Look into the Light

GC1AGGD

Well, admittedly with a helpful prompt from CO, I had this puzzle solved months ago with a plan to make it my 1000th find. However, a combination of lack of opportunity and simultaneously trying to complete a year-streak meant that that milestone was clocked elsewhere. Since that time I've been rather pathetically putting off finding this, despite an ongoing plan to focus mostly on 5/5s, with ropey reasons like, it's a bit far for a single find and I'll just leave it a few months until the weather is warmer...

Today I just thought, "What will I remember most? Waiting until the summer to put a wetsuit on and gingerly picking my way to the cache? Or eschewing warmth, comfort, and equipment, and just driving there today, hiking across snowy Exmoor, and striding purposefully, and naked, through a flooded adit?"

Yeah. And it was extremely cold walking the ridge. Throughout the drive, the snow came and went along with the altitude, but once at my elected parking space (the northerly option was out of action as snow had been ploughed into the space, so I parked to the south on the road) the snow was between six and ten inches deep, peaking in the drifts at hip-height. Visibility was low, as well as the brightness being high, as the wind was whipping up the snow and cloud cover was low. Happily, the footpath was fairly visibly marked by tufty rows of grass to either side.

The walk was hard because of the snow, but it was extremely pretty and on a few occasions I saw deer drinking from the stream. Eventually I arrived at the adit and found my way up to the opening (the climb up was unexpected, and difficult when everything was under snow). Happily, there was a reasonably large, if low, dry area inside, so I was able to take shelter, gain some privacy, and, er, find somewhere dry to leave my clothes! I should emphasise that nudity was not done for its own sake, but because - paradoxically - it was Baltic over the moor and I considered it quite sensible to make every effort to keep my clothes dry.

So. Um... I took off all my clothes, but for a woolly hat, a head torch, and wellies (the adit floor has sharp stones), and I stomped off to find the cache! I learned only recently that the temperature of caves (as far as I can tell) remains constant regardless of the conditions outside, and so the water was perfectly bearable and the air quite pleasant. And it was very nice to be able to stand straight and just march along. Equally it was nice to be able to spot the cache from metres away and just go straight to it!

Once back at the entrance I did take the opportunity to make a photographic record of this patently ridiculous caching day and the grizzly proof is in the image gallery. I have made some effort to make it - if not family-friendly - at least less family-surly.

Then it was dry, dress, and make the much more difficult stomp up the ridge and back to the car, during which I managed to lose both of my clever snow-chains-for-boots, such was the depth of snow.

Thank you for an interesting and challenging puzzle, and a cache that stretched my sanity as much as anything else.


NSFW

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Lasciate ogne speranza, voi ch'intrate

GC2JPKZ

Well that was immense!

I had this solved a few months back but had nobody to come with, but then with the brainwave of asking facebook and I had volunteers in the intrepid guise of Wheelybarrow, moortrekka, and sytyky.

The journey all the way from Cullompton was snow, snow, snow all the way and it didn't diminish all the way to the cache site, where the snow was inches thick on the ground, in the trees, and, often, down our necks.

Finding the opening was easier than expected as the various openings were sheltered from the snow by overhangs. And then in, which I just cockily rapelled down - meaning I had ignorantly ignored the critical factor of getting back up again, for which more later. I don't know how the others got down because, my head torch malfunctioned...! So for half of the rest of the climb I was holding a feeble garage torch that itself kept flickering on and off - until I horsed around with the internals and moortrekka intelligently suggested I tape it to my helmet (and gave up some tape from his helmet, to boot!)

This was by far my most challenging 5/5 to date, and I've got a few under my belt now. The rifts were narrow and slippery. The climbs were, well, narrow and slippery! And the drops were narrow and slippery, and uncontrolled! By the final push we were delighted to find a helpful length of scaffold, and moortrekka's three metres of 5mm cord, which was invaluable for the final little climb.

I left a very large TB, which was never going to fit in the cache, but is hiding just behind it. It cannot be missed!

On the way back, I dropped my phone down a deep rift! And nearly that was that, but for the fact that mercifully it landed squarely on a rock jammed into the rift and did not disappear down to the ninth circle of hell...

Once we got back to the bottom of the entry chimney the immensity of our final challenge became all too apparent. The chimney itself was easier than it looked (though still extremely tricky) but the initial little climb up onto the ledge required quite a lot of planning, and the construction of a bit of a ladder from the rope. I went first in order to quickly call Mrs Tank to say we were (nearly) out and not hastily call mountain rescue(!) and threw down our only harness - I know! - for the others... None of whom could make it fit and all of whom therefore very impressively made their way out unassisted. Excellent!

What a fantastic cache, and a real challenge. And the wood was absolutely beautiful in the snow. We pushed on to Earnanaes but on a quickk inspection decided to leave that until our strength has returned and (hopefully) the ground is dryer...!



Note: A few weeks later, I discovered that moortrekka broke a rib down there, and immediately let me use him as a ladder! The man's a real gent.
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Golden Goal

GC36719

Well this puzzle had me stumped for MONTHS. I just couldn't find the correct source of information without one of millions of cloned websites with Alan Hansen's gurning great mug grimacing at me. Then suddenly I googled EXACTLY what I wanted, and there it was! Piece of cake.

Then the retrieval. Well. I read all the previous logs and came properly prepared. Overalls, wellies, old walking boots, wetsuit, and towel. Seriously! I didn't know what to expect, see...?! I parked in the pub and made a quick reconnaissance visit to decide which of this kit was necessary, then just grabbed it without using anything!

No harm in being over prepared.

Second 5/5 of the day, along with Over the Rainbow, as so many have done before me. That's 22 now. I am pleased with my progress!

Thanks for an excellent puzzle and a VERY pleasing and fitting cache container.
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Over the Rainbow

GC3PVNA

Well I returned! Last visit I had one karabiner, one rope, no belay device, and an over-confident approach to Blake's Hitches...! THIS time I had a handful of slings, four biners, belay device, prusik loops, throwline, and throw bag. I was much happier with all this, although I'd suggest nylon rather than dyneema slings as they are more tolerant to sudden loads.

What a fantastic climb! I've been seeking out good tree caches in recent months, and this one is top of the bunch so far - and I've been up at fungimanforever's Arboreal Adventures in the midlands too. So far it's been mostly big conifers, which are great for height, but not so much for technical challenge. THIS one however has just that. You have to really plan the route and think hard throughout the exercise. No Just Climbing here!

Happily, the cache was just at the limit of my doubled rope so it was an easy rapelle and retrieve at the end. Climbing DOWN things is horrible!

Thanks for a tremendous cache and quite a challenging puzzle also. Thanks to rickardclan for the advice with THAT!



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