Difference between revisions of "2022-06-11 46 -122"

From Geohashing
(Location)
m (subst-ing)
 
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And DON'T FORGET to add your expedition and the best photo you took to the gallery on the Main Page! We'd love to read your report, but that means we first have to discover it! :)
 
And DON'T FORGET to add your expedition and the best photo you took to the gallery on the Main Page! We'd love to read your report, but that means we first have to discover it! :)
 
-->{{meetup graticule  
 
-->{{meetup graticule  
| lat={{#explode:{{SUBPAGENAME}}| |1}}
+
| lat=46
| lon={{#explode:{{SUBPAGENAME}}| |2}}
+
| lon=-122
| date={{#explode:{{SUBPAGENAME}}| |0}}
+
| date=2022-06-11
 
}}<!-- edit as necessary -->
 
}}<!-- edit as necessary -->
 
__NOTOC__
 
__NOTOC__
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== Participants ==
 
== Participants ==
<!-- who attended: If you link to your wiki user name in this section, your expedition will be picked up by the various statistics generated for geohashing. You may use three tildes ~ as a shortcut to automatically insert the user signature of the account you are editing with.
 
-->
 
  
== Plans ==
+
[[User:Michael5000|Michael5000]]
<!-- what were the original plans -->
 
  
 
== Expedition ==
 
== Expedition ==
<!-- how it all turned out. your narrative goes here. -->
 
  
== Tracklog ==
+
This hashpoint didn't look especially promising in itself, but [[2022-06-11 46 -123]] did, so I figured I might give this one a shot on the way.
<!-- if your GPS device keeps a log, you may use Template:Tracklog, post a link here, or both -->
+
 
 +
I drove up I-5 from Portland and then took Washington 504 to the Toutle River Valley, a small farming valley that I hadn't been through since the 1990s.  From the village of Toutle I took South Toutle Road -- it's pronounced like "poodle," by the way -- and then turned off onto Frank Smith Road, which I followed until it ended abruptly at what could either have been a forest road or somebody's driveway.  So, I turned around and found a place to pull over before getting out to walk.  I brought along my cup of coffee to better look the part of "just a guy enjoying a walk in the woods."
 +
 
 +
Shortly after I left the car, I began to hear a mechanical noise of the kind that always gets described as being "like a swarm of bees."  I didn't see anything out in the fields, though, and it got louder very quickly, and then I realized that I was across the road from the largest, densest, loudest swarm of bees I'd ever seen.  I kept walking.
 +
 
 +
As I neared the place where the paved county road abruptly changed to a dirt track, I suddenly beheld the most dangerous animal: man.  Specifically, a guy going out to post something in his mailbox.  "Hi," I said -- "does this road go into the forest, or would I be walking down people's driveways?"  He amiably told me that if I kept to the left I'd get to the forest gate, everything else was people's driveways.  That wasn't anything I didn't already know from the map, but it gave me confidence that I could continue down the lane -- if anybody yelled at me, I could just say "well, the feller down there said that if I stuck to the left...."
 +
 
 +
Anyway, at this point it was just the familiar ritual of following the logging road to the smaller logging road, and then diving into the underbrush for the last hundred meters or so.  And then getting back out.  I took the usual array of photos -- the hashpoint, the road, the gate, and so on -- but I noticed that they had kind of a soft-focus look to them.
 +
 
 +
When I got back to the car, the bees were gone.  I reset my GPS one graticule to the east, and continued along my way.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
  
 
== Photos ==  
 
== Photos ==  
<!-- Insert pictures between the gallery tags using the following format:
+
 
Image:2020-##-## ## ## Alpha.jpg | Witty Comment
 
-->
 
 
<gallery perrow="5">
 
<gallery perrow="5">
 +
File:2022-06-11 46 -122 a.jpg|Toutle High School, in the village of Toutle.  Go Ducks!
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
 +
My own photos may or may not be recoverable.
  
