On of my recent Guiding trainings was about Geocaching. I have decided that this is a suitable activity for my Rangers. Mainly as they all permanently have a smart phone attached to their hands already but I'll explain that later.
Whilst training I had hunted down a few laid out especially for us but I decided to give it a proper go 'in the wild' for practise. I explained it all to COG the night before but woke up to a horrid rainy day. This kind of weather requires a bit of extra cleverness to get a teenager moving..... I made her start her exam revision, left her until she was really fed up and then suggested Geocaching.
Finding a geocache, even in the rain, is a much better option than revision for COG!
A Geocache is a small box of varying sizes that is hidden. The box contains a log book and a little something. When you find it, you can take the little something and replace it with something else.
I was amazed how many there are close to me. There are at least 5 on my 'usual walk'.
You can find where the caches are on geocaching.com, it gives you co-ordinates and you basically walk until you are there. Then you find it, so far still sooooo boring....nope, this is where the fun starts:
Firstly, no one else is allowed to see you looking for it, it's all very hush hush and you can't let other 'normal' people know what you are looking for. So you have to do a lot of pretending to be tying up laces and texting. This makes it fun for kids, it adds a spark of magic to it.
Secondly, the damned things are very well hidden. The challenge isn't getting to the right spot, it's not even just 'not being spotted', it's actually finding it hidden under a log or magnetically attached to the underside of a seat.
COG found the one we were looking for, I was rubbish. We left a little toy cow behind. She got such a sense of achievement and discussed geocaching all the way back. Remember she is a teenager, the usual mode of conversation is a level of grunts that involved the words "Jack Wills" and "Converse".
So where does the smart phone come into it? GPS - simples. You need a GPS device to follow the co-ordinates. If you are in Guiding, you can hire them from your local equipment store. Mine does them for £1 a day. But I just downloaded an app to my phone and hey presto. Because I'm a firm believer in you get what you pay for, I downloaded the 'official' app for £6.99. But it looks like there are a number of free ones out there. I'm going to give them a try until I find one my Rangers can download and 'Bob's your mother's brother' we have an evenings
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