Difference between revisions of "2014-07-14 -12 130"

From Geohashing
imported>Felix Dance
(Created page)
 
m (Location correction)
 
(13 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 7: Line 7:
 
__NOTOC__
 
__NOTOC__
 
== Location ==
 
== Location ==
Just off the coast in Coconut Grove.
+
Just off the coast of Ludmilla, Darwin.
  
 
== Participants ==
 
== Participants ==
Line 13: Line 13:
  
 
== Expedition ==
 
== Expedition ==
 +
I saw this interesting and seemingly accessible geohash on Saturday and immediately halted all plans for the Monday evening.  I was soon informed by my friend [[User:Lachie|Lachie]] that there was also a (somewhat) accessible [[Globalhash|GLOBOHASH]] that very same day.  Spending some seconds weighing up the two I sadly decided to ditch the globohash and concentrate on the local one (the 3,000 kilometre round trip drive required for the globohash had something to do with the decision).
  
 +
Setting out after work on my bike towards the hash, my erst-while companion Bec having abandoned me for the preferred activity of sleep, I came to a sign on a gate warning me of an Aboriginal burial ground in the vicinity.  I justified my continued hashing by finding the sign unspecific as to the extent of the burial ground and I planned to enter via the back way.
  
I rode kms and reached the hash at about 8pm.
+
Making my way around the hash-area to the beach I soon realised the hash would be far harder than predicted.  The beach was entirely covered in mangroves and vegetable detritus impairing access. My road bike was no match for the sand and swampland and I had to push it along for about a km.  When I got to the closest beach access I discovered an even bigger problem: the hash was 60m out to sea through croc-infested mangrove marshland.
  
[ Here] is the route of my trip.
+
At this point I gave up.  Only a few weeks ago a man was ripped out of his boat in a park near Darwin and torn literally in two by competing crocs.  Several times a year people from this town are consumed by these dinosaurs and I was in prime crocodile territory.  Getting into the water was not an option.
 +
 
 +
But just as I was about to walk away I thought 'Stuff it', and suddenly found myself taking off my shoes and socks, donning my bike light, GPS and phone and venturing out into the marsh.
 +
 
 +
It was a surreal and creepy experience.  The tide was up and waves washed in and out around the gnarled mangrove forest.  My feet sunk into the mud, feeling the mangrove root tentacles and the pointy shells of buried hermit crabs.  I bristled at every un-sourced sound: splashes, squelches, bubbles, rustles and murmurs.  Occasionally, the mud next to my submerged legs would erupt in spurts of entrained air and something lizard-like would eject from a hole and swim away.  I was a feeding-bonanza for insects of all shapes, sizes and hums.
 +
 
 +
It took me half an hour to venture the 60m out into the ocean, with the water around my legs getting deeper and more impenetrable.  Soon I turned left into the thick mangrove forest and was entirely concealed from above.  Clambering over the roots and squelching through the mud I arrived at the hash in a triumph.  I took photos and sent text messages.  It was now that I realised the tide had receded substantially and I was surrounded by a mud-field.
 +
 
 +
I returned tentatively, taking another half-hour of clambering and freaking out at strange noises, once getting turned around and venturing another 20m out to sea, before I finally arrived back on the beach.  My bike was some distance away, flashing its beacon.  I walked back and rode home, arriving just after 10pm.
 +
 
 +
Covered in sand, mud and insect bites I told the story to my housemate - a Darwinian ecologist (i.e. an ecologist born in Darwin) who knows the area intimately.  He was shocked: "You really could have been taken by a croc out there!" he assured me.  It took a couple of shots of gin to get to sleep that night.
 +
 
 +
I rode 14.6kms and reached the hash at 8:40pm.
 +
 
 +
[https://goo.gl/maps/NC2wu Here] is the route of my trip.
  
 
== Photos ==  
 
== Photos ==  
 
<gallery perrow="6">
 
<gallery perrow="6">
 +
Image:Geohash 2014-07-14 -12 130 01 Sign.JPG|Burial ground sign
 +
Image:Geohash 2014-07-14 -12 130 02 Mangroves.JPG|Mangrove-hash!
 +
Image:Geohash 2014-07-14 -12 130 03 Water.JPG|Wading towards the hash
 +
Image:Geohash 2014-07-14 -12 130 04 Hermit.JPG|Hermit crabs everywhere
 +
Image:Geohash 2014-07-14 -12 130 05 Felix.JPG|Felix at the hash
 +
Image:Geohash 2014-07-14 -12 130 06 GPS.JPG|GPS proof
 +
Image:Geohash 2014-07-14 -12 130 07 Mud.JPG|Receding tide on the way out
 +
Image:Geohash 2014-07-14 -12 130 08 Crab.JPG|All sorts of crabs
 +
Image:Geohash 2014-07-14 -12 130 09 Boat.JPG|Upturned boat - note bullet-holes from unsuccessful defence against croc attack
 +
Image:Geohash 2014-07-14 -12 130 10 Bike.JPG|Waiting bike
 +
Image:Geohash 2014-07-14 -12 130 11 Beach.JPG|Beach walk home
  
