User:Tongs

From Geohashing
Revision as of 12:06, 14 September 2015 by imported>Tongs (Notes and plans)

The Tongs is a name for a group of friends who go geohashing in the Cambridge (UK) graticule, but who might stray into the Northampton graticule sometimes. We usually aim to visit hashpoints nearish us at 4pm local time, if it looks like there's something interesting in the area or if people want to meet up (we monitor our talk page, so leave us a message if you do).

We announce all our expeditions (and sometimes other fun) on the Twitter account 52n0e

Expeditions

The Tongs are at Level 2.

# log2# Date Who Graticule Where Result
1 0.000 Sunday, 17th August 2014 FTB (3 people) 52,0 A ploughed field just south of the A14. Success
2 (a) 1.000 Saturday, 23rd August 2014 FMTB (4 people) 52,0 A field on a hillside near the village of Shaftenhoe End. Success
2 (b) 1.000 Saturday, 23rd August 2014 FMTB (4 people) 52,-0 Just off a track by the side of a field near Therfield. Success
3 1.585 Sunday, 28th September 2014 FMTB (4 people) 52,0 In a field near Vestey Wood, near the Gog Magog Hills. Success
4 2.000 Sunday, 30th August 2015 FMTB (4 people) 52,0 In the northeastern corner of the grounds of Oxbrough Hall. Success

Notes and plans

  • The tongs are just over six years late to this particular party, and often hope to meet someone at a hashpoint. Often we have a good adventure anyway.
  • We'd like to try to do a hash with only a map and compass, not even using a car GPS to get us there. We later found out that this is called no batteries geohash.
  • M suggested a birthday expedition and doing a geohash on holiday.
  • We'd like Cambridge to be the UK's most active graticule.
  • To remember to wear long trousers (and maybe wellies) when we go hashing. We'd like to have some kind of recognisable tshirt or something so T doesn't need to ask strangers 'Are you geohashing?'.
  • To remember to mark the GPS coordinates of the car when we leave it.
  • We carry an Emergency Fun Box.
  • We wear a Reflective Vest.

We have invented some possible achievements:

  • Inverse geohashing is computing a future hashpoint based on a hypothetical movement of the Dow Jones. To get the hash, you have to correctly predict the movement and visit the hashpoint. For a better chance of achieving this, go to as many of the hypothetical hashpoints as possible.
  • Geosplashing has two possible definitions. The first is that the hashpoint is in a toilet. The second is that it is used as a toilet. Some of us thing the whole thing is disgusting.

Other geofun

  • We once let off a helium balloon with a message on it and it was found 85 miles away. We couldn't contain our excitement when we got that email. We're likely to do it again with the left-over helium. We found out since buying the helium that it's not good for the environment (and nor are the balloons for that matter).
  • We're sort of interested in orienteering and Ingress too, but haven't done much about it. Update: B went through an Ingress phase, got to Level 5, and is now over it. Geohashing is more fun.
  • Now that it's summer, F and B have started going for walks on some Friday nights. Right now we're walking up the Cam away from Cambridge, and will start the next segment of the walk from Upware.
  • Now that it's summer, we've been going wild swimming.

Tongs like playing with the idea of randomly-generated plans for fun. Here are some variants of geohashing.

  • F suggested we could do decihashing, where we just shift the decimal point across one place to give us a set of possible points within roughly a five mile square around Cambridge. We thought it might be just as fun.
  • Douglas Adams wrote in The Restaurant at the End of the Universe: "The History of every major Galactic Civilization tends to pass through three distinct and recognizable phases, those of Survival, Inquiry and Sophistication, otherwise known as the How, Why, and Where phases. For instance, the first phase is characterized by the question 'How can we eat?' the second by the question 'Why do we eat?' and the third by the question 'Where shall we have lunch?". Geohashing can help. F and B suggested devising a list of pubs, restaurants, cafés, picnic spots, places we'd like to go for lunch in Cambridge of length 2n for some positive integer n. Assign a unique number between 0 and 2n-1 to each, and use the first n bits of that day's hash to decide where to go for lunch. If it's 20 miles away and you only have an hour for lunch, go anyway.
  • F suggested a subset of points of the local area consisting of those found on interesting National Trust properties. Projecting this set onto a unit square in the 'best' way is left as a future task. The Tongs suspect we need someone good at making patchwork quilts.

Achievements unlocked

Landgeohash.png
This user earned the Land geohash achievement
by reaching the (52, 0) geohash on 2014-08-23.
Multihash.png
This user earned the Multihash Achievement
by reaching the 2014-08-23 52 0 and 2014-08-23 52 -0 geohashes on 2014-08-23.