Difference between revisions of "User:Sourcerer"
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Mon - [http://carabiner.peeron.com/xkcd/map/map.html?date=2015-08-24&lat=52&long=1&zoom=8&abs=1 Map] | Mon - [http://carabiner.peeron.com/xkcd/map/map.html?date=2015-08-24&lat=52&long=1&zoom=8&abs=1 Map] | ||
|'''264/300''' A field perimeter north of Yarn Hill, Iken, Suffolk, UK. | |'''264/300''' A field perimeter north of Yarn Hill, Iken, Suffolk, UK. | ||
+ | {{Midnight geohash | ||
+ | | latitude = 52 | ||
+ | | longitude = 1 | ||
+ | | date = 2015-08-24 | ||
+ | | name = Sourcerer | ||
+ | }} | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[2015-08-23 52 1]] | |[[2015-08-23 52 1]] |
Revision as of 00:48, 24 August 2015
Sourcerer's archives for -
2018 -
2017 -
2016 -
2015 -
2014 -
2013 -
2012 -
2011 -
2010 My favourites are highlighted yellow. Interactive Map implemented by NWoodruff.
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70 / m / 52,1
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Calculators and Links
Calculators: Eupeodes - Peeron - Ekorren's Tool - Geohash Droid (Android) - Probabilities
Links: Meetup Graph - UK Graticules - Facebook - Foonetic - Graticule Stats - User Stats - Maps and statistics - My Images - Implementation Notes - Moonrise and set
Hash Map
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Visited Graticules
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Expeditions
August
Expedition Links | Details | ||||
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2015-08-24 52 1
Mon - Map |
264/300 A field perimeter north of Yarn Hill, Iken, Suffolk, UK.
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2015-08-23 52 1
Sun - Map |
263/299 Four miles from home in a field north of Upgate Street, Norfolk, UK | ||||
2015-08-22 52 1
Sat - Map |
262/298 A front door, Hanly Court, Caister on Sea, Norfolk, UK.
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2015-08-21 52 0
Fri - Map |
261/297 A field perimeter hashpoint north of Golden Gates, Holkham Hall, Norfolk, UK.
Sourcerer issued a challenge for the Tale of Two Hashes achievement
by geohashing in a place named Golden Gate/s from the (52, 0) geohash on 2015-08-21.
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2015-08-21 51 0
Fri - Map |
260/296 In a harvested field between Fordham and Little Horkesley, Essex, UK. | ||||
2015-08-19 52 1 | 36/295 North of the river Yare and east of Buckenham railway station, Norfolk, UK.
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2015-08-15 52 1 | 259/294 Close to a public footpath south of Ilketshall Hall, Ilketshall Saint Andrew, Suffolk, UK.
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2015-08-14 52 1 | 258/293 25 metres north of a public footpath, west of Kirton, Suffolk, UK.
Sourcerer issued a challenge for the Tale of Two Hashes achievement
by geohashing in a place named Innocence (lane) from the (52, 1) geohash on 2015-08-14.
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2015-08-12 52 1 | 257/292 Tunstall forest, Suffolk, UK. | ||||
2015-08-09 52 0 | 256/291 In a wood south of Brancaster Staithe, Norfolk, UK.
Sourcerer earned the Two to the N achievement
by reaching 28 hashpoints on 2015-08-09 52 0 and is promoted to Level 8 (Coordinates reached).
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2015-08-08 52 0 | 255/290 Just off a dirt road in Fulbourn, near Cambridge, UK. | ||||
2015-08-08 52 1 | 35/289 35 metres from a house, probably in their garden, east of Helmingham, Suffolk, UK. | ||||
2015-08-07 52 1 | 254/288 In a lake! Lower Tasburgh, Norfolk, UK. Reached the next day on a second attempt.
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2015-08-06 52 0 | 253/287 Near a field perimeter, east of Sudbury, Suffolk, UK. | ||||
2015-08-05 52 1 | 252/286 In a field next to a public footpath west of Bressingham Steam Railway Museum and Garden Centre, Norfolk, UK.
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2015-08-04 51 1 | 251/285 Close to a lane south west of Flatford Mill (famous haywain painting), Dedham, Essex, UK. | ||||
2015-08-02 52 0 | 250/284 Close to a public footpath north of Twinstead, Essex, UK.
