www.geocaching.com, which gives the GPS coordinates, levels of
difficulty and user ratings.
Leja said most cachers begin strictly as finders, although it doesn’t
take long before they begin to get ideas for hiding places.
“You’ll drive by a place and say, ‘Well, that would be a good place
for a geocache,’” she said. “A lot of times you’re trying to bring
someone to an interesting spot, something they wouldn’t have seen
otherwise. A historic spot, a beautiful scene. Then, there are some
places that are just plain random.
“Once you get into the game, then the next logical step is to
become a hider also,” she said.
“It’s self-perpetuating,” Rider added.
Once they get an idea about where to put a cache, they register
online to see if there are any others in the area, and they must
receive approval from a local geocache official, of sorts.
They said their biggest concern when creating a new cache is
determining the coordinates.
“You try to be really careful and check them out, because
depending on which satellite you pull it off of at any given moment,
they can vary a little bit,” Leja said. “Sometimes we’ll take the
coordinates, and then we’ll walk away, and then try to (find it) to
see how it comes out.”
They do maintenance on their many caches each spring.
“They disappear, or they just get ruined,” Leja said. “Some stuff
went away in the flood a few years ago.”
The pair were introduced to geocache by Leja’s sister, who lives in
Michigan.
“She’d been telling me for a couple years that we would enjoy
this, and until we actually went and did it with her we didn’t know,
and then we just jumped in with both feet after that,” Leja said.
They certainly did. Their car – or “cachemobile” – is now filled
with the various tools of the trade they need to find and hide
caches.
There are tweezers to get logs out of tiny caches, there are rollers
that allow the logs to be put back into those tiny caches, there are
gloves, walking sticks, hooks for grabbing things, a stepladder and
many containers.
They’re always on the lookout for something they might be able
to use.
“Hardware stores are great places to look for things that you
could turn into a cache,” Leja said. “It’s been fun to come up with
containers, because if your location isn’t necessarily interesting you
hope maybe your container is fun.”
The hiding places themselves can also be memorable. One in
Chicago utilized a piece of PVC pipe. The pipe had a hole at the
bottom, but needed to be filled with water for the cache to be
found.
“When you plug the hole, the water rises and the cache comes to
the top and you pull it out and sign it,” Leja said.
Another favorite made use of an artesian well, the water of
which rose and fell several times an hour.
“You sit around and wait for 15 minutes, and the water goes up
and fills this pond, and then it goes away,” Rider said. “We sat
through a few cycles just watching it.”
There’s geo-art, too, Leja said.
“People will place caches so that when you look at them on the
map they either form a design or spell something,” she said. “In fact,
there’s one up by Lennox that actually spells out ‘geocache.’”
Not content with geocaching in South Dakota alone, they’ve
gone both west and east, to Wyoming and Illinois, among other
locations.
One of their favorite spots is Chicago, which is near the home of
Rider’s brother and his family.
“(Leja’s) sister got us hooked, and we got my brother and his
family hooked,” Rider said. “Whenever we go out there, we go out
together. We actually had a couple big milestones together. The first
was, they had 700 (finds) and we had 800. …
“Then the next time we were out there we both had 1,000,” she
said. “They worked really, really hard to catch up, so we got a joint
1,000 find out there a year ago Thanksgiving.”
Leja and Rider said one of the best parts of geocaching has been
simply getting out and learning more about the community.
“We’ve lived here over 20 years, and we’ve been to places in Clay
County I didn’t know existed,” Leja said.
Rider agreed, adding, “Once you know about it, it’s like it opens
up a different world.”
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