We've stopped at many Utah caches on vacation. Our caches are definately a higher quality. "Ed Philpott" wrote: > Maybe we're a quality state not a quantity state > -----Original Message----- > From: az-geocaching-admin@listserv.azgeocaching.com > [mailto:az-geocaching-admin@listserv.azgeocaching.com]On Behalf Of Ken > Akerman > Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2003 12:02 PM > To: listserv@azgeocaching.com > Subject: [Az-Geocaching] Why very few new caches lately in Arizona? > > > I've been looking at the list of new caches, and it appears that there is > very little new cache activity in Arizona during the past week. There have > been only two new caches approved in Arizona since Sept. 2, while in Utah > there have been 19 new caches approved in the past seven days. > > There are many great places to put caches in the high elevations of > Arizona. There are still many regions of the state of Arizona that don't > have many caches. I may make one or two new caches and hide them this > weekend, potentially near the Mogollon Rim. Don't complain about the heat > in the Phoenix area - the high elevations are less than two hours away and > the gasoline is less expensive in towns like Payson and Prescott than it is > in Phoenix. > > Why does Utah continue to outpace Arizona in cache activity? Utah has > less than half the population of Arizona, yet Utah has 1,893 caches as of > today, while Arizona has 1,733 caches. We really should have more caches > than our neighboring state to the north. (This has always irritated me that > Utah has more caches than Arizona. Why should Utah be a better geocaching > state than Arizona? I would like to challenge Arizona to become the best > geocaching state in the USA). > > Ken (a.k.a. Highpointer) >