2010-08-05 45 -122
Thu 5 Aug 2010 in 45,-122: 45.5267251, -122.6645214 geohashing.info google osm bing/os kml crox |
Location
Near? Underneath? OR-30 in Portland, near the Steel Bridge.
Participants
Plans
Jim and APR said to each other::
Well, it isn't a globalhash, but it is pretty accessible. Or maybe not. It appears to be on OR-30 North right near the Steel Bridge. I suspect you need to do it by car, which means you get to go for Speed Racer.
I think I'll be trying for it after work, though with only me in the car, I'm not sure how I'll know if I got there except by looking after I stop and turn around.....
Jim
It looks like there is a multi-use path running underneath the bridge there. I won't be able to join you, but you should be able to find some parking nearby and get to the hashpoint on the ground if desired.
--APR
I'm worried about fences preventing access with those RR tracks there.... Jiml 20:40, 5 August 2010 (UTC)
Expedition
Expedition 5000.01
In the course of ordinary daily work duties, I crossed the hashpoint at speed on the deck of the I-84W to I-5N ramp. I veered a little within the lane to ensure proper placement vis-a-vis the point, but otherwise would have -- like tens of thousands of other people -- reached this hashpoint in the course of my day even if I hadn't known about it.
User:Michael5000 earned the Cross that bridge achievement
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Michael5000 has visited an Easy Geohash
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Expedition 5000.02
At 1800 hours, Michael5000 and Mrs.5000 set off from their lovely Sunnyside home bearing west by northwest toward the Lloyd District. They crossed MLK on Lloyd Boulevard and pulled up under the ramp along a wide sidewalk overlooking the Eastbank Esplanade. A fence separated the sidewalk from a steep embankment, and the trusty GPS gadget placed the hashpoint 27 feet the other side of the fence.
Undeterred, the 5000s crossed I-84 on MLK and proceeded to a dead-end street off of the newly rerouted Couch (rhymes with "Pooch") Street, from which enterprising cyclists could gain access to a gravel track along the railroad lines. The hashpoint was right where we expected it -- downslope from the sidewalk overlook of a few minutes earlier, and underneath the freeway lane of earlier in the day. It was almost at the bottom of the embankment, in a neglected area of dusty blackberry vines, gravel, creosote, and bare dirt. We found an abandoned traffic pylon nearby and placed it atop the hashpoint to commemorate the spot at about 1835 hours.
Then we proceeded to Ole Ole at 22nd and Burnside for Burritos, and thence home again.
Tracklog
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Achievements