Geocoins vary in shapes and sizes |
Travel tags are less expensive, not as fancy, and with some luck will continue traveling, although they too have a tendency to evaporate into thin air. Many geocachers will no longer risk launching a travel bug, but I enjoy seeing where they go.
With one of our geocaching friends headed for Belgium for a couple weeks, I decided to launch a travel tag that I've had sitting around for months. I attached it to the back of a wooden wheel just to give it a bit more size so that it was less likely to be lost in the bottom of a cache, but I cut part of the tire off so that it wouldn't roll.
I just got some pictures of where it was dropped off.
A beautiful, sandy beach with a very well known name if you know any history - Dunkirk.
with remnants of war remaining to be seen.
The shifting sands don't bode well for the line of sight for a gunner, but do provide opportunity for the placement of a geocache large enough to host my travel tag. One of these days, a geocacher will pick it up and move it to a different cache.
Meanwhile, I can travel vicariously.
I've had very good luck with my TBs overseas. No so much hear in the US. Good luck with your wheel!
ReplyDeleteThanks! There's already been a bunch of visitors to the cache but no one has mentioned the trackable - wonder if it's already gone.
DeleteVery cool!
ReplyDelete