Do you ever get to the stage where you need just one cache to qualify for a challenge and it starts to nag at you.🤔 One that has been on my mind for a long time is Team Hippo’s Rainbow Challenge in Bucks.
Do you ever get to the stage where you need just one cache to qualify for a challenge and it starts to nag at you.🤔 One that has been on my mind for a long time is Team Hippo’s Rainbow Challenge in Bucks.
I was going to try to clear up the Bromley caches this morning so I parked up just before dawn in the free parking zone. My first cache of the day was to be the Bromley - Baptist mystery.
I had big plans for today. There were four Wherigo caches around Woking and if I found these, I would reach my century of Wherigos.
The weather forecast looked very poor this morning but I spotted a clear window between the rain for Bromley for an early visit.
I was just checking out the Challenges section of my Project. GC stats, as you do, and I was amazed to see that I had qualified for 168 challenges.
Cray, no not Robert Cray, that brilliant blues guitarist from Columbus, Georgia, it’s something much nearer to home. I’m visiting Cray, that area around the River Cray in South East London, you know where Crayford comes from.
So here’s the plan for the day.😀 First stop will be in Ipswich to collect the CM Ipswich ~ St Nicholas Wherigo that I couldn’t find before and then whiz up the A14 corridor to pick up some series caches.
I’ve been meaning to come over to Bromley for a long time now but never actually managed it. There are a good number of CMs and two Wherigos.
I’ve always got a challenge, or two, or three, or four bubbling around in my head. Whether it’s getting to a hundred wherigos or events, getting icons in counties or countries, filling my D/T grid with multis, trads or other stuff, there’s always something.
Now some cachers say that Geocaching isn’t just about the numbers, it’s much more than that. I’m not sure if there are any tongues in cheeks though.