Category: Extreme Geocaching
7 Souvenirs of August FAQ
I found all six souvenirs, but my achiever souvenir wasn’t issued?
Visit your 7 Souvenirs of August Trophy Case to unlock your Achiever souvenir.
I can’t see my friend’s/spounse’s/brother’s/pet’s 7 Souvenirs of August Trophy Case. What’s up with that?
You can see all of the souvenirs that you friend/spouse/brother/pet has earned on their Public Profile under the Souvenirs tab. You can find their Public Profile using this tool.
How do I delete these souvenirs?
You can hide a souvenir from your Public Profile on Geocaching.com by selecting the “Hide This” button below the souvenir you would like to remove on your Private Profile. Please note that this will not remove the souvenir from your Private Profile or the mobile app. You can make the souvenir visible again at any time by selecting “Show This”, underneath the souvenir in your Private Profile.
Oh no, it’s the end of August and I just signed up. Will there be another opportunity to earn the 7 Souvenirs of August?
Well, well… we have no plans now, but who knows? This challenge might come around again.
There’s no way I can find them all. Can I have an exemption for X souvenir?
Geocaching is about exploration and discovery. Unfortunately, exemptions are not being issued.
I have the Geocaching Intro app and I can only see traditional geocache types. How can I participate?
You can earn the Explorer souvenir by logging a Traditional geocache in the Intro app. You’ll then be able to see this souvenir in your Trophy Case, which is mobile-friendly. To earn the other souvenirs and unlock the special 7th one, you can use the website or upgrade to the Geocaching Pro app.
I found all the souvenirs in August, but I didn’t log my geocache finds until September. Do I still earn the souvenirs?
You’ll be able to receive the first 6 souvenirs by back-dating your logs to the correct date. However, the Achiever souvenir will only be issued to those who have earned all 6 souvenirs and then visit their Trophy Case during the month of August.
Break it down for me. How do I earn each souvenir again?
- The Nature Lover = Log a Found It on an EarthCache or an Attended for a CITO event.
- The Explorer = Log a Found It on a Traditional geocache.
- The Sightseer = Log a Found It on a Multi-Cache.
- The Puzzler = Log a Fount It on a Mystery Cache.
- The Socializer = Log an Attended for an Event Cache, Mega-Event, or Giga-Event.
- The Collector = Log a Found It on a Virtual Cache, Whereigo, Letterbox Hybrid, or Webcam Cache.
- The Achiever = Visit your Trophy Case after earning the 6 other souvenirs. To learn more about geocache types, go here.
What’s a souvenir, and why do I want one?
Souvenirs are virtual pieces of art displayed on your profile page that you can earn for various geocaching achievements, like finding a geocache in a new country. The 7 Souvenirs of August are extra special, as they only available during the month of August. To learn more about souvenirs, visit our Help Center.
Do I need to find the souvenirs in a specific order?
Nope! Bonus points if you do though! (Just kidding. There are no bonus points for earning the souvenirs in any particular order.)
I’ve heard rumors that Geocaching HQ has developed a very scientific quiz to reveal my geocaching alter-ego. Can you confirm these rumors?
Yes! The rumors are absolutely true. (Well, not the *very scientific* part.) Discover what type of geocacher you are: http://bit.ly/1z8vjKz.
When exactly will I be able to start earning the souvenirs?
August 1st at 12 AM your local time!
First to Find 4,355 Days Later
Remember that time we wrote about an FTF after 12 years? Maybe we weren’t being specific enough. That was a FTF after 4,337 days.
Geocachers are born to break records, to test limits, to push boundaries. So when four guys set out in a boat on a journey to an obscure island to find a geocache with impossible odds, we were excited, enthralled, even impressed. But we were not surprised. No, never surprised. The need to seek adventure is in a geocacher’s very DNA.

