Geo-Cedar
| Trackable Options |
Found this item? Log in. |
Printable information sheet to attach to Geo-Cedar
Print Info Sheet |
| There are 4 users watching this listing. |
-
Owner:
-
beatnik
Message this owner
-
Released:
-
Saturday, March 6, 2004
-
Origin:
-
Oklahoma, United States
-
Recently Spotted:
-
Unknown Location
The owner hasn't set their collectible preference.
Use TBG1Q4 to reference this item.
First time logging a Trackable? Click here.
This bug wants to travel to the great national forests of the world.
The elusive and sometimes evil geo-cedar. They are sometimes small, sometimes large but they love to swallow geocaches and geocachers! If you have ever found a cache in central Oklahoma you have most likely come in contact with the geo-cedar. The geo-cedar can hold caches up in it's many arms, or nestle a cache at it's base. While caching, if you see a geo-cedar staring out at you in the distance just beyond your GPS arrow, chances are, it holds a cache.
While the common geo-cedar may seem harmless enough don't be fooled. The larger geo-cedars have been known to completely swallow the novice geocacher. When it finishes feeding on it's prey it will spit out the poor geocacher leaving him/her covered in it's sticky sap and itching from head to toes. Even the small geo-cedar can swallow an arm in seconds flat.
You should always take the following precautions when wrestling with the geo-cedar. A walking stick will help you probe the geo-cedars many tentacles before waging your attack. Long sleeves are suggested to the weaker skinned folk. Whatever you do, do not slide in on your exposed belly or back or you will pay dearly.
Last but not least! Don't ever call it a pine. The geo-cedar takes great offense to being called the name of it's cousin the pine. It may be an evergreen but a pine tree it isn't. Calling it such will lead to the ridicule of your peers and the wrath of the cedar's most itchy attacks.
Gallery Images related to Geo-Cedar
View 1 Gallery Image
Tracking History (1219.7mi) View Map