That's what surprised me about the Junk Drawer Junkies cache... No one went for it the first day. And an easy one besides. It seems like the norm is for there to be a mad rush on the first day of an easy cache. (Easy cache defined as drive to with very short hike suitable for all cars and most people.) You bring a lot of enjoyment to the hobby with your reputation for being first. The Willow Creek Cache that Team Howler put together is a good example. With your reputation for being first, I put forth an extraordinary effort to be down there first, still only beating Mike the Mutant by about 20 minutes to the cache. That "race" made the experience a lot of fun for me. It didn't matter that you didn't know you were in a race. You set a standard and I decided I was going to beat that standard. I think that's a good example of why the stats and records are important to me. They provide a standard to measure my effort against. In reality I'm competing against myself and not directly with anyone else. It gives me a goal to shoot for. My grandfather once told me a story about growing up on a farm. Him and his siblings would race the neighbor farmer in doing some farm task. The thing is, the neighbor never knew there was a race going on. My grandfather saw the neighbor as setting a standard or goal with which to beat. -srdrake >That's the old Larry. We've had our fair share of being first to a cache. On >Junk Drawer Junkies - we waited almost 24 hours after the cache was posted >to seek it out. I can't help it if everyone else was slow getting there. :-) >No more jumping in the Jeep and racing to a new cache. > >However.... >"I'm Larry, and I'm a cachaholic."