A Struggling Town Is Reviving Itself With... Geocaching (vice.com) 33
An anonymous reader shares a report: In the town of Wilberforce, Ontario, a quick detour from the main street will take you to a seven-foot-tall wooden fork that sits at the point where the road splits into two -- a literal fork in the road. Unfamiliar passers-by may think it's a joke. But to locals, this landmark goes by the name "Fork and Beans." It has a logbook hidden inside its frame and it's one of the more than 500 geocaches scattered around Wilberforce -- the "Geocaching Capital of Canada," as the town calls itself, and home of one of the most popular geocaching tours in the world.
The rise of Pokemon Go in 2016 brought with it a surge of location-based outdoor games on mobile. Geocaching, which is akin to an outdoor scavenger hunt, uses GPS to locate hidden caches with logbooks inside and predates the latest crop of augmented reality games; it was a fixture of internet culture at the turn of the millenium. Geocachers use either an app or a GPS-enabled device to search for hidden containers (usually filled with something like a notebook) that are nearby or that they've sought out online. According to Geocaching HQ, a company that created one of the largest websites for the geocaching community in 2000, there are currently more than three million of these caches hidden in more than 190 countries around the world.
For Wilberforce, geocaching is more than a game from back when a low-res dancing baby was the height of online entertainment. It's a growing industry, with new caches being hidden and special events organized every year, that is helping keep the town afloat amidst economic struggles.
The rise of Pokemon Go in 2016 brought with it a surge of location-based outdoor games on mobile. Geocaching, which is akin to an outdoor scavenger hunt, uses GPS to locate hidden caches with logbooks inside and predates the latest crop of augmented reality games; it was a fixture of internet culture at the turn of the millenium. Geocachers use either an app or a GPS-enabled device to search for hidden containers (usually filled with something like a notebook) that are nearby or that they've sought out online. According to Geocaching HQ, a company that created one of the largest websites for the geocaching community in 2000, there are currently more than three million of these caches hidden in more than 190 countries around the world.
For Wilberforce, geocaching is more than a game from back when a low-res dancing baby was the height of online entertainment. It's a growing industry, with new caches being hidden and special events organized every year, that is helping keep the town afloat amidst economic struggles.
Tourism, it's called tourism (Score:3)
And it's an old hack that lasts about as long as the trend you've attached yourself to does. So unless you can get some hookers and blackjack going as well, I hope you have a plan C when people move on to other distractions.
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Geocaching isn't a trend - it's a hobby and an activity with a huge number of active participants across the world.
PHAH! (Score:2)
You're forgetting the coins (Score:2)
You're forgetting the actual "cache" part of geocaching! In traditional geocaching, the cache is a cache, a depository, a place where stuff has been stashed away. You bring something to the cache, and swap it with something that's been left behind by a previous geocacher. The traditional objects are custom-made coins, Geocoins, which are trackable online at Geocaching.com.
I'm not a cacher myself but I work for a company that makes stuff like coins and we get a lot of geocacher customers.
Re:You're forgetting the coins (Score:4, Insightful)
it's frivolous shit that accomplishes nothing useful or edifying in any way
You mean "it's a hobby/pastime"? Yeah, it is. Like hiking, but with a game overlaid on it.
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I wish I could mod +1 Funny in a thread I've already posted in.
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Can we patent geobitcoins? Let's use as a catchphrase, "Shave and a haircut, two bitcoins!" (Obviously, would have been more applicable in 2011 or before.) In fact, let's go with GeoBitCoinCaching (GBCC) and GBNU, Geocaching Blockchain is Not Unix!
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I've had to make some physical representations of bitcoins at work (still not clear exactly what use those are), so yeah I don't see why not. Make geobitcoins, I mean. Patents don't work like that.
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Some cachers swap do-dads. Others (like myself) just sign the log and move on.
The traditional objects are do-dads or tchotkes of
Pokémon Go (Score:1)
"The rise of Pokemon Go in 2016 brought with it a surge of location-based outdoor games on mobile."
Then can you explain to me how I was Geocaching long before Pokémon Go and I owned a cell phone?
Now get off my lawn.
Ah yes, that game from way back when (Score:2)
I geocache. So far I found 2735 caches in 42 countries, so I'm not doing too badly. I remember when I first started, there was this cool website by and for nerds. It had fascinating articles, interesting and stimulating discussion, and whenever an article was posted you could count on at least a few real experts chiming in. Sadly, it declined greatly since then. What was it called again... something like 'sloshdad'.
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There's also a Degree Confluence Point nearby (Score:2)
The town is also less than 18 km away from a Degree Confluence Point [confluence.org] (45 Degrees North, 78 Degrees West) - a 'natural' geocache.
GeoCashing (Score:3)