Difference between revisions of "2008-11-16 57 -3"

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Image:2008-11-16_57_-3_skerries.jpg Alt="Covesea Skerries at high tide"|[[2008-11-16 57 -3|Breakers on the Skerries]]
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Image:2008-11-16_57_-3_skerries.jpg|[[2008-11-16 57 -3| Alt="Covesea Skerries at high tide"|Breakers on the Skerries]]
 
Image:2008-11-16_57_-3_map.jpg|[[2008-11-16 57 -3|No GPS for us]]
 
Image:2008-11-16_57_-3_map.jpg|[[2008-11-16 57 -3|No GPS for us]]
 
Image:2008-11-16_57_-3_boat.jpg|[[2008-11-16 57 -3|Should we have hailed this boat?]]
 
Image:2008-11-16_57_-3_boat.jpg|[[2008-11-16 57 -3|Should we have hailed this boat?]]

Revision as of 17:28, 16 November 2008

Sun 16 Nov 2008 in Elgin:
57.9874987, -3.3504907
geohashing.info google osm bing/os kml crox
Covesea Beach

About

The geohash of the day was in the water somewhere in the north Moray Firth.

We didn't have a boat so immediately decided that this would have to be a Failed Geohash.

We set the venue as the first point of landfall south of the geohash at 57.724098°, -3.350491° because this was just down the road for us. We set the additional goal for the geohash of stretching the boundaries of what "landfall" could mean by walking northwards into the sea.

The Expedition

We started at Covesea village, half a mile away from the proposed Failed Geohash, which gave us a good view of our target. A path led us down to the beach through the caves and onto the cobbles.

The water was breaking over Covesea Skerries and we took a bearing off the westward end of the westward skerry to pinpoint our location on the beach.

The tide had just started to recede from the high water mark and the waves were more than ripples, so little progress northwards could be made northwards. However, Smoulder did get as deep as she could in her wellies without getting water IN her wellies. Smoulder's obligatory grin was inspired by the thought “I'm looking at the camera but I'm wondering what is happening down there at welly level”.

Damianc's obligatory grim was inspired by the thought “I'm looking at the camera and I know what is happening down there at boot level”.

Smoulder is rather pleased that the water reached up to 1 centimetre from the top of her wellies and no further. Damianc's feet survived in soggy monkey boots all the way back home to post this report.


Gallery