Difference between revisions of "2024-10-18 35 -97"
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Looking at the hashpoints this morning, I noticed this one was reachable without losing too much common sense: it's a fenced field divided by Union Pacific railroad, and on both sides of the track are openings of the fences according to Street View. This is in contrast to many other points around here, which usually land on parcels that are fenced thoroughly (with chained gates), sometimes have No Trespassing signs, and often no Street View as it's surrounded by unpaved roads which the drivers don't glance twice at. And I'm not too fond of going to these undocumented parcels or jumping gates. | Looking at the hashpoints this morning, I noticed this one was reachable without losing too much common sense: it's a fenced field divided by Union Pacific railroad, and on both sides of the track are openings of the fences according to Street View. This is in contrast to many other points around here, which usually land on parcels that are fenced thoroughly (with chained gates), sometimes have No Trespassing signs, and often no Street View as it's surrounded by unpaved roads which the drivers don't glance twice at. And I'm not too fond of going to these undocumented parcels or jumping gates. | ||
− | Again, I waited until my father came home, then told him I was driving just for the fun of it; he doesn't know about geohashing yet, and I suppose if he realizes the goal is to go to people's fields (mostly), he'd lose it. In front of them, I drove the crossover down the long driveway, and so the adventure began. | + | Again, I waited until my father came home, then told him I was driving just for the fun of it; he doesn't know about geohashing yet, and I suppose if he realizes the goal is to go to people's fields (mostly), he'd lose it. In front of them, I drove the crossover ([[2024-09-15 27 -81|not the same one]]) down the long driveway, and so the adventure began. |
Almost. Pulling over, I turned on the eTrex to get it used to the satellites, programmed my phone to the location, and off I went. First, it was through miles and miles of county roads, but the route I've took, I'm familiar with at this point; you can call it running errands. It runs through flat roads, then a rollercoaster, then flat roads again. Now, let me enlighten you on the wonder of Midwestern state highways; OK-152 is a nice example of one. Two lanes, one each direction; the speed limit is 65 mph (105 km/h); the road is badly maintained, there's no shoulder, and turns do not have dedicated lanes... and I was going above the limit so I wouldn't be picked on by my father. Anyone want to wish me luck for getting a good score for the Oklahoma driving test? | Almost. Pulling over, I turned on the eTrex to get it used to the satellites, programmed my phone to the location, and off I went. First, it was through miles and miles of county roads, but the route I've took, I'm familiar with at this point; you can call it running errands. It runs through flat roads, then a rollercoaster, then flat roads again. Now, let me enlighten you on the wonder of Midwestern state highways; OK-152 is a nice example of one. Two lanes, one each direction; the speed limit is 65 mph (105 km/h); the road is badly maintained, there's no shoulder, and turns do not have dedicated lanes... and I was going above the limit so I wouldn't be picked on by my father. Anyone want to wish me luck for getting a good score for the Oklahoma driving test? | ||
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Then home. Same route. I was going even faster now; I went 60 where I should be going 45. I'll really ace the Oklahoma driving test!<ref>Since I have a Florida license, there's actually no need for me to take a driving test to receive an Oklahoma license.</ref> Anyway, if you want to discount more oversizes on 152 and kids sitting on the side of the road with a dad running across, the trip back was fine, and maybe a good thing I went at speed because I was interrupted while writing the beginning to help my father. I wasn't scolded. | Then home. Same route. I was going even faster now; I went 60 where I should be going 45. I'll really ace the Oklahoma driving test!<ref>Since I have a Florida license, there's actually no need for me to take a driving test to receive an Oklahoma license.</ref> Anyway, if you want to discount more oversizes on 152 and kids sitting on the side of the road with a dad running across, the trip back was fine, and maybe a good thing I went at speed because I was interrupted while writing the beginning to help my father. I wasn't scolded. | ||
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+ | Distance going to the hash, according to the eTrex, was 50 km (31 miles). It means I used slightly less than 2 gallons of fuel, even with my chaotic driving. | ||
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Revision as of 02:55, 19 October 2024
Fri 18 Oct 2024 in 35,-97: 35.4350572, -97.9540501 geohashing.info google osm bing/os kml crox |
Location
A crop field bounded by 29th, 2830, 44th, and US 81, north of Union City, OK
Participants
Plans
Kind of on impulse, really: camera, eTrex Solar, go.
