2024-03-08 -37 145

From Geohashing
Revision as of 03:54, 9 March 2024 by Johnwrw (talk | contribs) (Participants)
Fri 8 Mar 2024 in -37,145:
-37.7577230, 145.0852613
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Location

A car park in Bulleen

Participants

Expedition One:

Expedition Two:

Expedition Three:

Expedition Four:

Expedition Five:

Expedition Six:

Expedition Seven:

Expedition

Expedition Four (BarbaraTables)

Was nearly excited to post a Tale of Two Hashes for Heidelberg, but it turns out that the Hash is in Bulleen. Oh, and the "Heide Museum of Modern Art" near it? It's also in Bulleen!! Well, that's some bull.

Took a series of buses to get there, grabbing not one but two cool beverages along the way. Got to see Doncaster Shopping Centre, had no idea it was so big. I really enjoy shopping centres because of their walkable interiors; I love places - both interior and exterior - where you can just walk around, discover things, and see other people walking around. My heart yearns for the growth of sustainable, walkable communities in Melbourne, but I suppose I'll make do with lorge capitalist buildings.

Autism-adjacent yearnings aside, the interesting part was when I got there. As I walked from my bus stop to the Hash, I started seeing large temporary fencing on the side of the road the Hash was on. "Surely the Hash isn't blocked off" I thought. "The fencing must be blocking off entrance to the museums nearby. There's no way the parking lot can be blocked off too. But maybe everything is being blocked off here - there's massive construction and improvement around here".

The parking lot was indeed blocked off. But... I spotted an entrance! So, I walked in and two workers in high-vis noticed me. They informed me that this parking lot is actually not open to the public, but I told them what Geohashing was and they were satisfied with my explanation. They explained that their real concern was trespassers burgling the premises - they've had tools stolen before by people doing the exact thing I was doing. Walking into areas designated for private use, that is. Not Geohashing. We would never do that, because we're good people.

My Dad arrived during this conversation, so we both took a photo at the Hash together. He thinks this parking lot is blocked off because it needs to be used by the construction vehicles and the workers' personal vehicles.

Expedition Five (Steve)

Boldly forth

It was hot, and I suddenly got too busy with work to meet tAlex at the hash. So I waited for the temperature to drop and the traffic to calm and then...

I shot like a rocket! I couldn't have timed it better. The air temp was pleasant, the streets were quiet (the Labour Day long weekend having just begun) and I had an incredible run of good luck with traffic lights and level crossings.

Down the Merri Creek, along Westgarth St, up the Hurstbridge Shimmy, down the Darebin Creek Trail, to the Boulevard as I have done so many times before. Then down to Wilson Reserve, which I haven't done in years. Predictions of a closed section did not come true, and I blasted through the bumpy dirt section, skirting the Ivanhoe public golf course.

Briefly back to hard surface, then dirt again as the trail leaves the freeway and wanders north. Up the tricky steep section under Banksia St, which for once I perfectly nailed.

All this I had committed to memory and could navigate easily. But then I hadn't actually really planned the next bit. I was now heading west along the side of Banksia St, but the geohash was directly east of me. What to do?

I hunched over the screen mounted to my handlebars in the fading light. Prodding, poking, probing for a solution. Suddenly it struck me!

Bang! A bollard! Right in the middle of the path! I lurched to a sudden stop and stared in dismay as a piece of plastic flew off from the vicinity of my recently-patched left shifter.

On closer inspection, the plastic was from a reflector on the bollard which I smashed. Increasing the likelihood of the next person not seeing it. Sometimes life is cruel like that.

Other than a slight graze to my hand, everything was fine, so with a rueful smile I carried on. Onto the footpath in the direction of the hash, past some workers setting up for nightworkers on the monstrous northeast link freeway project.

I wasn't sure about finding a creative way through the park to the point so just stuck with actual streets. They were surprisingly quiet. Just a lot of construction vehicles and a feeling of anticipation but nothing much actually happening yet.

And then, to the promised golf course car park, surrounded by the promised temporary fencing. Fortunately there was a big gap in it, and I could easily ride in and circle around until I found the point.

Boldly fifth

Turning back, I immediately encountered a problem. The air of anticipation and lack of activity had, in my few minutes' absence, transformed into road closures and flashing lights. This time, I peeled down into Banksia Park, and tried to find a way through te Banksia St.

The way turned out to be a very steep scramble, which seems to be pretty much par for the course when I go geohashing. (Wait, that would have made such a good pun two paragraphs ago).

The rest of the ride home was really much the same as on the way out, but darker, and with one fewer bollard collision, and a few more traffic lights. But wait till you hear what happened next.

Achievements

Bikegeohash.png
Stevage earned the Bicycle geohash achievement
by cycling 31km to the (-37, 145) geohash on 2024-03-08.
Landgeohash.png
BarbaraTables and Wizdude earned the Land geohash achievement
by reaching the (-37, 145) geohash on 2024-03-08.
Bus.PNG
BarbaraTables earned the Public transport geohash achievement
by reaching the (-37, 145) geohash on 2024-03-08 using public transit.