A return to geocaching



Kabutroid's geocaching bag, fully unpacked and displayed on a wooden table.
It has been quite a while since I last updated the Geocaching page. The last time I found a geocache was in 2023, and then only three of them that year. Two in 2021, and then it dips back to 2019 when I was active. There's a lot of reasons for this. Abject poverty, depression. Losing my geocaching bag with the majority of my belongings in the 2010's somewhere, whenever that happened (I tend to block it out). Somehow, my GPS survived, but at some point, I just couldn't bear it any more. I think the final straw was when my Kabucrikey Geocoin went missing, I think in a box that never made it across the ocean when moving to England. I'd mostly put it down for the other reasons before then, but then the loss of that coin kinda did me in.

And then some things started to turn around. My friend MétisAngel (geocaching.com) offered to gift me a premium account, but I ended up saying to offer it to someone more active. And then I went on a few road trips where, if I had had my GPS on me, I could have found some geocaches in some amazing locations (and also added Wales to my list of places I've geocached). And then the final thing... the old geocoin came back.

Or at least it will soon (I hope I hope I hope). Shortly after the Wales trip, MétisAngel sent me a link to some cool dragon geocoins, and while those weren't available for purchase (I had considered using one as a replacement for the lost one), it did get me to search online for that coin.

And. I. Found. It. Not only did I find it, I found it unactivated on eBay. Oh you KNOW I had to snap that up in a tenth of a second. Now, they only shipped to the USA, but I do have a niece there (one of the Blagden clan), who offered to receive it for me and send it on. And that is where that currently waits... currently in transit on its way to me.

In the meantime while waiting, I decided that I needed to prep my geocaching setup. While I don't have all the bells and whistles, digital camera, string, wire, I do still have a number of tetra orbs, and a tradeable toy that I've been holding onto for way too long. And so, I made a number of möbius balls, some micromaille balls, and came up with a system to carry them. A large change purse can hold the tradeable and tetra orbs, a small bag inside can hold the tiny stuff. We still have our inkless pen, and while I can't get maps for a GPS this old any more, it'll still point me at coordinates, and that'll do.

It's minimal, it lacks a lot of the bells and whistles that my old setup had, but it'll take me to a geocache and I'll be able to leave my signature item, still unmissed in leaving one in/at every find. I've been told that GSAK is avaiable for free now (though usage on Linux has yet to be seen), but if I can somehow get that working again, I can perhaps update the master list of cache logs. All things to be seen to, but first and foremost, lets get out caching again.
Kabutroid's cat chewed GPS, with its strap attached to the inkless pen as well as the change purse, and below the tetra orbs, mobius balls and micromaille balls next to their separate purple bag, and a blue rocket ship looking toy car tradeable item, all sitting on a wooden table.
Slowly, our geocaching kit began to upgrade and sort. Finding a better pouch, find an EVEN better pouch, which had been used to poorly and barely contain my old gameboy games (aw yeah I've got Pokemon Blue and Silver in there, and Metroid II: Return of Samus), we moved those somewhere better, we got tips from MétisAngel and the list of contents from our first geocaching bag (most of which was never used, so we know what can be lopped out). Slowly, quickly, it began to take shape.

We found our spare daisy chain that was once a shoulder strap for my water bottle (which has since been replaced), and found the geocaching Metroid stamp (mental note, apparently I was planning to replace that with a K.T., so I should probably get on that again) and a small medical kit to to in the My Little Pony bag, which went into the purple pouch to help keep things sorted (the tetra orbs can go in that front mesh pocket, and the micros in the bison tube beside the inkless pen).
A purple and black multi pocket pouch much like Kabutroid's old camera case, but smaller, with the GPS and a smaller multi pocket coin purse beside, which currently holds the chainmaille tetra orbs and tradeable.The purple pouch with tetra orb chainmaille balls inside the front mesh pocket, and a yellow daisy chain strap now attached to the back of it, with the GPS now having a small green bison tube attached with the inkless pen to it.
And then, the computer side of it was solved. We got GSAK running through Wine on Linux, however it was unable to send waypoints to the GPS as a result of that. However, we *are* able to use this to update the on-site finds list. To add fresh waypoints, we found that Garmin BaseCamp has a native Mac version, which could indeed send to the GPS. So while we need to use two computers for this (I may as well not fight with running GSAK on Mac, since I'd need them on the Linux machine to add to the webpage anyway), we have a working method again! A photo of Kabutroid's Linux computer's screen, showing the app GSAK open, with all of her cache finds loaded into the database.A photo of Kabutroid's MacBook computer screen, showing the app BaseCamp open, with a variety of caches loaded and showing on the map of London inside it.
Kabutroid's geocaching kit neatly organized and laid out on the table, containing the items listed in the main text paragraph.
And then, in rapid succession, we obtained the rest of the items needed to complete my new primary geocaching kit items. We asked our good friend MétisAngel, who has over 10,000 finds, what things are *actually* needed in a geocaching bag, and we could add the necessary while removing the un. First and foremost, she recommended adding a pair of tweezers, for the purposes of grabbing little tiny tube caches that are trapped inside of holes, their handles either having fallen off, or them being pushed in too far. The same goes for my addition of a hefty safety pin, for when something pointy may be the only thing that might grasp the side of a container. Also for the vaguely potential use with the string if I need to... I dunno, grab something in a hole by creating a crude grappling hook? In either case, the string is primarily for temporarily re-attaching a geocache to a spot that it has fallen from, part of the cache repair kit. Also included in the cache maintenance supplies are spare logbooks of several sizes, spare ziplock bags, tiny little inkless pens to add to caches that need a writing instrument, and some duct tape. Naturally, we have our tetra orbs still inside the main bag, our micro and nano orbs inside the bison tube, spare batteries which go into the pink inner bag along with all of the maintenance supplies (the main bag mainly just holds this and cache swag in its main pocket), and... that about covers it! With this, our geocaching bag is complete, as of June 19, 2026. And I've already found four caches since beginning to set this up, nice.

Our contents to begin:

Garmin GPSMap 60Cx GPS
Inkless pen
Bison tube containing micromaille and nanomaille balls
Regular size tetra orb signature items
Personal Kabutracking tag (not visible)
Sturdy safety pin
Tweezers
Stamp
Geocache container sticker
Geocaching event cards
Cache swag (starting with a toy car)
Travelbug tags
KabuCrikey Geocoin
Spare logbooks
Spare pens
Spare ziplock bags
String
Duct tape
Spare batteries

Let the caching begin!


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