail, big wooden box
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Terrain and Difficulty
• Terrain Rating: 1-5 stars
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Steep terrain, water, cliffs
Paved trail
1 star would be wheelchair accessible
5 star may require special equipment
• Difficulty Rating: 1-5 stars
– Nano up in a pine tree (5)
– 50 gallon garbage can (1)
– 1 star would be super easy, 5 star is evil
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Attributes
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What to expect at cache location
Is parking available? Can you bring your dog?
Do you need special equipment (boat, scuba gear)
How long will it take? Is cache available at night?
Kid Friendly?
Stealth Required?
Do I need to watch out for ticks or poisonous plants?
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Internet Safety
• Obtain parent permission and follow the rules
• Never give out your email, phone number or other
personal information
• Never open e-mail or files if you don’t know who sent
it
• Tell a parent if you see or receive anything that
makes you feel uncomfortable
• Never agree to meet with anybody you meet online
• Don’t share passwords
• Don’t believe everything you read online
• Obey the laws
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Getting Started
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Step 1: Research
Step 2: Safety
Step 3: The Hunt
Step 4: The Actual Find
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Step 1: Research
• Sign up for free account on Geocaching.com
• Click “Hide and Seek a Cache”, enter a zip code
• Select the Geocache you want to find
– Pay attention to distance, difficulty, terrain, type and size
• Enter coordinates in your GPS device
• Look at map of area to determine your best approach
– In the city, use a city map
– In rural areas, use a topographic map
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Preparing to Geocache
What to take with you
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GPS
Extra batteries
Cache page
Water
A buddy
Trinkets to trade with
Pen/Pencil
Bug Spray
CITO bag
Sense of Adventure
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Step 2: Safety
• Bring a buddy
• Tell someone where you are going and when you
expect to be back
• Carry a compass, whistle and first aid kit
• Dress for weather and terrain
• Be aware of your surroundings
• If it’s hunting season, wear blaze orange
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Step 3: The Hunt
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Mark your car and/or trailhead
Stay on the trail
Watch your Footing
Use your GPS compass to lead you towards the
cache
• Slow down when you get to about 300 feet
• Once you get to about 30 feet, start your search
– Sometimes it helps to just put the GPS away and use your
“geosense”
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Step 4: The Actual Find
• Once you find it, write about it in logbook
– Use your geocaching name (handle) and date
• Take something, Leave something
• Only take a trackable if you intend on moving it
– Trackables are Geocoins, Travel Bugs and tracked on
Geocaching.com
• Put Geocache back, better than how you found it
– Many times, geocaches “move” or camo disappears
– Make sure lid is on tight
• Log it on Geocaching.com and share your
experience.
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Hazards
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Poisonous plants
Sunburn
Heatstroke
Hypothermia
Woodticks
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Mosquitoes
Holes in the ground
Uneven terrain
Disorientation
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Hiding a Geocache
• Read the guidelines on Geocaching.com
• Many parks and cities have special rules
• Same steps as finding:
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Step 1: Research
Step 2: Safety
Step 3: The Hunt
Step 4: The Actual Find
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Step 1: Research
• Where would be a good place to hide a
Geocache?
– Geocaches must be .10 miles (528 feet) away from
others.
– Think “Where would I like to FIND a Geocache?”
• Hide Geocache where there will be minimal
risk to the environment
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Step 2: Safety
• Geocaches must be safe to get to
• If on private property, obtain permission
• Geocaches are not allowed near railroads,
bridges, school property or military bases
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Step 3: The Hunt
• Make sure coordinates are accurate
• Supply a hint
• Write “Geocache” on outside of container
• You want to be sure Geocachers can find
your hide
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Step 4: The Actual Find
• Be sure to use a watertight container
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Lock N Locks
Ammo Cans
Decon containers
Do not use: “gladware”, they do not hold up to Minnesota
winters
• Put a “Cache Note” in the geocache
– This can be printed off Geocaching.com
• Put logbook in a plastic baggie
– Leave the pencil out, they tend to poke holes in the baggie
• Load the cache up with swag
– Do not put in food, fireworks, or other dangerous materials
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Submitting your Geocache
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Go to Geocaching.com
On “Hide and Seek” page, click on the Online Form
Complete all information on the form and Submit
Add Attributes
Volunteer reviewers will review your listing
– If there are questions, they will email you
– If no questions and all guidelines were followed, they will publish
your new Geocache on Geocaching.com
• Wait for that first Geocacher to log the “FTF” (First to
Find)
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Maintain it!
• When you hide a Geocache, you are obligated to
maintain it
• Read the logs that geocachers will send you
– They will let you know if your Geocache is “wet” or the logbook is
full
– If you get a few “DNF” logs (Did Not Find), you may want to
check to see if the geocache has been “Muggled” (a nongeocacher may have found it and removed it)
• When you visit the area, make sure environment
around isn’t being damaged in anyway
• If you can no longer maintain, you need to “archive”
and remove the geocache
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Leave No Trace
• Follow 7 Leave No Trace Principles
1. Plan Ahead and Prepare
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Check weather, be safe, follow land policies, know how to use
GPS
2. Travel and Cache on durable surfaces
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Stay on the trail, avoid creating new “geotrails”, avoid sensitive
areas
3. Dispose of Waste Properly
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Cache in, Trash Out
4. Leave What you Find
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“see it as it is, leave it as it was”
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Leave No Trace
5. Minimize Campfire Impacts
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Typically doesn’t apply with Geocaching, but know area
regulations
6. Respect Wildlife
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Never leave food in a geocache
Dogs on a leash
Observe wildlife from a distance
7. Be Considerate of other Visitors
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Yield to those on a trail
Avoid loud noises
Do not trespass
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CITO
• Cache In Trash Out
– Always carry a bag with you to pick up trash on your way out
– CITO Event: Group of geocachers getting together to clean up a
park or other geocaching friendly area
• DIPO
– Dog in Poop Out: make sure you clean up after the dogs
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Make CITO Containers
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Geocaching
Game!!
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Geocachers Creed
When placing or seeking geocaches, I will:
• Not endanger myself or others
• Observe all laws & rules of the area
• Respect property rights and seek permission where
appropriate
• Avoid causing disruptions or public alarm
• Minimize my and others' impact on the environment
• Be considerate of others
• Protect the integrity of the game pieces
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Resources
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www.geoscouting.com
www.geocaching.com
www.cacheintrashout.com
www.mngca.org
• References:
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Geocaching Merit Badge Handbook
http://geocaching.coollibrarian.com
http://egsc.usgs.gov/isb/pubs/factsheets/fs07701.html
http://www.maptools.com/UsingUTM
http://www.geocreed.info/index.html
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Contact Information
Melissa Portz, Assistant Scoutmaster
Delano Troop 273
612-590-3453
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What to bring with to class
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GPS devices
UTM mapping materials
CITO stickers, containers and bags
Presentation, binder stand, LCD, Laptop
Geocaching Glossary and Handouts
Geocaches, Travel Bugs, Geocoins, Pathtags
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