 +
</gallery>
  
 
{{bicycle geohash
 
{{bicycle geohash
Line 28: Line 56:
 
| date = 2014-07-14
 
| date = 2014-07-14
 
| name = Felix Dance
 
| name = Felix Dance
| distance = kms
+
| distance = 14.6kms
 
| bothways = true
 
| bothways = true
| image =  
+
| image = Geohash 2014-07-14 -12 130 11 Beach.JPG
 
}}
 
}}
 +
 +
{{water geohash
 +
 +
    | latitude = -12
 +
    | longitude = 130
 +
    | date = 2014-07-14
 +
    | name = Felix Dance
 +
    | image = Geohash 2014-07-14 -12 130 03 Water.JPG|Wading towards the hash
 +
    | vehicle = Foot
 +
}}
  
 
[[Category:Expeditions]]
 
[[Category:Expeditions]]
 
[[Category:Expeditions with photos]]
 
[[Category:Expeditions with photos]]
 
[[Category:Coordinates reached]]
 
[[Category:Coordinates reached]]
 +
{{location|AU|NT|DR}}

Latest revision as of 14:30, 4 October 2020

Mon 14 Jul 2014 in -12,130:
-12.4024204, 130.8453082
geohashing.info google osm bing/os kml crox


Location

Just off the coast of Ludmilla, Darwin.

Participants

Expedition

I saw this interesting and seemingly accessible geohash on Saturday and immediately halted all plans for the Monday evening. I was soon informed by my friend Lachie that there was also a (somewhat) accessible GLOBOHASH that very same day. Spending some seconds weighing up the two I sadly decided to ditch the globohash and concentrate on the local one (the 3,000 kilometre round trip drive required for the globohash had something to do with the decision).

Setting out after work on my bike towards the hash, my erst-while companion Bec having abandoned me for the preferred activity of sleep, I came to a sign on a gate warning me of an Aboriginal burial ground in the vicinity. I justified my continued hashing by finding the sign unspecific as to the extent of the burial ground and I planned to enter via the back way.

Making my way around the hash-area to the beach I soon realised the hash would be far harder than predicted. The beach was entirely covered in mangroves and vegetable detritus impairing access. My road bike was no match for the sand and swampland and I had to push it along for about a km. When I got to the closest beach access I discovered an even bigger problem: the hash was 60m out to sea through croc-infested mangrove marshland.

At this point I gave up. Only a few weeks ago a man was ripped out of his boat in a park near Darwin and torn literally in two by competing crocs. Several times a year people from this town are consumed by these dinosaurs and I was in prime crocodile territory. Getting into the water was not an option.

But just as I was about to walk away I thought 'Stuff it', and suddenly found myself taking off my shoes and socks, donning my bike light, GPS and phone and venturing out into the marsh.

It was a surreal and creepy experience. The tide was up and waves washed in and out around the gnarled mangrove forest. My feet sunk into the mud, feeling the mangrove root tentacles and the pointy shells of buried hermit crabs. I bristled at every un-sourced sound: splashes, squelches, bubbles, rustles and murmurs. Occasionally, the mud next to my submerged legs would erupt in spurts of entrained air and something lizard-like would eject from a hole and swim away. I was a feeding-bonanza for insects of all shapes, sizes and hums.

It took me half an hour to venture the 60m out into the ocean, with the water around my legs getting deeper and more impenetrable. Soon I turned left into the thick mangrove forest and was entirely concealed from above. Clambering over the roots and squelching through the mud I arrived at the hash in a triumph. I took photos and sent text messages. It was now that I realised the tide had receded substantially and I was surrounded by a mud-field.

I returned tentatively, taking another half-hour of clambering and freaking out at strange noises, once getting turned around and venturing another 20m out to sea, before I finally arrived back on the beach. My bike was some distance away, flashing its beacon. I walked back and rode home, arriving just after 10pm.

Covered in sand, mud and insect bites I told the story to my housemate - a Darwinian ecologist (i.e. an ecologist born in Darwin) who knows the area intimately. He was shocked: "You really could have been taken by a croc out there!" he assured me. It took a couple of shots of gin to get to sleep that night.

I rode 14.6kms and reached the hash at 8:40pm.

Here is the route of my trip.

Photos

Bikegeohash.png
Felix Dance earned the Bicycle geohash achievement
by cycling 14.6kms to and from the (-12, 130) geohash on 2014-07-14.
Geohash 2014-07-14 -12 130 11 Beach.JPG
Watergeohash.jpg
Felix Dance earned the Water geohash achievement
by reaching the (-12, 130) geohash on 2014-07-14 by Foot.
Geohash 2014-07-14 -12 130 03 Water.JPG