Expedition
Oklahoma is where part 2 of my vacation is taking place. I don't know if I should say vacation, though, because this is more like the beginning of a family restructuring; in a few days, we'll drive to Tampa and move things from there. Anyway, this is where I'll be moving next. How long I'll be there, I can't figure that out.
Looking at the hashpoints this morning, I noticed this one was reachable without losing too much common sense: it's a fenced field divided by Union Pacific railroad, and on both sides of the track are openings of the fences according to Street View. This is in contrast to many other points around here, which usually land on parcels that are fenced thoroughly (with chained gates), sometimes have No Trespassing signs, and often no Street View as it's surrounded by unpaved roads which the drivers don't glance twice at. And I'm not too fond of going to these undocumented parcels or jumping gates.
Again, I waited until my father came home, then told him I was driving just for the fun of it; he doesn't know about geohashing yet, and I suppose if he realizes the goal is to go to people's fields (mostly), he'd lose it. In front of them, I drove the crossover (not the same one) down the long driveway, and so the adventure began.
Almost. Pulling over, I turned on the eTrex to get it used to the satellites, programmed my phone to the location, and off I went. First, it was through miles and miles of county roads, but the route I've took, I'm familiar with at this point; you can call it running errands. It runs through flat roads, then a rollercoaster, then flat roads again. Now, let me enlighten you on the wonder of Midwestern state highways; OK-152 is a nice example of one. Two lanes, one each direction; the speed limit is 65 mph (105 km/h); the road is badly maintained, there's no shoulder, and turns do not have dedicated lanes... and I was going above the limit so I wouldn't be picked on by my father. Anyone want to wish me luck for getting a good score for the Oklahoma driving test?
A large load pulled out in front of me, but it was a heavy duty pickup carrying bales of hay, specks of which would loosen up and smack into my car. Not a huge problem, really, it's gone through worse. 152 was once again feeling long, and I kinda recognize the landmarks that tell me roughly what percentage of the stretch before the turn I'm in. The turn came, left there after the cars end. Heading now towards Union City, two trucks on the other lane, each carrying a piece of oversized bridge; eventually, Union City, which you can't really call a city, came about. At this point, I branched off the path of 152; it makes a turn at the stop sign to go straight to Mustang, but right now it's closed and the detour is to turn right from the last turn and pass through Tuttle. Anyway, the highway became a four-lane divided, and I was going limit 70 by the time I had to turn left to make the final stretch to the hashpoint.
I went below the limit this time, but as I was approaching the rails, I noticed that dust was emanating from what I assumed was the field. They're doing work on it right now? As I approached the railroad crossing, where a Union Pacific train ran well before I could cross, I realized that it was more semis with oversized loads (by the way, on an unmarked unmaintained road), and I think the dust was kicked up from braking. Barriers still down, I got a good look at the openings of the field; it's undoored, contrary to my expectations. However, it looks different: bales of hay run along part of the fence. Now to do is to wait for the oversizes and their escort to move along.
Them moved along, I parked the crossover on a horizontal grade, and got my things. The field was one that's used to grow crops; of what, I wouldn't know, but after another pickup passed, I crossed the road and started rolling video with the ZS70. Since the eTrex was set on multi-band, locating was quite easy; in fact, maybe a bit too easy, because like last time, I just wanted to find it and go; I unfortunately stepped on some crops in doing so. The exact point has crops that haven't sprouted quite yet, whilst further south the crops matured enough to have wide greens. In my haste, however, I just took photos of the proof, and left; I only took photos of the surroundings from outside the bounds, because I didn't want to walk back.
Then home. Same route. I was going even faster now; I went 60 where I should be going 45. I'll really ace the Oklahoma driving test![1] Anyway, if you want to discount more oversizes on 152 and kids sitting on the side of the road with a dad running across, the trip back was fine, and maybe a good thing I went at speed because I was interrupted while writing the beginning to help my father. I wasn't scolded.
Distance going to the hash, according to the eTrex, was 50 km (31 miles). It means I used slightly less than 2 gallons of fuel, even with my chaotic driving.
- ↑ Since I have a Florida license, there's actually no need for me to take a driving test to receive an Oklahoma license.
Photos
Achievements
10d100h earned the Two to the N achievement
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