Welcome to the list Bill! You've joined a bunch of addicted geocaching nuts here! :) A great group of folks! You'll get a ton of preferences, as everyone has there own idea of what is good. Any GPS will work for geocaching. It all depends on how much $$ you want to spend and the extra features you want. I think you can get a GPS for under $100 now, which is what my wife uses (Garmin Etrex). I like the added features of mapping and auto-routing, yet still small provided by my Garmin GPS V ($400+). If you hide the cache - you can decide where to place it. Cache's in remote areas won't get visited very often, but sometimes provide the best scenery or historical value. Personally, I like the caches with great scenery and/or a historical value. However, I'll rarely go for a single remote cache. Once there's a few in an area, then I'll plan a caching trip to that area. Usually, if I wait long enough, groups of caches appear together. Happy Hunting! Larry Farquhar Team "Wyle E" www.happy-wanderers.com -----Original Message----- From: Bill [mailto:bill@freeholder.com] Sent: Friday, June 14, 2002 2:13 AM To: AZGeocaching Subject: [Az-Geocaching] newby Well, I am new to the list and new to the whole geocaching thing. Any recomendations on a GPS to get started? I live in the country, and could plant some caches on land not closed for the fire season. Are most of them in remote areas, or are some more accessable sites appreciated? Bill in the Willcox area _______________________________________________ Az-Geocaching mailing list listserv@azgeocaching.com http://listserv.azgeocaching.com/mailman/listinfo/az-geocaching Arizona's Geocaching Resource http://www.azgeocaching.com