SK Extreme 01 is a virtual geocache on an uninhabited and unnamed island in Brabant Lake, in northern Saskatchewan. Note that Saskatchewan is just about twice the size of Germany—making the island a needle in a big Canadian haystack.
The geocache was published on Geocaching.com in 2002 by geocacher KenJamin, who was staying on the island during a guided canoeing trip. He found a topographical survey benchmark and, realizing that Canadian benchmarks weren’t published online like American benchmarks, thought it would make a good virtual cache.That’s the type of geocache for which one gathers information at a site, rather than finding a physical hidden container.
KenJamin says the virtual would be the start of a series of extreme geocaches. “The kind of caches that drew me to geocaching in the first place.”
Twelve years and zero finds later…
Team BOSS, a group of geocachers consisting of bennykidd, olemaz, scratch1, and sasktravelbugs, planned a trip. Snow and ice would force them to delay their adventure until spring. Their journey would begin with a drive from Saskatoon to Brabant Lake, a route so long and remote even Google Maps doesn’t dare plot it. And they knew the drive itself wouldn’t be a picnic. Says Olemaz, “We had heavy rains in Southern/Central Saskatchewan and if we had the same rain that far North, roads could have been treacherous. ”
Once at the lake, which is shaped more like a trailing globule of drool than a water feature, they’d cross the water in a rented boat to the island—the site of the cache. Rain, fog, and wind were of primary concern on this stretch of the journey.
Of course, these things don’t usually go as planned.
Team BOSS had, “perfect weather, perfect roads, and a perfect landing.” And the benchmark itself? It was “a fairly quick find.”
The real challenge came when the team was forced to wait to return to an area with cell service before making the phone call to KenJamin. The reward, however, was spectacular. “The phone call to the Cache Owner, KenJamin, for his required answers made our day as we knew we’d catch him off-guard and he would be stunned.”

And he was. “I vividly remember receiving the call from Team BOSS. I think olemaz said the digits from the benchmark followed by the key digit, and words to the effect of ‘does that mean anything to you?’ I admit I was stunned and didn’t make the connection at first. I paused and thought; then it suddenly stuck me and I blurted out ‘No Way!'”
Gold, guts, and glory?
Not quite. Despite this, olemaz says there was great deal of excitement and adventure for sure. “The best moment of the trip was seeing the beauty of nature in this world and the camaraderie among geocaching friends having fun.”
What’s next for Team BOSS?
Among other things on a long, long bucket list…
- Olemaz wants to complete the Jasmer Challenge—to find one geocache hidden in each month since May 2000. He is only four finds away.
- Scratch1 plans to find a geocache in every province and territory in Canada. When that’s done, he’ll find a geocache in every state in the U.S.
- Bennykidd is just going to go out and find more geocaches, all over, from one coastline to the other!
- Sasktravelbugs has the last “APE” geocache in Brazil in his sights. He also needs to find caches on only one more continent to complete the 7-continent challenge.
And KenJamin?
“As I reflect on this, the first cache in the series, I recall and appreciate all the great logs and pictures I have received as a result. The three caches and the cachers that have visited them have made the distance, hikes and effort to place them repaid ten fold. As far as my future geocaching adventures go I have ambitions for areas in and around Arches and Grand Canyon National Parks. Cache recommendations would be appreciated.”
Want to read more about this epic adventure? Check out the audio of an interview with Team BOSS on http://www.livingskies2014.ca/ or http://www.podcacher.com/2014/06/show-474-1-pmm-ftf-12-years-later/.

Terezin Games Mega-Event

Editor’s note: Geocaching HQ staff are attending dozens of Mega-Events around the world, shaking hands, sharing stories of adventure, and of course, geocaching. Each person at Geocaching HQ brings their own unique talent to advancing the adventure. Some write code for the website, others design images for the apps, and some shoot videos explaining it all. Eric Schudiske is the Geocaching HQ staff member behind Geocaching.com social media and public relations. He recently traveled to the Czech Republic to join nearly a thousand people in celebrating geocaching and the geocaching community at the Terezin Games 2014. Here’s his story.

There’s something you need to know about the location of this Mega-Event. It’s not pleasant, but it’s important. History has visited Terezin in the Czech Republic in almost all its forms, but perhaps none more than tragedy.
The Austro-Hungarian Empire staked a claim here with a city-sized fortress in the 1700’s. Gavrilo Princip, the gunman who triggered World War I with the assassination of Archduke Ferdinand died in prison here. There’s more. The atrocities of the Holocaust claimed Terezin when the Nazi Gestapo turned the walled fortress into a Jewish ghetto and concentration camp. After World War II, former captors became prisoners. Nazis and ethnic Germans were detained in Terezin until 1948.
That’s the textbook backdrop that cannot be ignored. That’s the history of this location and context of this event. Thousands of questions will never be answered about Terezin. But the geocaching Mega-Event offers some help. The event organizers take this fragile piece of shared history off the mantle. They do not hide it. They offer context.

