Difference between revisions of "2019-11-29 51 -1"

From Geohashing
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== Video ==
 
== Video ==
Having realised my imminent failure, I vlogged the experience:
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Having realised my imminent failure, I vlogged the experience.
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<youtube>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2sqX7RCgptQ</youtube>
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Also available at:
  
 
* [https://tube.danq.me/videos/watch/96f3244d-f3b2-4f94-943c-54d0877515fe QTube]
 
* [https://tube.danq.me/videos/watch/96f3244d-f3b2-4f94-943c-54d0877515fe QTube]
* [https://tube.danq.me/videos/watch/96f3244d-f3b2-4f94-943c-54d0877515fe YouTube]
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* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2sqX7RCgptQ YouTube]
  
 
== Photos ==  
 
== Photos ==  

Revision as of 21:50, 26 February 2020

Dan Q also wrote about this expedition on his blog. For more details and higher-resolution pictures, see this expedition's log at https://danq.me/2019/11/29/geohashing-expedition-2019-11-29-51-1/

Fri 29 Nov 2019 in 51,-1:
51.9032005, -1.4401402
geohashing.info google osm bing/os kml crox


Location

Footpath connecting Ditchley, Fulwell and Cleveley, North-East of Charlbury.

Participants

Plans

The XKCD Geohashing Wiki has been down ever since the forums hosted on the same server were hacked almost three months ago. But the algorithm is functionally open-source and there’s nothing to stop an enterprising Geohasher from undertaking adventures even when the biggest silo is offline (I’m trying to negotiate a solution to that problem, too, but that’s another story).

So I planned to take a slightly extended lunch break for what looked like an easy expedition: drive up to Fullwell where it looked like I’d be able to park the car and then explore the footpath from its Western end.

Expedition

Everything went well until I’d parked the car and gotten out. We’ve had some pretty wet weather lately and I quickly discovered that my footwear was less than ideal for the conditions. Clinging to the barbed wire fence to avoid slipping over, I made my way along a footpath saturated with ankle-deep slippery mud. Up ahead, things looked better, so I pressed on…

…but what I’d initially surveyed to be a drier, smoother part of the field up ahead quickly turned out to be a thin dried crust on top of a pool of knee-to-waist-deep ooze. Letting out a smelling like a mixture of stagnant water and animal waste runoff, the surface cracked and I was sucked deep into the pit. I was glad that my boots were tied tightly or I might have lost them to the deep: it was all I could do to turn around and drag my heavy, sticky legs back to the car.

This is my first failed hashpoint expedition that wasn’t cancelled-before-it-started. It’s a little disappointing, but I’m glad I turned around when I did – when I spoke to somebody near where I’d parked, they told me that it got even worse in the next field and a farmer’s tractor had gotten briefly stuck there recently!

Tracklog

My GPSr keeps a tracklog:


Video

Having realised my imminent failure, I vlogged the experience.

Also available at:

Photos

Achievements