Difference between revisions of "2010-08-08 -37 144"

From Geohashing
imported>Felix Dance
(Get on with it!)
imported>Stevage
(writeup)
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== Location ==
 
== Location ==
Just off the coast in Altona (I think), feet wetting time.
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A few metres off the coast on Williamstown beach.
  
 
== Participants ==
 
== Participants ==
[[User:Stevage|Stevage]] - I think he was alone for this one.
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[[User:Stevage|Stevage]]. Mitch and D observed and laughed. Ellen sat in the car.
  
 
== Expedition ==
 
== Expedition ==
From Stevage's description, he dropped the other skiers off at their respective houses from the previous day's [[2010-08-09 -37 144 geohash]], then drove to the beach near the hash, waded in to within 5m, the GPS accuracy level, before heading home. Unfortunately, it was past midnight, so it doesn't count as a success.
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I'd been hoping to do an aquatic geohash for a long time. This one was only a few metres off the beach, and in daylight would have been perfect - there's even a bike path running past. At 11pm, it was on the chilly side.
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Fresh from the successful Footscray cemetery geohash, we zoomed in on the spot, parking within about 50m. I wandered over to the rocks and saw that I could get to 20m without getting my feet wet. I clipped on my helmet cam, whipped off my jeans, and slipped on the sandals I had brought for the occasion. It is faintly possible that I looked ridiculous, in sandals, undies, ski jacket, and helmet camera attached to a strap around my forehead.
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At first, all went well. I delicately hopped from rock to rock, admiring the sludge and mildly nauseating odour. The lights across the water were pretty, and I could see the whole Westgate Bridge lit up. GPS in hand, I made my first steps into the mud. Squelch. Squish. The closer I got, the thicker the mud got, until simply extricating my feet for each step became a major challenge. Retrieving the sandal, even harder... Then I slipped, plunging my GPS underwater in my frantic efforts to regain my balance. Yes, it really is waterproof.
  
More detail Stevage!
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Eventually I got to within 7m, and having great difficulty moving in any direction, I called it "close enough is good enough". I clumsily waded back to shore, quickly dried off (I even remembered to bring a towel!), and drove back home. Mitch caused a few last moments of drama by revealing that he'd locked himself out. Fortunately, a passing PhD student was able to let him in.
  
 
== Photos ==  
 
== Photos ==  

Revision as of 23:52, 27 August 2010

Sun 8 Aug 2010 in -37,144:
-37.8514438, 144.8988717
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Location

A few metres off the coast on Williamstown beach.

Participants

Stevage. Mitch and D observed and laughed. Ellen sat in the car.

Expedition

I'd been hoping to do an aquatic geohash for a long time. This one was only a few metres off the beach, and in daylight would have been perfect - there's even a bike path running past. At 11pm, it was on the chilly side.

Fresh from the successful Footscray cemetery geohash, we zoomed in on the spot, parking within about 50m. I wandered over to the rocks and saw that I could get to 20m without getting my feet wet. I clipped on my helmet cam, whipped off my jeans, and slipped on the sandals I had brought for the occasion. It is faintly possible that I looked ridiculous, in sandals, undies, ski jacket, and helmet camera attached to a strap around my forehead.

At first, all went well. I delicately hopped from rock to rock, admiring the sludge and mildly nauseating odour. The lights across the water were pretty, and I could see the whole Westgate Bridge lit up. GPS in hand, I made my first steps into the mud. Squelch. Squish. The closer I got, the thicker the mud got, until simply extricating my feet for each step became a major challenge. Retrieving the sandal, even harder... Then I slipped, plunging my GPS underwater in my frantic efforts to regain my balance. Yes, it really is waterproof.

Eventually I got to within 7m, and having great difficulty moving in any direction, I called it "close enough is good enough". I clumsily waded back to shore, quickly dried off (I even remembered to bring a towel!), and drove back home. Mitch caused a few last moments of drama by revealing that he'd locked himself out. Fortunately, a passing PhD student was able to let him in.

Photos

You've gotta have some of this one!

Achievements