The initial coordinates will place you out the front of somewhere that I sometimes find myself after a long days caching. I often take a seat on the nearby public bench, and reflect upon all things caching.
Please take a seat yourself, and reflect upon your caching good times.
I like to think of all the great friends I have made, usually meeting them in dark and remote places during the night during a quest for a FTF, like when I first met CovertHypnosis aka C@H.
Perhaps you have had fun startling a fellow geocacher whom you have not previously met, putting him on the spot having to explain what he is doing, as did C@H and I to poor gmj3191 at the FTF for Under the Rotunda!
Sometimes the weather isn't great, but perhaps it's worth it for that FTF - even if my wife does think I'm mad!
I once left her in a carpark with the baby in New Zealand, while I climbed up a snowy mountainside to find a cache ... It was one of my most exhilarating caching experiences with a breathtaking view of an almost martian landscape. Check out my wife's photographs with the log - you can just make me out at GZ in the second picture.
It's great to ponder and recall the comraderie among caching companions, exemplified by the great caching run of 01/08/2011 (1 year ago) with C@H and Kellyhaunts, where we cached for nearly 24 hours, heading out to the back of Ballarat somewhere, and finishing with a 300km dash to Wonthaggi for 8 FTFs. One most memorable find on that jaunt was my 500th find at Glide With the Eagles.
The Cache
Take a seat yourself and let your mind and your eye wander. To find the final coordinates, you must reflect upon your inner cacher ...
Once you determine the coordinates of GZ, make your way to another of my favourite places and experience your own meditative moment.
(Removed Premium Member requirement on 16/11/2012)