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Britain’s best geocache trails

new-geocache

Rediscover your inner child with our start-up guide to geocaching. Adam Vaughan explores this fast-growing game which uses satellite technology to combine brilliant hikes with adult treasure hunts

From the remotest peaks to city centre parks, your hikes are increasingly likely to lead you within metres of hidden treasure troves. Across the UK, more than 35,000 containers known as geocaches are squirreled away in car parks, hollow trees and nooks. The South Downs is host to dozens, Hyde Park has four and even the demanding environs of Snowdon have scores. These geocaches are the key element of geocaching – a fast-growing game that uses GPS satellite technology for treasure hunts across the world.

Anyone can take part in geocaching, and the great news for walkers is that many geocache locations are an excuse for a good yomp. The concept is simple: you look up geocaches online, plot the coordinates into a GPS device and then embark on an expedition to find your hidden treasure.

The contents of caches vary massively and are mostly low in financial value. A typical find might unearth a logbook, toys and other knick-knacks, usually wrapped in individual plastic bags to protect them from the weather. Other forms of caches include events, multi-parters (where one cache provides the location of another cache) and educational geology-themed caches known as EarthCaches.

Once a niche hobby in the US, geocaching has grown hugely in the UK thanks to the falling price of GPS handsets, an army of volunteers and a healthy social scene online and in pubs around the country. “The sport is seeing an almost exponential growth and the character of the game is changing,” says Peter Howard, one of the UK’s most prolific geocachers. “It’s becoming a much more mainstream activity and, for something that frequently involves whole families participating and getting out and about, that can only be a good thing.”

The appeal is as varied as those taking part, from families turning walking into an interactive game to serious hikers rewarding themselves for challenging routes. “Imagine being on a mystery tour and being taken to something you never knew existed – that’s geocaching,” says Dave Love, a geocacher in Edinburgh. Other enthusiasts cite fun, the joy of  the outdoors and the thrill of finding a well-hidden cache as attractions.

For an activity that can appear solitary, the social aspect is important to many geocachers. “The social scene is part of the fun – it’s an excuse to meet up in a pub occasionally and swap stories,” says Nick Meredith, a regular cacher. “It shows what a pleasant and like-minded group geocachers are.”

As you’d expect for a game that relies on the internet, geocaching is moving with the times. Over 14 geocaching programmes have been written for the iPhone 3G, taking advantage of its GPS and internet connection to allow cachers to look-up caches while they’re on the hoof. Early adopters are even taking advantage of microblogging service Twitter (see www.tinyurl.com/gc-twit) to post their geocache discoveries in real-time, opening up new social possibilities. The advent of Google Maps and its integration into geocaching sites has also helped cachers who don’t know their latitude from their longitude.

Top Geocaching Websites

Geocaching.com
Run by a commercial company called Groundspeak, Geocaching.com is the undisputed king of geocaching listings and forums: it hosts over 35,000 UK caches alone.

Gagb.co.uk
This is the official site of the Geocaching Association of Great Britain and is home to a lively forum discussing UK events and UK-specific debates, such as the Forestry Commission’s stance on geocaching.

Terracaching.com
An alternative to Geocaching.com, this site is home to thousands of what it claims are ‘high quality’ cache locations. Although it lists very few UK geocaches, it is useful if you’re geocaching abroad.

Geocachingpodcast.info
If you want to hear the voices of real geocachers, this weekly podcast is a great place to start. It focuses on US geocaching, but features useful advice on GPS hardware and general tips that apply to the UK, too.

Geocachingbuddies.com
This new social networking site for geocachers shows a lot of promise. Although it’s early days in terms of the number of people using it, you may find it helps you meet like-minded geocachers in your area.

  2 Responses to “Britain’s best geocache trails”

      At 8:15 am on March 6th, 2009 Dave Jones wrote:

    This is the most comprehensive Geocaching article I have seen published for some time and I hope it attracts many new cachers to a most enjoyable and educational passtime.

      At 7:51 pm on March 10th, 2009 Peter Armstrong wrote:

    Lovely to see people picking up on this - I have recently written a thriller (http://www.lulu.com/content/3224830) based round geocaching, where you can even follow the clues and find the caches.

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