Difference between revisions of "2012-01-21 40 -74"

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== Location ==
 
== Location ==
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Featherbed Rd., within the Sourlands natural preserve in Hillsborough.
  
 
== Participants ==
 
== Participants ==
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Officially it was just [[User:Jevanyn|Jevanyn]], but I did encounter two other cars while I was there.
  
 
== Plans ==
 
== Plans ==
<!-- what were the original plans -->
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I was originally going to go in the late afternoon, if at all, because my son's [http://www.google.com?q=Pinewood+Derby Pinewood Derby] was scheduled for that day. But the snow the night before (2-3 inches) prompted the school to stay closed on Saturday, which postponed the event. After some sledding, which exhausted everyone but me, I headed out for what I expected to be a short expedition.
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== Expedition ==
 
== Expedition ==
<!-- how it all turned out. your narrative goes here. -->
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My initial approach was to not follow pre-determined directions and just drive toward the hashpoint, but I decided I didn't have the time and would likely end up stuck in the snow somewhere unnecessary.
  
== Tracklog ==
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Luckily, I know where I was going, because a strange weather phenomenon caused my GPS signal to drift. I had the very weird experience of sitting still, but watching the blue dot on the GPS travel several feet a second, as if following something else.
<!-- if your GPS device keeps a log, you may post a link here -->
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 +
As the geohash was in a fairly wooded area, the light coating of snow highlighted the damage done to a large percentage of trees, standing or lying at all angles. (For anyone not following the weather in the US, an early season snowstorm dropped 4 inches of wet snow at the end of October. Most trees in the 40N latitudes still had leaves, and the otherwise modest snowfall brought a lot of trees to the ground, disrupting power for over a week to some residents.) A few trunks pointed directly at or over roadways, showing they had blocked those roads (or threatened to) before being cleared.
  
 
== Photos ==  
 
== Photos ==  
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Image:2010-##-## ## ## Alpha.jpg | Witty Comment
 
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<gallery perrow="5">
 
<gallery perrow="5">
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Image:2012-01-21_40_-74_14-27-48-677.jpg | Many trees were damaged in the Halloween snowstorm. [http://www.openstreetmap.org/?lat=40.47400000&lon=-74.71600000&zoom=16&layers=B000FTF @40.4740,-74.7160]
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Image:2012-01-21_40_-74_14-29-55-155.jpg | Someone seems to have been here earlier, and turned around on this narrow bit of road. [http://www.openstreetmap.org/?lat=40.47403352&lon=-74.71659669&zoom=16&layers=B000FTF @40.4740,-74.7166]
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
  
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{{location|US|NJ|SO}}
 
 
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[[Category:Not reached - Technology]]        when you failed get your GPS, car, bike or such to work
 
[[Category:Not reached - Did not attempt]]  when you went to an alternate location, or decided early on to abort the expedition.
 
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Latest revision as of 02:10, 13 August 2019

Sat 21 Jan 2012 in 40,-74:
40.4743653, -74.7163425
geohashing.info google osm bing/os kml crox


Location

Featherbed Rd., within the Sourlands natural preserve in Hillsborough.

Participants

Officially it was just Jevanyn, but I did encounter two other cars while I was there.

Plans

I was originally going to go in the late afternoon, if at all, because my son's Pinewood Derby was scheduled for that day. But the snow the night before (2-3 inches) prompted the school to stay closed on Saturday, which postponed the event. After some sledding, which exhausted everyone but me, I headed out for what I expected to be a short expedition.


Expedition

My initial approach was to not follow pre-determined directions and just drive toward the hashpoint, but I decided I didn't have the time and would likely end up stuck in the snow somewhere unnecessary.

Luckily, I know where I was going, because a strange weather phenomenon caused my GPS signal to drift. I had the very weird experience of sitting still, but watching the blue dot on the GPS travel several feet a second, as if following something else.

As the geohash was in a fairly wooded area, the light coating of snow highlighted the damage done to a large percentage of trees, standing or lying at all angles. (For anyone not following the weather in the US, an early season snowstorm dropped 4 inches of wet snow at the end of October. Most trees in the 40N latitudes still had leaves, and the otherwise modest snowfall brought a lot of trees to the ground, disrupting power for over a week to some residents.) A few trunks pointed directly at or over roadways, showing they had blocked those roads (or threatened to) before being cleared.

Photos

Achievements