Geocaching, at its most powerful, provides a clearer lens into the past by revealing a hidden history. Among the events, one held a special gravity for me. It translated to “Talking to a Witness“. 92-year-old Lisa Mikova spoke for more than an hour. She survived the Terezin concentration camp. She survived Auschwitz. She survived the fire bombing of Dresden. This miraculous woman spoke to two large groups of geocachers about her will to survive and the cost of the Holocaust to her family and culture.
Her voice echoed through the rest of the event, and I imagine others will keep her stories with them their entire lives. I know I will.
During another event, stories were also shared about the thousands of Austro-Hungarian soldiers who garrisoned the fort in the nineteenth century. Another event told the history of the city itself. I’ve learned this: geocachers are curious and seek to understand locations and the stories they hold.

A firm knowledge and respect for the history of the location helped geocachers create an event which offered an insight into our past and a unity in our present. With the blessing and support of the state agency which oversees Terezin, the Terezin Games 2014 Mega-Event was planned. More than a 1000 geocachers from across Europe (and one Geocaching HQ staffer from the United States) attended.
The games were a type of offbeat marathon, challenging teams of four at every level. It was also what we hope geocaching events around the world deliver: plain fun. It was something else: not normal. There’s perhaps no other place in the world where activities take you deep in the belly of a fort which was built four years after the United States of America became a country, and then off to fire a giant air cannon, or maybe play bubble soccer, or maybe talk to soldiers in authentic period dress. Geocachers know how to entertain, no matter where you find them.

There was also a chance to break the record for the longest towel (of course). The events were perfect conduits to meet the great people who attended (and there were many great people). It’s the same way I feel about crackers and cheese. Crackers are just an excuse to eat more cheese. Events are just an excuse to meet more people. This was a rockstar event. The geocacher who owns the world’s most found geocache was in attendance. A geocacher with about 500 first to finds was also in attendance, and probably won’t read this blog post, because you know; beep beep… first to find alarm, go get ’em.
To be honest, the Terezin Games ended up as two events for me. I’ve moved them into two different pockets in my brain. There was the past: honored and respected. And then there was the present: appreciated and welcomed. It’s perfect they’re both reflected in one smiley and Mega-Event souvenir, because both can exist together. Check out the pictures below for a little glimpse of what it was like. A very special thank you to Marketa and the organizing committee for the Terezin Games (all 90+ of them). You did an excellent job. Hope to see you all in Seattle soon!






The Madness After Maker Madness
Get ready to find some amazing geocaches this summer!


When geocache makers go mad, you’re the real winner. Get this. From March 28 – April 7, over 21,000 geocachers in more than 50 countries took the Maker Pledge. By signing this pledge, geocachers around the world promised to “live and breathe by Favorite Points, obtain joy from long and in-depth logs, perform maintenance when it’s needed (and before), inspire geocachers with photos and stories of your hides, and most of all, hide innovative and creative geocaches.” When these new pledges hide a geocache, there will be thousands of mind-blowing, stunning, life-altering (too much?) new geocaches out in the wild, just waiting for you to discover them.
It’s true, the 11 days of Maker Madness have come to end, but that doesn’t mean we are done saying “hurrah” to great geocaches and their makers. Say thank you to a great geocache maker today, ask them to show you the geocache hiding ropes, and sign your own Maker Pledge. Here are a few resources to keep your creative juices flowing, get inspired, and share the Maker Madness all year long:
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The Beginner’s Guide to Hiding a Geocache video
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Geocache of the Week (every Thursday!) on The Geocaching Blog
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7 tips and tricks for creating the ultimate geocaching experience
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Makers’ Secrets Revealed: Blueprints for 3 Amazing Geocache Hides
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Creative Geocache Hides on Pinterest

What are you waiting for? Go forth & create! And tell us, should we revisit Maker Madness in 2015?

