Difference between revisions of "2016-09-06 -37 176"

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(Plans)
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(Plans)
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It appeared to be in water, although tidal in nature. Checking the tide almanac, low tide was at 1630 that day. I drifted off to sleep dreaming of Geohashing adventures I was to have following my repose ...
 
It appeared to be in water, although tidal in nature. Checking the tide almanac, low tide was at 1630 that day. I drifted off to sleep dreaming of Geohashing adventures I was to have following my repose ...
  
<nowiki>*</nowiki> Actually this was not the case - it was a public holiday in the US today, so the hash had been up already for 24 hours ... (Labour Day)
+
<nowiki>*</nowiki> Actually this was not the case - it had been a public holiday in the US on the day, so the hash had been up already for 24 hours (Labour Day)
  
 
== Expedition ==
 
== Expedition ==

Revision as of 10:22, 6 September 2016

2016 09 06 -37 176 07.JPG


Tue 6 Sep 2016 in -37,176:
-37.7158950, 176.1545456
geohashing.info google osm bing/os kml crox



Location

Fraser Cove, Tauranga Harbour

Participants

The Quaternary (talk) family geohashers, with Hugh and Heather

Plans

I had arrived in Tauranga the evening before in order to watch Hugh Jnr compete in the annual AIMS Games. Not being asleep in the early hours of the morning, and realising that the Dow Jones would have opened for the day many lines of latitudes away to the east*, I checked my favourite Geohashing app. And low and behold, a mere 8.4 miles away as the crow flies was a geohash! The geohashing god was indeed shining benevolently upon me.

It appeared to be in water, although tidal in nature. Checking the tide almanac, low tide was at 1630 that day. I drifted off to sleep dreaming of Geohashing adventures I was to have following my repose ...

* Actually this was not the case - it had been a public holiday in the US on the day, so the hash had been up already for 24 hours (Labour Day)

Expedition

Happily breakfast that morning with my hosts Hugh and Heather wasn't as awkward as it could have been, as they had accompanied me on a previous (but failed) geohash expedition some years earlier. So total explanation of the Ways of the Geohash wasn't completely necessary - only a mild refresh was required ("remember that time when we ..."). "Can't wait to do it again!" exclaimed Hugh senior.

We had two games of hockey to watch today, so between the first two games we did a reccie of the location. We were standing on the tip of a promontory, and the hashpoint was about 110 metres off shore. I was sorely tempted to there and then remove my attire in order to claim the hash for the Geohashing Community, but it was likely the water may have been over my head. Patience was required.

So we returned to the hash at 1500, and like the dividing of the Red Sea, my objective was now eminently achievable. There was some doubt that the hash may be in the channel, requiring me to get wet, so I removed my outer garments, just in case.

However, as the hash had been planted by a benevolent statistical geohashing deity, the hashpoint was just shy of the channel. The hash was snatched.

Tracklog


Photos

Achievements

Template:Virgin graticule

Drag-along.png
Quaternary earned the Drag-along achievement
by dragging Hugh and Heather to the (-37, 176) geohash on 2016-09-06.
2016 09 06 -37 176 12.JPG