I just started geocaching last year. I'm probably not what most would call a "serious" cacher...I don't go out every day, or week, or sometimes even month. I have small children, so it's not always the easiest thing to just grab and go. That said, we've had a number of glorious weekends spent up in the high country. Sometimes we do an overnight trip. More often we'll pack up the car early with a picnic lunch, get to Payson in time for breakfast, cache to our hearts content, stop at whatever beautiful place the caches lead us when we're hungry, cache until the kids can't go anymore (remember, they're little!), stop for dinner, get the kids in PJs and drive home. It is the best family time we ever have, and the kids have gained an appreciation for the beauty of nature that they would never have gotten otherwise. Just this weekend we drove up to Payson and my 5-year-old kept commenting on the view. How many little kids care about a view these days? Caching taught him that. Yes, they (and I!) love the thrill of the hunt, and them moreso the prizes, but the experience together is the real "treasure", IMO. I didn't find out about HR until a couple of days before it happened last year, so I couldn't get it together to go. I remember thinking how cool it sounded. I kept looking for a price on the website, and didn't find one. I just couldn't fathom that it was free. My next thought was that it must be really lame (although it didn't sound like it). The more I heard and read, the more I realized that it was just a really awesome even put on by people taking caching to the extreme. And I felt guilty for not even having a cache yet (still don't, but I'm working on some ideas). I told my husband that I wanted to do the event this year. This year comes around and I see a fee. And I think, "oh, man, with the time, effort, and $$$ it must take to put this thing on, I'm not going to be able to afford it this year". Times are hard at work; I'm in danger of losing my job. Then I see the fee. If I pre-register, it will cost me $35 for my family of four. That's nothing. I spend that on one night at a sit-down restaurant. I spend that on *gas* driving up to the high country (if I take my truck). I think the fee is affordable and reasonable, and regardless of the actual cost involved to put on the event (and I know there is one), I think it's fair to compensate a modest amount for what I know must be a considerable amount of time involved in setting up the event. I know how much time it takes me just to prepare to get a family of four away for an overnight trip; so I know many more hours than that go onto the people who put on HR. But, I'm not a serious cacher. I'm just a mom with a couple of kids who enjoys the opportunity to get out with her family for an (increasingly rare) form of non-electronic entertainment. -Lisa "PoledraDog"