You’re at Ground Zero (GZ) of a geocache. You’ve been looking for awhile and have come up empty. What are some other things you can try?!?
Here are some tips on how to find a geocache.
- Touch and examine everything - even if you are SURE that’s not the cache. [Be sure to ignore this advice if you are hunting near electrical wires or porcupines!]
- Come from a different angle - walk away and come back - change your angle of attack - you might see things you missed last time.
- Change your perspective – lower – higher – look up – look down
- Think about the easiest location not the hardest (unless of course it’s a high difficulty cache). Sometimes we make it harder than it is.
- Expand your search radius - remember that GPS receivers and smart phones are only accurate to 20-30 feet. Throw your backpack down near ground zero and then work outwards, searching in ever-widening circles.
- Think about where you would hide the geocache. Try to think like a hider approaching the area.
- Look NEAR things - base of tree, rock, log. It’s NORMALLY not going to be just thrown into a random bush.
Now here are a few specific ideas from geocaches we’ve encountered:
- For a tree hide, gently shake the branches, listen for sound, look for reflecting light (if it’s metal), look for something out of place
- If you’re near a fence post lift off the cap
- If there’s a hole (like on a pole), look for a wire or string that could be going down the hole with a cache at the end
And here are some “Don’t Forget” reminders
- Check the difficulty and terrain ratings. If the terrain is 3 or 4, it’s not going to be on nice level ground.
- Re-read the title and description for hidden clues.
- Reading other finder’s logs can often help.
- And there’s always the cache owner’s hint, if they left one.
We’d love to hear from you with YOUR tips!
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