2024-11-26 31 34

From Geohashing
Revision as of 23:42, 26 November 2024 by FippeBot (talk | contribs) (Location)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Tue 26 Nov 2024 in 31,34:
31.7749070, 34.9960613
geohashing.info google osm bing/os kml crox

Location

On what looks like a boundary between two warehouses in an industrial area outside of Beit Shemesh, near a company that supplies equipment to key duplication stores and another company that supplies greeting robots for tech conferences.

Participants

Yerushalmi (talk)

Plans

Yesterday I picked up a print of my wife's photography; today I have to deliver it to Tel Aviv. From there I can take a train to Beit Shemesh and a bus to the point. I'll take a bus or train back to Jerusalem, whatever is more convenient.

Expedition

I took the shacharit train to Tel Aviv, then a bus to the art gallery and dropped off the print. Then I walked back to the train station (no need for a bus if I'm not lugging a print around) and took the train to Beit Shemesh.

The train had to stop in the middle of the route for a few minutes due to a delay up ahead, so that meant I missed the bus that would've dropped me off directly at the point. But there were other buses that took me close; easy enough. Bus to Shimshon Junction, walk past the IKEA into the industrial zone, and look for the point...

As I approached I got a bit worried: the satellite image showed the point was on a white strip that went north-south between the two buildings. I thought that was just pavement or possibly rubble filler. But I'm seeing in front of me piles and piles of some kind of tile-like thing. Am I going to have to ask permission to stand among them? Or worse, climb on top of them?

Turns out I didn't need to at all. The satellite image was off; way off. The point was on the *other side of the street* from the tiles, right up against the wall of the opposite warehouse. I took my usual panorama, walked back to Route 38, and took a direct bus to Jerusalem.

After two straight failures it was good to have an uncomplicated success. But my legs are killing me; I'm glad the point is inaccessible tomorrow, I can take a break.

Photos