Where The Monsters Hide Extreme 5, Monsters Lair

GC3YWRA

So VERY smugly, the coords I derived from the hint took me closer than those I derived from the monster. I attribute this to my superior mapping skills, rather than inferior counting skills, obviously...!

This was my last of five 5/5's for the day. Needed to save some for my next trip up here...! The monster was interesting, and the cache location was pretty tremendous. I got the throwline exactly in place on throw one! This I consider to be a triumph considering the lack of limbs.... The first place I looked seemed to be an owl's dining room as there were bones and an interesting rodent skull in there. Not what I expected to put my hand on, but there you go. That's what eyes are for. So onwards and upwards, with a degree of uncertainty as I was sure it would be in the owl's house. No worries though, there it is. Quick sign and down again.

Pouring rain didn't dampen my spirits. Enjoyed this tremendously - thanks for the cache!


A Cunning Move Chaps

GC18RQB

So I have a proposition to put to you, based upon my experience today.... If grabbing the cache with a ladder is about a 2:3, and accessing it the approved way is a 5:5, may I suggest that being idiotic enough to attempt it with a dynamic rope makes it a 6:6...?!

Ew... I enjoyed it, don't get me wrong, but it was pouring with rain all day and the route was very slippery, and thanks to my elastic rope, I had to lean right out over the stream in order to get enough of an angle on the sloping stonework to stay up, and of course the rope bunged all over the place....!

Anyway a quick grab, and back to the car. Only 20p. Get in!

Thank you for the cache. U Nutter.


G2HX4 (Guildford to Horsham Extreme 4)

GC23Z0B

On reflection it was probably this one that killed my rope as I anchored it to the tree, and wound it around the square pillar so as to descend exactly over the cache. I ascended from the bottom, signed, and then carried on up and over. Unproblematic.

Great fun though. I enjoyed all three of the 5/5 G2HX's today. I imagine #2 is great, but I was on a mission.

Thanks for the adventures.


G2HX3 (Guildford to Horsham Extreme 3)

GC23Z06

Loved it. I couldn't see the cache from the ground, but was confident about where it was so set a rope and hopped over. I was particularly pleased with my Y-shaped rig as I was able to descend diagonally from high on one side and then ascend up the middle.

I'd like to blame you for destroying my rope, but it was my fault I guess...! Didn't protect it sufficiently on this or #4 and now I think it's beyond safe. Brickwork abrasion.

Good fun. On to the next one. (Didn't bag #2 because I was playing 5/5's and had only finite time available.)



G2HX1 (Guildford to Horsham Extreme 1)

GC23YZX

I was in the area to finish my grid and that having been ticked off, coming to do these was just gravy! This first one was way the most problematic of the three 5/5's I attempted thanks to the socking great fence and the face-high nettles and brambles along the bridge making it a little complicated to set an anchor. Nevertheless I managed it after surprising a couple of old ladies walking their dogs, and then ascended from the bottom rather than abseiling from the top.

It was a little difficult to spot from the floor, but once identified, retrieval was fairly trivial, particularly as I had by chance had the foresight to consider how I might get back to dry land after descending to a point slap in the middle of the stream...

Thanks for the cache. Very enjoyable despite the rain!


T5 Tree-top Challenge

GC3K9X

16/02/2013 
Weeeeeeell... I was up this way to buy a ukulele (long story) and it would have been rude not to scoop up a couple of big 'uns on the way back, eh?!

The whole enterprise was slightly overshadowed by the pervading guilt that I'd spent an unholy amount of money on what amounts to a pretentious toy guitar, and this may have knocked my confidence slightly but..... nevertheless!. I arrived at Stage 1 having seen the spoiler image and expecting it to be child's play. Nyope. What appears to be a straightforward stroll up a fallen tree is very much not that - especially when the moss is so slippery. I wandered around planning various angles of attack until eventually giving in and just running up the tree - although I did take a rope so I would not have to gingerly pick my way back down. A satisfying leap/rappel saw me back at ground level with the coords for Stage 2.