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2015-08-01 52 0 | 249/283 A field perimeter east of Great Barton, 1.3km from 2015-02-11 52 0, Suffolk, UK. |
Interesting Hashpoints
- Neil wonders if 2010-09-13_52_1 is in a tiger enclosure. The hashpoint is at Banham Zoo.
- Stealth hashing is fun but not today! Is there a get yourself arrested award?
- 2011-01-17 52 0 - A nudist beach hashpoint. Sadly it was a freezing January night.
About Sourcerer
- Expeditions - 294
- Coordinates reached - 259
- Coordinates not reached - 35
- Graticules attempted - 24
- 88% coordinates reached
- First expedition - August 7th 2010
- One hundredth expedition - August 10th 2012
- One hundredth success - February 19th 2013
- One hundred and ninety ninth expedition - February 22nd 2015 Oops.
- Two hundredth success - May 5th 2015
- One hundredth expedition in 52,1 - February 5th 2015
- One hundredth success in 52,1 - February 26th 2015
- Real name: Neil
- Home Location: Suffolk, UK 52,1
- Age: One of the oldest active geohashers. Not everyone has an updated ASG template - see Geohashers_by_age
- OpenStreetMap - New map features get uploaded to OpenStreetMap
- WikiLoc - Good walking routes get uploaded to Wikiloc.
Have all the geohashers been "Nerd Sniped"?
My user name is a play on words based on computer source-code and is a tribute to controlled folly.
I enjoy computer programming and in 1972, wrote an implementation of Conway's Game of Life in BASIC. The virtual creatures were printed on a paper roll by a mechanical teletype. Those were the days!
In 1976 I taught programming to school kids. We used Algol! We filled in coding forms and submitted them to be punched onto cards for the overnight run. The next day we'd get the error message print-outs or occasionally a successful run.
More recently I have used HTML, CSS, DOM, PHP, MySQL, Javascript and Delphi.
One of my follies is to go geohashing with a penchant for stealth hashes, unobserved, often at night. If possible, to save fuel and the planet, I visit pairs of hashpoints each side of midnight. This is great for wildlife spotting and the roads are empty. I have a spreadsheet to calculate when to set out in order to arrive at the second hashpoint at midnight. I get driving times from Google maps and estimate walking times from the UK Ordnance Survey maps available on-line from Bing maps.
Like golf and most other human activities, geohashing is totally pointless (in fact it is one of the few activities that has got an identifiable point) and it's much more fun than geocaching or golf. Many hashpoints are in the middle of a muddy field. These are a bit worthless but if there's some other attraction or challenge, I'm more likely to make the effort. In 2015 Sourcerer discovered a previously unsuspected competitive streak leading to a serious increase in geohashing activity. For some grand scale folly, see Neil's Big Walk below.
Local Terrain
The terrain in the east of England is almost flat and often quite dry. Google earth has been most useful for planning expeditions. Usually it's easy to identify hashpoints which are on private land or inaccessible for other reasons. After 100 expeditions, my success rate was 86%. In late August and autumn, most of the fields have been harvested but not yet re-planted so they are easily accessible. In the other seasons, it's often wetter and access is less easy. Hard frozen ground in deep winter is really good for geohashing.
Big Walk
Another folly is to walk from Cape St Vincent (Portugal) to Istanbul (Turkey). Starting in 2003, after 183 days walking and 3798 km, Neil had reached Vicenza in the north of Italy. The walk is about 50% complete. Neil is not seriously expecting to complete this walk but that is all part of the folly. He set out with his mother and sister. Both have since died. His mum reached a ripe old age. His sister died of cancer but she walked 2567 km before the cancer overcame her. She reached France. Geohashing is a good way to keep fit enough to continue with the big-walk stages.
Here are the walk details and photo gallery. You can download a [KML file] of Neil's walk for use with Google Earth. These paths are also logged at [WikiLoc].
This is what Google Earth looks like if you download the KML file. It makes more sense when you zoom in.
Respect Zone
Here I pay tribute to awesome contributors to geohashing. If there were Oscars for geohashing, in no particular order, these would be my nominees.
- The low profile people who set up and maintain the wiki.
- Atlanta, Georgia - for breaking all sorts of records.
- Eupeodes - for making a really useful coordinate calculator and acting on suggestions for improvement.
- GeorgDerReisende - for being so active and often hitch hiking.
- NWoodruff - for breaking all sorts of records and writing bots that generate interesting statistics.
- 2011-05-21_52_14 - I wish I'd been able to go there.
- A catch all - because there is much more effort going in, invisible, because it just works.