Difference between revisions of "2009-12-30 49 -123"
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We got up this morning and puttered about doing the things that you do when it's the second last day of the year, and the first day in a week that you've had no houseguests. Around 12:30 that puttering included checking the geohash. "Hey!" said Robyn, "It's accessible!" Robyn clicked on the Meetup link that should have taken her to this page, to see if it existed yet, but the Internet told her it couldn't do that right now. | We got up this morning and puttered about doing the things that you do when it's the second last day of the year, and the first day in a week that you've had no houseguests. Around 12:30 that puttering included checking the geohash. "Hey!" said Robyn, "It's accessible!" Robyn clicked on the Meetup link that should have taken her to this page, to see if it existed yet, but the Internet told her it couldn't do that right now. | ||
− | Wade had a meeting downtown at three, so - | + | Wade had a meeting downtown at three, so there was no time to bike. We put on boots and swamp-appropriate trousers, wrote out some quick directions, gathered GPS, compass, and dinosaur and jumped in the car. The directions led us past the airport, right on Westminster Highway, right on Barnard Avenue, then left on Westminster Highway again. That sounds weird, but it worked out in the end. It brought us to a park, an actual recreational area with a parking lot next to a dyke. The geohash was only 300 metres from the parked car. We walked along the dyke and when the geohash was about 80 metres away, Robyn drew breath to say "I think it's going to be off to the right there." Instead, what she said was "Geohashers!!" and burst into a run, because someone with a bicycle was emerging from the approximate location of the geohash. It turned out to be Elbie, and not some stranger going for a whizz in the bushes. Elbie reported the geohash to be about 20 minutes away into the copse. |
+ | |||
+ | People not accustomed to geohashing might think this strange. Or people not accustomed to metric might think they had misremembered what a metre was. But geohashers will understand. In this case it was only about fifteen metres of brambles. Wade used some heavy sticks to help batter the brambles into submission, but while he was doing that and despite T-Rex's vigilant presence, a velociraptor darted by and savaged his hand. Nevertheless, we both persevered and reached the point. | ||
+ | |||
+ | We're pleased to have reached what will probably be Vancouver's last geohash of the year, and delighted to have coincidenatally arrived while Elbie was there. On the way back to the car we saw a Great Blue Heron looking for fish in a ditch. At least we think it was looking for fish. Maybe it was geohashing. | ||
==Photos== | ==Photos== |
Revision as of 03:41, 31 December 2009
Wed 30 Dec 2009 in 49,-123: 49.1689328, -123.1974537 geohashing.info google osm bing/os kml crox |
Location
Northwestern coast of Richmond.
Participants
- Elbie
Planning
Elbie's plan:
- 12:30 - leave UBC
- 14:00 - arrive hashpoint
Expeditions
Elbie
Robyn & Wade
We got up this morning and puttered about doing the things that you do when it's the second last day of the year, and the first day in a week that you've had no houseguests. Around 12:30 that puttering included checking the geohash. "Hey!" said Robyn, "It's accessible!" Robyn clicked on the Meetup link that should have taken her to this page, to see if it existed yet, but the Internet told her it couldn't do that right now.
Wade had a meeting downtown at three, so there was no time to bike. We put on boots and swamp-appropriate trousers, wrote out some quick directions, gathered GPS, compass, and dinosaur and jumped in the car. The directions led us past the airport, right on Westminster Highway, right on Barnard Avenue, then left on Westminster Highway again. That sounds weird, but it worked out in the end. It brought us to a park, an actual recreational area with a parking lot next to a dyke. The geohash was only 300 metres from the parked car. We walked along the dyke and when the geohash was about 80 metres away, Robyn drew breath to say "I think it's going to be off to the right there." Instead, what she said was "Geohashers!!" and burst into a run, because someone with a bicycle was emerging from the approximate location of the geohash. It turned out to be Elbie, and not some stranger going for a whizz in the bushes. Elbie reported the geohash to be about 20 minutes away into the copse.
People not accustomed to geohashing might think this strange. Or people not accustomed to metric might think they had misremembered what a metre was. But geohashers will understand. In this case it was only about fifteen metres of brambles. Wade used some heavy sticks to help batter the brambles into submission, but while he was doing that and despite T-Rex's vigilant presence, a velociraptor darted by and savaged his hand. Nevertheless, we both persevered and reached the point.
We're pleased to have reached what will probably be Vancouver's last geohash of the year, and delighted to have coincidenatally arrived while Elbie was there. On the way back to the car we saw a Great Blue Heron looking for fish in a ditch. At least we think it was looking for fish. Maybe it was geohashing.
Photos
Elbie's are here. Waiting for Robyn & Wade's.