Stage 2 proved conclusively that I am a bloody awful shot with a throwline. It must've taken me 30 minutes and probably twice that in throws to get close, and even then once aloft I needed to do some terrifying balancing to shift from rope to an improvised web of slings for the final little push. However, coords grabbed, and then an awkward prusik failure saw me down in a fairly unplanned way.

It seems to be going... acceptably.

Stage 3 took me ages to spot, but miraculously I managed to get the throwline through the exact two branches I wanted on throw TWO! The bad news was that once ready to set off it was clear that I'd positioned the rope between the branches I wanted and in fact over a cruddy 5cm dead-looking branch. I decided, ill-advisedly, to ascend anyway, calculating that if the dead branch were to give way, I'd fall about six feet. Of course it didn't, and had the effect instead of merely filling me with dread as I ascended.

Stage 4. Stage 4.... It took a lot of spotting and after a couple of abortive throwline attempts, an increasing sense that I should be at home facing the ukulele music, fatigue (I'd been up since 5am) and an increasingly-significant awareness that I was climbing solo, I decided to call it a day for today.

So I've got the coords for 4. Spotted it in the tree. MIGHT find a second rope for the return visit as although Blake's Hitches are my preferred method for re-rigging, they're a pig to set up in a complex tree.

See you next time!


28/03/2013
Gutted!

I was up a few weeks ago grabbing stages 1, 2, & 3, and that time arrived at stage 4 without really the time or the body-warmth to attempt it. So I very sensibly called it a day to return today to clean up.

Stage 4 was great fun. Challenging and using a variety of ascension methods and a splendid rappel down to earth too. Whereas Stage 5...... JEEEEEZ! How did you get that there...?

I was at GZ at 7/8ish this morning and the sun was exactly in the wrong place to be able to clearly see the geography of the tree. I could not for the life of me figure out a workable route to the cache (beyond coming back with a bow and arrow and a very long rope...) I climbed up to the Obvious Fork to see if I could get a better handle on things from there but, inevitably, it was harder to work anything out from the single point, albeit further up, than it was from pacing around on the ground.

Had I come with a climbing partner perhaps I'd have stuck around and figured something out or learnt a new arboreal skill but as it was, I descended dejectedly and came away from this my first arboreal cache defeat! Though saying that, I was later defeated by DizzyPair's Hit The Beech too, so it's been a very poor show all round!


10/05/2013
Three months. Eighteen hours in the car total. A couple of audiobooks. And this last one, stage five, an unbelievable four hours in the tree!

It started so well... After all, I've been here before(!) I had a good idea of what to expect, and had been practising my throwline technique to such a high standard that I'd all but given up on saving for a Big Shot. Not only that, but I'd perfected a technique of re-siting the throwbag mid-way along the line to ensure a good pathway for both sides of the rope. So I'm all confidence.

It took fifteen minutes to get the throwline near the cache, but finally like a god I (completely by chance) managed to get the throwline EXACTLY where the cache was. Not only that, but neatly above the helpful side-branch to stop the rope dropping down the limb to the Black Hole Of Throwlines - about which more later. After making use of the mid-line throwbag strategy I had what looked like the idea setup for hoisting the rope. Rope up, and curses the ends were hanging at eye level meaning, of course, no way of setting up a rig.

However - never fear! - I've also been working on a patent pending system for using and retrieving the full length of a rope. I... need to... just... tweak this... throwline... as it's not in the right plaaAUGH! The line, snagged on a small springy branch, perfectly catapaulted the bag OFF of it's amazing place and sent the entire thing down to a neat pile by my feet.

'Rats. Let's just go up and have a look. I'll take the throwline and bag with me and try to position it from aloft.' I bundled the rope and just slung it over a handy low limb and began the ascent (the first ascent... hmm...) with the old hitch-climber setup and 3m lanyard. Neat. That got me to within TEN FEET of the cache. But... once there it seemed to be extraordinarily difficult to set the throwline. Or shimmy the remaining ten feet thanks to an abrupt lack of lateral growth. I spent a long time looking at it before realising that I was spending more time planning an alternative route than it took me to chuck the line from the ground before, so down I jumped for a second crack at that.

This was when I fully appreciated the awfulness of The Black Hole Of Throwlines. Right in there. SO tightly that it wasn't going to move in either direction. A bloody great bright orange throwline hanging the full length of the tree, pretty much.