 
== Achievements ==
 
== Achievements ==
Line 41: Line 49:
 
<!-- Add any achievement ribbons you earned below, or remove this section -->
 
<!-- Add any achievement ribbons you earned below, or remove this section -->
  
<!-- =============== USEFUL CATEGORIES FOLLOW ================
+
{{consecutive geohash
Delete the next line ONLY if you have chosen the appropriate categories below. If you are unsure, don't worry. People will read your report and help you with the classification. -->
 
[[Category:New report]]
 
  
<!-- ==REQUEST FOR TWITTER BOT== Please leave either the New report or the Expedition planning category in as long as you work on it. This helps the twitter bot a lot with announcing the right outcome at the right moment. -->
+
    | count = 2
 +
    | latitude = 45
 +
    | longitude = -122
 +
    | date = 2022-06-10
 +
    | name = Michael5000
  
<!-- Potential categories. Please include all the ones appropriate to your expedition -->
+
}}
<!-- If this is a planning page:
 
[[Category:Expedition planning]]
 
-->
 
  
<!-- If all those plans are never acted upon, change [[Category:Expedition planning]] to [[Category:Not reached - Did not attempt]]. -->
+
{{Multihash
  
<!-- An actual expedition:
+
    | latitude1 = 46
[[Category:Expeditions]]
+
    | longitude1 = -122
-- and one or more of --
+
    | latitude2 = 46
[[Category:Expeditions with photos]]
+
    | longitude2 = -123
[[Category:Expeditions with videos]]
+
    | date = 2022-06-11
[[Category:Expedition without GPS]]
+
    | name = Michael5000
-->
 
 
<!-- if you reached your coords:
 
[[Category:Coordinates reached]]
 
  
  
--><!-- or if you failed :(
+
}}
[[Category:Coordinates not reached]]
 
-- and a reason --
 
When there is a natural obstacle between you and the target:
 
[[Category:Not reached - Mother Nature]]
 
 
 
When there is a man-made obstacle between you and the target:
 
[[Category:Not reached - No public access]]
 
  
When you failed get your GPS, car, bike or such to work:
+
[[Category:Expeditions]]
[[Category:Not reached - Technology]]
+
[[Category:Coordinates reached]]
   
+
{{location|US|WA|CW}}
When you went to an alternate location instead of the actual geohash:
 
[[Category:Not reached - Attended alternate location]]
 
 
 
(Don't forget to delete this final close comment marker) -->
 

Latest revision as of 20:48, 24 May 2024

Sat 11 Jun 2022 in 46,-122:
46.3065811, -122.6711348
geohashing.info google osm bing/os kml crox


Location

In the woods south of the Toutle Valley.

Participants

Michael5000

Expedition

This hashpoint didn't look especially promising in itself, but 2022-06-11 46 -123 did, so I figured I might give this one a shot on the way.

I drove up I-5 from Portland and then took Washington 504 to the Toutle River Valley, a small farming valley that I hadn't been through since the 1990s. From the village of Toutle I took South Toutle Road -- it's pronounced like "poodle," by the way -- and then turned off onto Frank Smith Road, which I followed until it ended abruptly at what could either have been a forest road or somebody's driveway. So, I turned around and found a place to pull over before getting out to walk. I brought along my cup of coffee to better look the part of "just a guy enjoying a walk in the woods."

Shortly after I left the car, I began to hear a mechanical noise of the kind that always gets described as being "like a swarm of bees." I didn't see anything out in the fields, though, and it got louder very quickly, and then I realized that I was across the road from the largest, densest, loudest swarm of bees I'd ever seen. I kept walking.

As I neared the place where the paved county road abruptly changed to a dirt track, I suddenly beheld the most dangerous animal: man. Specifically, a guy going out to post something in his mailbox. "Hi," I said -- "does this road go into the forest, or would I be walking down people's driveways?" He amiably told me that if I kept to the left I'd get to the forest gate, everything else was people's driveways. That wasn't anything I didn't already know from the map, but it gave me confidence that I could continue down the lane -- if anybody yelled at me, I could just say "well, the feller down there said that if I stuck to the left...."

Anyway, at this point it was just the familiar ritual of following the logging road to the smaller logging road, and then diving into the underbrush for the last hundred meters or so. And then getting back out. I took the usual array of photos -- the hashpoint, the road, the gate, and so on -- but I noticed that they had kind of a soft-focus look to them.

When I got back to the car, the bees were gone. I reset my GPS one graticule to the east, and continued along my way.



Photos

My own photos may or may not be recoverable.

Achievements

Consecutivegeohash.jpg
Michael5000 earned the Consecutive geohash achievement
by reaching 2 consecutive hash points starting on 2022-06-10.
Multihash.png
Michael5000 earned the Multihash Achievement
by reaching the 2022-06-11 46 -122 and 2022-06-11 46 -123 geohashes on 2022-06-11.