Zürich, Switzerland
From Geohashing
Revision as of 13:33, 2 May 2012 by imported>Zafford (→Geohashers in this graticule)
Strasbourg, France | Pforzheim, Germany | Stuttgart, Germany |
Basel | Zürich | Sankt Gallen |
Bern | Lugano | Chur |
Today's location: geohashing.info google osm bing/os kml crox |
About
The Zürich graticule is located at latitude 47, longitude 8.
Zürich, the biggest city in Switzerland, is located more or less in the center of the graticule. Around three quarters of its area are within Switzerland whereas the northern part belongs to Germany.
According to Land usage, the chance for your hash to fall into one of the following areas is:
42.05% Fields 24.31% Forests 22.90% Natural reserves 3.63% Water 3.35% Settlements 2.60% Roads 1.14% Highways
Today's Location: [Zurich, Switzerland]
Geohashers in this graticule
Current plans
Please add your planned expeditions here
Expeditions
most recent first
- 2011-08-20 A nice spot in the middle of Winterthur city
- 2011-08-19 Calamus felt like mountaineering
- 2011-06-18 Crox and Elisa were stopped by a construction site
- 2011-06-13 In the german exclave Büsingen, reached independently by Ekorren and TheOneRing
- 2011-05-07 Between Effretikon and Kempttal, not far away from the 2010-12-12-geohash
- 2011-02-15 Cheap one: directly on a street in the wood near Baden, Switzerland
- 2011-01-09 Multinational meetup near Schleitheim, Kanton Schaffhausen, Switzerland
- 2010-12-26 Danatar visited a snowy but sunlit forest near Schaffhausen and went to the Rhine Falls afterwards.
- 2010-12-12 In Bassersdorf
- 2009-10-14 The Swiss Army went geohashing!
- 2009-05-31 Ekorren was at Sumpfohren.
- 2009-01-21 reached by Enric and relet.
- 2009-01-04 A little new years trip. First time ever for all three participants.
- 2008-11-19 A group led by swiss radio seems to have reached the point. One photo was posted to the main page, otherwise it was only reported on the radio.
- 2008-05-24 Looks like someone got near, but the description is a bit on the short side. Participants were most probably stopped by a fence and did not reach the coordinates.