I'm a big boy. I can leave a cache if it's too much. I've done it before on this very tree! However, I can't leave that there. So once again it was up again with the hitch-climber and lanyard until I was almost, but not, at the Black Hole. And now I felt more of a moral imperative to solve the problem of lack-of-lateral-growth. Happily this time inspiration struck in the form of memories (painful ones, but memories nonetheless) from Hang 'Em High... and slowly - forty five minutes slowly - with a couple of slings, I inched my way to the dodgy and optimistic little knot in the branch just south of the cache over which I reckoned I could sling my rope. And did.

And on the way I found evidence of THREE other jammed throwlines in the same spot.

Then all that was required, HA! "all" that was required, was for me to drop off of the limb at 50m and trust the rope, my Distel Hitch, and the little knot. And then, the cache being at fingertips' length and still unopenable (albeit pokeable), to toss the lanyard over the branch upstream of the cache and tow myself in a hammock formation closer to the container. Adjusting. The. Lanyard. Prusik. With. My. Teeth.

My teeth...

... But this is a geocache. A 5/5. It's very important. It's vital, urgent, critical... indispensable... essential... there... er... just a geocache... with no meaning, at all, pointless. Stupid. What am I doing? I got out of bed at 4am and have spent an hour throwing a beanbag at a tree, four hours in the tree, and now here I am dangling from a rope that I know will not reach the ground for my descent, gripping a biro lid in my teeth, writing a name that is a made up name onto a small slip of paper.

And that's about it. Other than the prusik seizing up halfway down and almost needing cutting out. Beyond that it was plain sailing.

I had a list of DizzyPair climbs to do today. Didn't get to any of 'em.

Thank you Ambles for a great challenge. It escalates quickly, and has rather conveniently mirrored my gradually increasing confidence and knowledge of the various strategies and pitfalls. Brilliant. Obviously a favourite.


Below Above - Old Stone Face

GC49MEV

First To Find!

Brilliant. Inevitably I suppose as it was next to an already properly excellent piece of the quarry, but also turns out to be pretty impressive in its own right too! I was back here with Stuey, Wadders and cachemad as part of Stuey's insane attempt to make his 5,555th find the fifth of five 5/5's found on the fifth of the fifth. Which. He. Did. What a god! For me, the Earthcaches were original finds.

Thanks for more excellent caches Steve!


Below Above - The Great Rift

GC47PTC

First To Find!

Brilliant. I was back here with Stuey, Wadders and cachemad as part of Stuey's insane attempt to make his 5,555th find the fifth of five 5/5's found on the fifth of the fifth. Which. He. Did. What a god! For me, the Earthcaches were original finds.

We managed to walk right past this feature initially and spent a lot of time looking at ceiling cracks and trying to decide which looked most promising as a rift. None of them, it turned out, but a quick backtrack and it made itself resoundingly obvious. What a shift!

Notes taken and onwards and upwards. Downwards, I mean. Thanks for more excellent caches Steve!


SO NEAR YET SO FAR 10: 'More Tea -----?'

GC3HRY2

[This was the original log that I wrote, Google-translated into Malay, Vigenere encoded with the keyword being the CO's name, and Caesar-shifted each paragraph by a value equivalent to its paragraph number. I wanted to get my own back for the evil convoluted puzzle he'd set... He deleted it, so the replacement log says "TFTC". But this is my blog... yuk yuk.]

Well, that was a task.

After being alerted to the existence of this cache soon after it was published I managed to get pretty far through it, so I thought.

I had managed to decode the Part A hint, and quickly after that the Parts B and C hints.

Also further meta-hints dropped into place.

But then it all ground to a halt.

Some hope was raised when the cache owner suggested that hints may be available to those watching the cache, but that was quickly extinguished when the offer was asked to be withdrawn, presumably by the team who were first to find.

Well done to them!

Who can blame them for preserving their lead?

Once it was found however, it appeared that part of the cat was out of the bag, and indeed I glimpsed a flash of its tail and was very much on the trail again.

And I had it solved.

I understand all of the "whats" but very few of the "whys".

