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Travel Bug Dog Tag Bruce the Great!

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Owner:
CachingCats Send Message to Owner Message this owner
Released:
Wednesday, August 6, 2003
Origin:
Indiana, United States
Recently Spotted:
In the hands of leopardlove14.

This is not collectible.

Use TBB99B to reference this item.

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Current Goal

Bruce would like to make his way back home to Indiana. He has had a wonderful journey, but his geocaching family would like a chance to reunite with him. Please help him along. Thank you!

About This Item

When a great white shark is born it immediately swims away from its mother. Baby sharks are on their own right from the start, and their mother may see them only as prey. At birth the baby shark is about 5 feet long already; as it grows it may reach a length three times that. The pup will live its life at the top of the ocean’s food chain. As the largest predatory fish in the ocean, great white sharks are the top predators of the sea. But before it grows larger, the pup must avoid predators bigger than it is—including other great white sharks. Many baby sharks do not survive their first year. Young great white sharks eat fish (including other sharks) and rays. As it grows, the shark’s favorite prey becomes sea mammals, especially sea lions and seals. Sharks count on the element of surprise as they hunt. When they see a seal at the surface of the water, sharks will often position themselves underneath the seal. Then they swim upward at a fast sprint, bursting out of the water in a leap called a breach, and falling back into the water with the seal in their mouths. Sharks don’t chew their food; they rip off chunks of meat and swallow them whole. After eating a seal or a sea lion the great white shark can last a month or two without another big meal. Great white sharks are found near shore along most of the temperate (not very hot and not very cold) coastlines around the world. Great white sharks have been observed along the coastlines of California to Alaska, the east coast of the USA and most of the Gulf coast, Hawaii, most of South America, South Africa, Australia (except the north coast), New Zealand, the Mediterranean Sea, West Africa to Scandinavia, Japan, and the eastern coastline of China and southern Russia. In the fall, some females migrate to warmer waters (for example, southern California) to give birth.

Gallery Images related to Bruce the Great!

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    Tracking History (40005mi) View Map

    Discovered It 4/2/2024 schwartz-hansen discovered it   Visit Log

    Coincidentally seen on the home page of the TB while searching for another TB
    I hope that´s ok? else just delete my log please - thank you anyway 🙂
    Sadly it seems that the TB is lost, since it haven´t moved for more than 6 years 😮

    Retrieve It from a Cache 8/16/2017 leopardlove14 retrieved it from Snead Park Cache Texas   Visit Log

    Hes amazing love it

    Dropped Off 7/30/2017 HoseMonkey1 placed it in Snead Park Cache Texas - 3.21 miles  Visit Log
    Retrieve It from a Cache 7/30/2017 HoseMonkey1 retrieved it from Key Cache Texas   Visit Log

    Going to another cache

    Dropped Off 7/11/2017 Itsjoma placed it in Key Cache Texas - 392.5 miles  Visit Log
    • The Key Cache outside of Corpus Christi, Texas.
    Visited 7/10/2017 Itsjoma took it to The Way to Magic Island Texas - 96.39 miles  Visit Log
    Visited 7/10/2017 Itsjoma took it to Sonora Cemetery/Sutton County Burial Park Texas - 35.54 miles  Visit Log
    Visited 7/10/2017 Itsjoma took it to HM: Fort McKavett - Fort Clark Military Road Texas - 70.05 miles  Visit Log
    Visited 7/10/2017 Itsjoma took it to Davy Who? Texas - 97.29 miles  Visit Log
    Visited 7/10/2017 Itsjoma took it to Cowboys... where are the Indians? Texas - 54.49 miles  Visit Log
    data on this page is cached for 3 mins