I've tried to hide my caches (only 4 so far, that have lasted over a year, but stay tuned....I have a good multi in the planning stages) up here around Prescott in places with beautiful views, a small walk to get to but not too hard. These are also the kind I like, but I have enjoyed a few of the virtuals (places that I wouldn't have seen otherwise, educational, etc). I feel a sense of responsibility to try and make my caches "good" since most of the cache hunters are not from this area and have come a distance (usually from Phoenix), and come "up here" to enjoy the area and mountains. I know Flash feels in a similar way. Trisha "Lightning" Yavapai Co. Jeep Posse Searchers Prescott "Ford, Denny" wrote: > > I will have to agree with Cody, lately there have been some caches > that are a waste of time. I know that I have had a > couple of Altoid container caches, actually besides Chandler Mini, my > Palo Verde was one of the first Altoid container > caches. I think the best caches are ones that are unique, either > area, or the method of finding them. The best Urban > Cache I can think of was the Water Ranch (the original one) cache. > This gave you clues and made you go to one > coordinates and use your brain in finding the cache. There have been > others also, but as a group we should not be > placing cookie cutter caches just to place them. Some of the best > quality cache hiding teams (strictly my opinion) > Wyle E, Roadrunners, Cache Quest, and CB2X .(I have left off a few > teams due to bias, caching partners). When I see > their caches I know time and effort has gone into placement and I > really appreciate the hunt for caches you have hidden. > May we all attempt to achieve the quality of these teams. > > Denny > Tres Hombres > > -----Original Message----- > From: teamcbx2 [mailto:teamcbx2@ev1.net] > Sent: Sunday, September 08, 2002 8:55 PM > To: listserv@azgeocaching.com > Subject: RE: [Az-Geocaching] what makes a good cache > > > Stepping up to soapbox... > > Cheryl and I visited 14 caches today along with 2 not founds. We > visited some very cool cache sites and a couple that > had absolutely no thought, planning, or creativity involved. These > are a waste of my time, your time, and everyone > involved. Yes it counts as a find, but thats it. I would like to ask > our fellow cachers to please put some thought > into their caches. At this rate, we'll have an altoid tin hidden on > every corner of the city. There are countless > magnificent places here in Arizona as well as right here in the > valley. Please seek these out and share them with the > Geocaching community. > > Stepping down, > Cody > Team CBX2 > > > > > -----Original Message----- > From: az-geocaching-admin@listserv.azgeocaching.com > [mailto:az-geocaching-admin@listserv.azgeocaching.com]On Behalf Of > WOLFB8 > Sent: Sunday, September 08, 2002 8:20 PM > To: listserv@azgeocaching.com > Subject: [Az-Geocaching] what makes a good cache > > > With a increased number of geocacher in Arizona we have a increased > number of people hiding caches. I was just wondering > what people consider a good cache and a cache to just to add to your > stats. I am not looking for names of caches. ( I do > not want to hurt anyone feeling including mine if you think they suck) > so if we were to break it down in to > > for stats only > > almost good > > good > > I will remember this one > > great > > Hopefully this can be a tool for the cacher out there who want to hide > a cache or 2 > > Libby > We will be known by the tracks we leave behind > > > > _______________________________________________ > Az-Geocaching mailing list > listserv@azgeocaching.com > http://listserv.azgeocaching.com/mailman/listinfo/az-geocaching > > Arizona's Geocaching Resource > http://www.azgeocaching.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Although no one can go back and make a brand new start, Anyone can start from now and make a brand new ending." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~