Nevertheless, an imaginative puzzle with elements I had not seen before, and a nice final location.

I abseiled. Bollocks to seafaring.

Thanks for the cache.


Below Above - Mega Breakfast

GC45XAE

+++ It's amazing how your bearings can be so easily lost when there is nothing at a distance to sight towards. +++

Well anyway, antpeng, Staticman1 and I had banded together in order to grab Earnanæs, þæs wyrmes denn (GC2VH8B) and the opencache il Nono Cerchio (OK0235) last weekend, but the insistent calling and irresistible attraction of the Mega Breakfast kept interfering with our plans - and when it was disabled prior to our agreed weekend it looked as if either it was going to be bloody disabled, or, optimistically, it was usefully unavailable for anybody else who fancied their chances at the First To Find..... So we crafted two cunning plans based upon the status of the cache at the moment of our assembly.

For a couple of weeks we each went cross-eyed in our respective corners of the country trying to decode the nasty nasty encoded directions until, eventually, we became able to just read along the codes and decode live into English. This, let me tell you, is a terrifying thing to discover you can do. It's like conducting brain surgery on yourself. Thankfully, that brain-warping turns out not to be permanent and I for one can no longer do it.

However, now I can do it for the new script. You absolute sod BareClawz!

Still, directions decoded, coordinates decoded (lazy! Lazy boy!), and the next stage was to grab the relevant maps to make sense of the routes (as far as it is possible to do that), and then muster on the day.

It was bloody disabled.

So Staticman1 and I grabbed Earnanæs and another opencache, and then antpeng joined us to begin gathering the required breakfast menu items in the many subterranean greasy spoons.

EXCELLENT!

Perhaps because we knew we had a long way ahead of us we managed to work through all of this quite efficiently, but that said, it was still a long, long couple of days. We went off-piste quite a bit, but that led us to some hair-raising climbs over deads, as well as getting us, at first mildly and later hopelessly, lost and disoriented... I should stress that this was not a function of the quality of the directions, but of our happy-go-lucky willingness to go blundering off in the wrong direction just for grins, and then to compound the problem by walking in circles for ages.

But what would life be like without an elevated pulse occasionally?

Probably my most life-endangering moment was making the classic geocaching error of walking along with my eyes on the map and not the terrain and only realising seconds later that I'd walked blindly less than a foot from a deep unguarded well. Try not to do this. There's breaking your pelvis in a subterranean hell-hole, and there's breaking your pelvis in a subterranean hell-hole because you are a dick-wit.

And then we had all the codes. And then we had the final coordinates. And then we had the cache. Except... we didn't because it was, as mentioned, bloody disabled. So we went and sat at GZ, held hands in a circle and cried softly for a few silent moments.

We left a little something for CO, despite his obvious pact with the Devil, and returned to our respective corners relying on our only remaining plan: To leave a watchlist on the cache page, eyes on the Below Above Facebook page, and the engines running.

...Time... Passes... Oh... So... Slowly...

And then BANG! Drop the baby and drive! DRIVE! DRIVE! The cache is ours!

In your face.

Obviously a fave. Obviously.



Earnanæs, þæs wyrmes denn

GC2VH8B

Found with staticman1.

What a tremendous cache. What can I say...? Well, in summary, I think opting out of it last time after Lasciate was a very sensible move.

This one is, to my mind, far more of a challenge, not least for the initial descent, where the bottom cannot be seen from the top and decisions need to be made on the way down which, depending on the flexibility of your setup may or may not be reversible...!

After that there's the terrifying thrutch and/or corridor of Much Height, then the short climb down where the big rocks can be dislodged.

Essentially however, the ultimate location is absolutely fab, and the twist in the dragon's tail made me smile all the way back to the rope. It was only the tricky ascent left then to wipe the smile off of my face.

Not a single bat was observed, which I thought was bit spooky. I suppose some caves are just not appealing to mammals...!

Thank you Abanazar for another amazing cache. I'm just going to have to come back now and see if I can find all of them.

All clothes remained on for the duration. As far as James was aware.


I DARE YOU???

