Difference between revisions of "2010-09-04 53 0"
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== Expedition == | == Expedition == | ||
− | [[2010-09-04 53 | + | [[2010-09-04 53 0]] :: [[2010-09-04 53 -0]] :: [[2010-09-04 52 -0]] :: [[2010-09-04 52 0]] |
[[User:Sourcerer|Sourcerer]] (Neil) spotted that the hash point was only 850 metres east of the Greenwich Meridian and there was another hashpoint 850 metres west. This was the ideal opportunity to collect two easy hashes within walking distance of each other. In the end he didn't walk because the siren call of a Bateman's pub was too strong. This involved a small detour by car. After that he needed petrol. For this hash point he only walked about 450 metres. Neil believes he was the first to visit a geohash in the Skegness graticule. | [[User:Sourcerer|Sourcerer]] (Neil) spotted that the hash point was only 850 metres east of the Greenwich Meridian and there was another hashpoint 850 metres west. This was the ideal opportunity to collect two easy hashes within walking distance of each other. In the end he didn't walk because the siren call of a Bateman's pub was too strong. This involved a small detour by car. After that he needed petrol. For this hash point he only walked about 450 metres. Neil believes he was the first to visit a geohash in the Skegness graticule. |
Revision as of 16:56, 3 March 2015
Sat 4 Sep 2010 in Skegness: 53.0448326, 0.0126721 geohashing.info google osm bing/os kml crox |
Contents
Location
In a harvested wheat field just north of the village of Sibsey. The nearest town was Boston (Lincolnshire, UK).
Participants
Expedition
2010-09-04 53 0 :: 2010-09-04 53 -0 :: 2010-09-04 52 -0 :: 2010-09-04 52 0
Sourcerer (Neil) spotted that the hash point was only 850 metres east of the Greenwich Meridian and there was another hashpoint 850 metres west. This was the ideal opportunity to collect two easy hashes within walking distance of each other. In the end he didn't walk because the siren call of a Bateman's pub was too strong. This involved a small detour by car. After that he needed petrol. For this hash point he only walked about 450 metres. Neil believes he was the first to visit a geohash in the Skegness graticule.
Image Gallery
More Proof
I have a gdb file from my Garmin GPS receiver. I used GPSBabel to convert it to GPX/XML format. Here is the trackpoint for the geohash. The time-stamp is in GMT.
<trkpt lat="53.044836418703198" lon="0.012712329626083"> <ele>0.137451171875</ele> <time>2010-09-04T12:06:02Z</time> </trkpt>
Other geohashing expeditions on the same day
Expeditions and Plans
2010-09-04 | ||
---|---|---|
McMinnville, Oregon | Jim | Off a highway near Salem down a steep embankment. |
Schweinfurt, Germany | Danatar | in a harvested corn field near Burghausen, a part of Wasserlosen. Country:... |
Kielce, Poland | Felinator | In the middle of river Wisła (Vistula) in Kraków, near power plant Łęg. |
Northampton, United Kingdom | Sourcerer | 3) In a residential street in Royston, Hertfordshire, UK. |
Cambridge, United Kingdom | Sourcerer | 4) In a sugar beet field east of Royston, Hertfordshire, UK. |
Utrecht, Netherlands | CO2, Freeze XJ | In between Montfoort en IJsselstein, in a piece of farmland, probably priva... |
Hull, United Kingdom | Sourcerer | 2) In a sweet corn field just north west of the village of Sibsey. The near... |
Skegness, United Kingdom | Sourcerer | 1) In a harvested wheat field just north of the village of Sibsey. The near... |