You could do a space cache now. Just pick something in space and have them
send a picture of it and the coords they they were at when they took it. It
will definatly be a difficult cache. I know that I used to constantly see
yellow jeeps everywhere, but the second you have a camera in hand they are
nowhere to be seen. I've been hauling my camera around for weeks trying to
get a pic of one. Of couse the second jason finds wyle e in the wild, and
actually does have a camera... he forgets to take the all important picture.
D'oh.
Maybe the next time a comet comes around we can turn it into a cache. That
would be pretty funny to have a cache thats only available to log every 200
years or so :)
Brian Cluff
Team Snaptek
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jim Scotti" <
jscotti@jupiter.lpl.Arizona.EDU>
To: <
listserv@azgeocaching.com>
Sent: Wednesday, April 10, 2002 8:38 AM
Subject: Re: [Az-Geocaching] Celebrity in our midst.
>
> Well, that interview was before I got into geocaching.... :-) I'll have
to
> wait until the transportation system allows geocachers to get to
asteroids,
> otherwise the guys at geocaching.com will probably not approve a cache on
an
> asteroid. I think even the Yellow Jeep would have trouble getting out
into
> space (at least until Larry installs that new ACME rocket engine mod, but
> then I've seen what happens in the cartoons to Wyle when he lights the
fuse
> on that rocket - it never turns out well for him).
>
> Between Near Earth Asteroids and comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 (you may remember
the
> comet that broke up while orbiting Jupiter and crashed into the planet in
> July 1994), I've talked to a lot of reporters and film-makers over the
years.
> The producers rarely send me a copy of the film even though most of them
say
> they will, so I've not seen the History Channel program you saw.
>
> Jim.
>
> On Wed, 10 Apr 2002, Bob Renner wrote:
>
> > I was watching The History Channel last night and they
> > had a show about asteroids. One of the scientists
> > they were interviewing was none other than Tucson
> > geocacher Jim Scotti. Good job Jim. But how come you
> > didn't mention that you were planning on putting a
> > geocache on one of the asteroids?
> >
> > Bob Renner
>
> Jim Scotti
> Lunar & Planetary Laboratory jscotti@pirl.lpl.arizona.edu
> University of Arizona
> Tucson, AZ 85721 USA http://www.lpl.arizona.edu/~jscotti/
>
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