GC3MRKK

Brilliant. Loved stage 1, despite looking in the correct place first off, but not thoroughly enough so only found it after also having ransacked the surrounding area! Stage 2 was sadly in some disrepair at the time but is clearly an excellently implemented field puzzle. Final stage: great. The sling already in the tree was handy for the log signing, and the climb was enjoyable with my new pair of ascenders. The danger of this tree is indeed that it looks very temptingly climbable without gear but really really don't try! Not least due to the barbed wire fence (and associated fence poles). I carry scars from childhood from falling into a barbed wire fence and although it breaks your fall it is in no way a comfortable experience...!

Thank you FMF for your great hides and for your help with stage 2. Just a few of yours left for me now, sadly.

Oh! Oh! Also this is my 30th 5/5. I wanted it to be this one and am pleased I managed to swing it. A high quality milestone.


Pirate's Treasure Trove

GCPWKZ

26/01/2013

Well then..... After a lot of joint discussion, furrowed brows, and cooperation with Chris (rickardclan) and a reassuring email from CO, I decided I had enough to go on, although the precise coords still eluded me, and made the crossing today.

Please be aware: The obvious car park to use is currently untenable. I was lucky to get my 4x4 out of it today.

That little adventure aside, I got everything together and got all the way there, minus about ten feet. I was alone. The only bit of gear was already in situ, looked very old, and I could not effectively judge it's safety. So I got to eye-level and was a very big boy and turned around, and came all the way home again.

I will not be beaten. I have a plan.


23/02/2013

And the tank did return, and once again a meal was made of the whole thing....

Right... So last time I visited I figured that maybe a descent from above would be easier (and dryer) than one from below. I did speak to CO about that and he suggested I reconsider that and as evidence pointed me towards some earlier logs. Yup. However, I did happen to bring a sackful of climbing gear and this morning was SO cold I thought I'd try that first, regardless.

And what did we learn? Well, one thing was that a 50m rope isn't long enough, even if you boldly reascend and tie it off lower down.

So I reverted to boat mode and had cadged what seemed to be a critical bit of kit, and paddled it all the way across. BUT... On approach I spotted another of the key features mentioned in the cipher and thought I'd try that one first.

BINGO!

And there it was. So it turned out I was in somewhat the wrong place during my last visit and didn't need the other bit of kit. The bit of kit that made the kayak oh-so-very-unstable for the journey across and back.

What else did we learn? Well, that the excellent descending approach with a longer rope would still have been disappointing, as it would have arrived in the wrong place.

Oh, and never trust that the millpond ocean will still be a millpond for the journey back. In particular don't extend that misplaced trust into a decision to just leave your only set of dry clothes on for the trip and hope for the best. The launch from GZ was hairy, but successful, but the journey back was highly precarious, and, inevitably, I got dumped fully clothed into the drink just metres from the beach.... Resulting in a trip to M&S in Hayle wearing nothing but a towel and a cagoule..!

You live and learn. Thanks for the adventure!

(Number 29 of my personal 30x5/5 challenge. Woo!)



A Year, Lost! - 365 days of caching!

GC254H4

I completed 366 days towards the end of last year, and the hardest part of it was not looking for a cache the next day! In fact, there is a cache near me called Do Not Find This Cache which had been taunting me during my 366 streak, so on day 367 I went and found it but didn't sign the log. I consider this a comprehensive win and a feat of superhuman self-control!

This cache is quite a drive from my base (Exeter) but was pointed out by HeartRadio who knew I was now on a quality rather than quantity streak and was collecting 5/5s.

Thanks for number 28! It was the easiest one I've had to grab, but that's good as I'm anticipating the T5 challenge near Bournemouth later on and suspect it will be somewhat harder.

Decent container too. Cheers..! Always a pleasant surprise.

A Cheval

GC2J6BV

Great stuff as usual. Quickly dispatched the puzzle in the grounds of this lovely church, and then off to the cache. I tried approaching via the nose, then up the hindquarters but it hailed on me (5 minutes of hail right when I didn't need it!) so I approached by hastily rigged stirrups up towards the belly.

Hippos Below

GC1C47M

Meet Alain.

