New York, New York

From Geohashing
Revision as of 18:03, 11 July 2015 by imported>OtherJack (add today's plan)
Newburgh Danbury, Connecticut Hartford, Connecticut
Newark, New Jersey New York Brookhaven
Atlantic City, New Jersey 39,-73 39,-72

Today's location: geohashing.info google osm bing/os kml crox

The New York City graticule is at latitude 40, longitude -73. It includes most of New York City (minus Staten Island, the west tip of Brooklyn, the West Village & Chelsea and downtown Manhattan) and a whole hell of a lot of Long Island. That means about 10 million potential geohashers in this graticule. Sigh, if only our graticule were not mostly sea water... On the bright side, non-preppies can now visit the Greenwich, CT islands in this graticule via Metro North and ferry.


Today's Location: [New York, NY]

There is a facebook group for New York, NY geohashers. http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=19859510038

Planned geohashes

2015-07-11 - OtherJack and a drag-along will take the LIRR to see the front of another small apartment building in Queens.

Successful geohashes

2009-02-26 - Brandon took the subway to this graticule's first geohash. About time!

2009-04-03 - Captin Shmit walked a half hour to this geohash.

2009-06-05 - Jevanyn got a second chance at this graticule, this time on the Palisades Parkway.

2012-03-18 - Sempaispellcheck took the LIRR to Smithtown, then walked 2.2 miles to reach this geohash on the North Shore of Long Island, his first geohash ever.

2012-05-26 - Sempaispellcheck took the train to this hash.

2013-03-18 - Sempaispellcheck reached this one too.

2013-05-18 - Million zillion dragged-along his sister and her fiance to this hashpoint in Brookville while visiting relatives in Roslyn.

2013-11-14 - Elipongo rode his bicycle eight miles to this hash.

2013-12-07 & 2013-12-08 - Elipongo rode the New York City Subway to get to both locations in the Bronx within the space of an hour!

2014-09-27 - Danatar went to the Flushing Meadows Corona Park in Queens.

2015-02-08 - Elipongo, OtherJack and sempaispellcheck took various subways and buses to Astoria where they witnessed the front of a small apartment building.

2015-03-01 - OtherJack went up a hill in the snow in Hastings-on-Hudson.

2015-04-16 - OtherJack took a speeding Metro-North train straight through the circle of error in Bronxville Mt. Vernon.

2015-06-20 - Elipongo took the subway to the South Bronx in time for a midnight-hash. (OtherJack met him there, but too late.)

Unsuccessful geohashes

2008-12-01 - Sentodude attempted to reach the hash, but there was no public access.

2009-05-07 - User:JuneO visits the nearest land point to a water geohash.

2009-06-04 - Jevanyn hiked along the tracks to almost reach this geohash in Haworth.


Local Geohashers

  • OtherJack just moved here (Dec 2014.) Interested in meetups and hashpoints here as well as in the graticules immediately north and west. Especially on weekends (or weekday evenings if easy enough.) No car, but transit-friendly and should have my bike soon.
  • Jevanyn is in the city once or twice a year, and may try to join a Saturday meetup.
  • Sempaispellcheck does not have a car and is very busy, but will try to geohash whenever possible.
  • Elipongo can bicycle, walk, take transit, or even his ambulance at work to geohashes; except for on Saturdays because of Shabbos.

Inactive Geohashers

Achievements

Template:Virgin graticule

Issues

This seems to be one instance where the incredibly cool XKCD geohashing scheme fails. Many New Yorkers located in the city do not have cars due to the availability of public transportation and the lack of space to park said car. Because of this, people are disinclined to take the train out to Long Island.

  • This could be solved by congregating at or near the closest train (LIRR, MTA, Metro North) station when hashes occur in generally unreachable locations.
  • Another possible solution would be to use a Half-graticule algorithm to increase the chances of land-based geohashes.
  • A solution for geohashpoints in the ocean could be to determine the nearest coast-point from a geohashed point. Ryelle wrote a script called CoastSeeker back in the day, but it is no longer working.