Difference between revisions of "2010-09-11 29 -95"

From Geohashing
imported>Phineas
(Photos)
imported>Phineas
(Expedition)
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== Expedition ==
 
== Expedition ==
 
<!-- how it all turned out. your narrative goes here. -->
 
<!-- how it all turned out. your narrative goes here. -->
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Well, after the debacle on Thursday regarding [http://wiki.xkcd.com/geohashing/2010-09-09_30_-94 my first geohashing attempt], it was a relief to find such an approachable target today. In fact, it was almost un-sporting, old chap. Not only was this a simple thoroughfare about 20 miles from my hometown, but I could easily stay on streets and highways divided by medians the ENTIRE route, excepting a few blocks on either side of home street. Tron achievement was easily in reach.
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Urban geohashing is a whole different matter than trekking the wild, I guess.
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So to make this simple journey more enjoyable, I commandeered child #3, Amy, age 7. A resonable-distance, sunshine-laden drive on a Saturday afternoon was just the thing for a little dad/daughter time. That, and I couldn't leave her home alone.
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Just off one of the two expressways we'd travel we would pass a favorite taqueria, at which I once observed a drug bust in process. Despite the shaky neighborhood, it should have been plenty safe on a lazy Saturday afternoon. A dozen homemade tamales in hand, we proceeded.
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Despite the pleasant day and company, after the drama of fighting off several vicious, venomous snakes two days prior (hah), this trip was a little anticlimactic. We stopped a few hundred yards north of the hashpoint to snap a photo of the GPS (fuzzy, hard to take pix in sunlight - I'll figure that out soon enough). Then, having located the hashpoint in the left hand lane of Bammel North Houston Rd, southbound, we drove through it at just a few miles per hour over the speed limit.
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A quick U-turn, and.....wait - I needed more photos. So slowed and snapped a few through the windshield, as we re-approached from the south. Not a great picture, as the grass median even blocked the roadway. I also had wanted a picture with Amy and Ralph, my intrepid bear. So in a rush of bad judgement, I turn left across my original route, and traced back to the hashpoint, ruining my easily accomplished Tron.
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Amy and I snapped a couple photos, and I explained to her, that the spot in the road behind her was the random  destination we had been targeting all along.
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"You were really serious about it being random, Dad", replied Amy. No lie. Her words exactly. I drove the first few miles of the return trip in silent awe of her.
  
 
== Tracklog ==
 
== Tracklog ==

Revision as of 01:08, 12 September 2010

Sat 11 Sep 2010 in 29,-95:
29.9314646, -95.4966417
geohashing.info google osm bing/os kml crox


Location

Dead center in the southbound lane of Bammel North Houston Rd. in NW Houston, Texas.

Participants

Phineas

Ralph (the naughty bear)

Possible drag-along selected among my immediate family members

Plans

After failing in my first geohashing attempt two days ago near Devers, TX, this hash is a no brainer.

It is a definite for a Speed Racer achievement.

As to other designations, I began to think Picnic, Kite, Twister, and all manner of potential achievements. Then realized that being in the middle of a busy highway, not beside a busy highway, limits me a bit.

Potential achievements: - No Batteries - as I need no aids to reach this point, and could use my sextant for the final positioning. Rejected - I'll be going in daylight, and need at least one other celestial body to trinagulate my position. - GeoTrash - if there's trash nearby, consider it gone. - Drag-along - I've got three kids and a wife to choose from. Hmmm.

Of course, a target this easy will also be my first Land Geohash.

Expedition

Well, after the debacle on Thursday regarding my first geohashing attempt, it was a relief to find such an approachable target today. In fact, it was almost un-sporting, old chap. Not only was this a simple thoroughfare about 20 miles from my hometown, but I could easily stay on streets and highways divided by medians the ENTIRE route, excepting a few blocks on either side of home street. Tron achievement was easily in reach.

Urban geohashing is a whole different matter than trekking the wild, I guess.

So to make this simple journey more enjoyable, I commandeered child #3, Amy, age 7. A resonable-distance, sunshine-laden drive on a Saturday afternoon was just the thing for a little dad/daughter time. That, and I couldn't leave her home alone.

Just off one of the two expressways we'd travel we would pass a favorite taqueria, at which I once observed a drug bust in process. Despite the shaky neighborhood, it should have been plenty safe on a lazy Saturday afternoon. A dozen homemade tamales in hand, we proceeded.

Despite the pleasant day and company, after the drama of fighting off several vicious, venomous snakes two days prior (hah), this trip was a little anticlimactic. We stopped a few hundred yards north of the hashpoint to snap a photo of the GPS (fuzzy, hard to take pix in sunlight - I'll figure that out soon enough). Then, having located the hashpoint in the left hand lane of Bammel North Houston Rd, southbound, we drove through it at just a few miles per hour over the speed limit.

A quick U-turn, and.....wait - I needed more photos. So slowed and snapped a few through the windshield, as we re-approached from the south. Not a great picture, as the grass median even blocked the roadway. I also had wanted a picture with Amy and Ralph, my intrepid bear. So in a rush of bad judgement, I turn left across my original route, and traced back to the hashpoint, ruining my easily accomplished Tron.

Amy and I snapped a couple photos, and I explained to her, that the spot in the road behind her was the random destination we had been targeting all along.

"You were really serious about it being random, Dad", replied Amy. No lie. Her words exactly. I drove the first few miles of the return trip in silent awe of her.

Tracklog

Photos

Achievements