Alain

Alain is the friendly person who, when I asked if anybody had a shortie whitewater kayak to borrow, for fear that my own longer one would not turn around in the tunnel, said not only "yes" but also, quite embarassingly cleverly, "why don't you just go in in a nice long comfy one and turn yourself round instead?"

He also, rather splendidly two days ago said, "I'm going to be in the midlands on Saturday. With my Canadian open canoe. Do you want to go and do that geocache?" With due consideration I calmly and without betraying my glee said,

"YES!!!"

...and thus it was that we met this morning in Newent for an adventure. (I'd already had one. Lair of The Lost Boys - http://coord.info/GC30P7T - is well worth travelling early for!)

Frustratingly Alain's massive van would not fit into the minimal gap remaining since two cars were already parked at the Parking waypoint. Happily we carried on and followed the lane as it turned back on itself and the kind lady in the farmhouse up the hill let us park opposite their entrance - which meant we ended up carrying a large laden canoe through a field full of sheep....

It also meant of course, no less ridiculously, that we ended up carrying a large laden canoe along a distinctly muddy and somewhat treacherous path.

Part way along it looked as if there was enough water in the canal to paddle, so Alain jumped in while I walked on ahead to see if the route further on was navigable. It so very wasn't! So it was back onto the now much muddier towpath for the final push. It was now that Alain regretted not putting on the wetsuit socks that he had with him but which, by now, were entirely pointless.

Once at the hippos' front door it was an easy launch and somewhat of a surprise. The cache has not been logged since October last year and yet... what's that?... Surely not.....? Yep. It's torches. Them's people! The torchlight looks a little low though. They're surely not.... swimming?! They were some way off still... Eventually the first person to appear was paddling a large plastic bag. It wasn't supposed to be a large plastic bag... It seemed to have started life as a firmly inflated dinghy, but by the time we came across him it had lost all of its puff.

"Did you find it?" we asked breezily.

"No. Although, to be honest, I was more preoccupied with not sinking and had to turn back."

"Would you like some help?"

"No thanks!" he said, confidently, as he paddled on following a gradient down of about 1 in 20...

Shortly thereafter, more people. "Hello! Did you find the box?!"... "No... we searched for ages, but it's not there."

Oh no. Maybe somebody dropped it in...? We sure as **** aren't going to turn back without exploring (and hunting) at this point. And on we paddled, occasionally knocking into the walls because everything was just so ace! The calcification made the tunnel in places look like a terrifying alien trachea. The dozen or so pipistrelles were great. And the air shaft was brilliant, although it was raining hard in a perfect circle beneath it, making it quite difficult to look up! We also paddled right to the end and hopped out for an explore in what looked quite humblingly like a very significant and scary collapse. Paddling right to the far end meant also, gratifyingly, that we of course spotted, with no trouble whatsoever...

THE CACHE.

Sorry guys. You just didn't go far enough. I thought it was much further than the distance given in the hint, but on this Alain disagreed and we decided that probably distance in the open seems not as far as distance in a narrow dark tunnel.

Thanks for a brilliant and completely ridiculous cache. We found no TBs in the box despite the inventory, so hopefully those will be logged by somebody soon.

Not easy to get lost




Lair of the Lost Boys

GC30P7T

Well that was excellent - thank you.

I drove up from Exeter for the double of Lost Boys and Hippos Below, and this is the first of hopefully two...! My ****** phone decided to keep freezing (why do I bother updating iOS?!) and so I splodged around in the mud for a while rummaging and rebooting until eventually found stage one without the GPS. Then of course I spent rather a long time poking around as per the instructions until I remembered one of the key attributes and returned to the car with my tail between my legs.

Suitably chastened, but reinvigorated as what had seemed impossible now felt more likely, I returned to the search, widened that search considerably, and found the elusive pointer just as dawn began to break.

Then a quick bit of scavenging about, tree-climbing reconnaissance, and rope-work, and Bob was indeed my uncle. Yay! The good news was I remembered to climb with a pen. The bad news was I forgot my little book to stamp into. No mind. It's the FIND I'm interested in, in my nearly-there quest to bag thirty 5/5's.

Thanks again for an excellent and characterful cache. Loved it.


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

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.

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.