Difference between revisions of "2008-07-30 53 8"

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{{Two to the N achievement | count = 0 | latitude = 53 | longitude = 8 | date = 2008-07-30 | name = Alaska | image = 20080730621.jpg }}
 
{{Two to the N achievement | count = 0 | latitude = 53 | longitude = 8 | date = 2008-07-30 | name = Alaska | image = 20080730621.jpg }}
  
[[Category:New report]]
 
 
[[Category:Expeditions]]
 
[[Category:Expeditions]]
 
[[Category:Expeditions with photos]]
 
[[Category:Expeditions with photos]]
 
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[[Category:Coordinates reached]]
 
{{location|DE|NI|OL|city=true}}
 
{{location|DE|NI|OL|city=true}}

Revision as of 12:32, 2 July 2020

Wed 30 Jul 2008 in 53,8:
53.1701131, 8.2305790
geohashing.info google osm bing/os kml crox


Location

The hash was located in the yard of an apartment building in the northern part of Oldenburg, Germany.

Participants

Alaska

Plans

Yes, it took me almost twelve years! Here's why:

This was going to be my first Geohash, back in 2008, just a few weeks after Randall had published his Geohashing webcomic. I had been eagerly waiting for a hash location near Oldenburg where I was (and still am) living. And this turned out to be the first real good opportunity for a Geohashing expedition.

Unfortunately, it also turned out that the plan to document the expedition was a little harder to execute than the trip itself. In the days and weeks after, I simply didn't find the time or wasn't in the mood to transfer the photos from my (good old Nokia N95) phone and to write some expedition report. And then – I probably just forgot about it.

Until September 2018, when fellow Geohasher User:Fippe surprisingly contacted me, asking if I could finally document the expedition, mainly because it was the first one in its graticule and as such of some “historic importance”. I answered him that I would try to find the old photos and to provide the report. Which – you guess it! – was again a little harder than expected because due to a computer crash in 2009 or 2010, I lost access to most of my older photos. I remember searching for the expedition photos, but unfortunately without success. And then – I probably just forgot about it again.

Until a few days ago, when I found an old hard drive, connected it to my PC, browsed through its contents, and – badaboom! – discovered the long missed photos in some obscurely nested backup folder! So finally, after almost twelve years, I'm able to provide the report on my first Geohashing expedition! And sorry, the expedition report itself is much less exceptional than its release story ...

(Is there an achievement for the longest time period between going on an expedition and documenting it?)

Expedition

After work, I took the bike and went to the hash location, arriving there around 6 pm local time. No one else was there, so I left a note with “xkcd” written on it on a nearby tree stump, just in case someone else would show up later. Took some photos (including a self-timer one of myself with my bike), made a screenshot of my phone's GPS location, and left again.

Photos

Achievements

Landgeohash.png
Alaska earned the Land geohash achievement
by reaching the (53, 8) geohash on 2008-07-30.
20080730621.jpg
Bikegeohash.png
Alaska earned the Bicycle geohash achievement
by cycling 7.1 km/5.2 km to and from the (53, 8) geohash on 2008-07-30.
20080730621.jpg

Template:Virgin graticule

TwoToN.png
Alaska earned the Two to the N achievement
by attempting to reach 20 hashpoints on 2008-07-30 53 8 and is promoted to Level 0 (Expeditions).
20080730621.jpg