Northern Ireland Outdoors Forum - Hiking, camping and more
Outdoor Activities => Northern Ireland Hiking, Walking, Running, Orienteering and Geocaching => Topic started by: Oisín on March 15, 2012
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I was thinking about getting into Geocaching, as another form of entertainment alongside camping etc.
I've read information and watched videos on the official site. I love the idea of it but have a few questions and thought there would be plenty here who can answer them.
I havent got a GPS device or a GPS enabled mobile phone. - Would I be best getting a phone and buying and app that allows me to do so, or would a actual GPS prove more useful?
That then leads to my second question of can any recommend a good GPS (relatively cheap - i.e. less than £150) or does anyone have an old GPS they dont use anymore and would be willing to sell it to myself.
Answers appreciated,
Thanks team.
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Mate i bought my Etrex garmin from ebay for £26.00,& its never failed me once,you're more that welcome to join me any time for a spot of geocaching.It's a wee bit tricky at first how to load up the co-ordernates,but it's easily picked up,something like this does the job oisin
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Garmin-eTrex-GPS-/251015420989?pt=UK_AudioTVElectronics_GPSSystems_GPSSystems&hash=item3a71af5c3d#ht_600wt_1141
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I'm liking the price of that. Some of the top of the range one's scared me they were that dear.
I'll possibly bid on that.
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Never tried it either. Sounds fun & would gladly take a lesson before having a go.
Do you cover much distance on your average geo-caching day out?
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From what I've read on it distances can vary as there can be one anywhere at all.
And it seems to be a jump right in hobby, as in you put the co ordinates into a GPS device and away you go.
I love the fact that it's something for all abilities and that it takes you places you might never of thought of going had it not been for that cache.
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heading to the mournes first light geocaching
;D
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Never tried it either. Sounds fun & would gladly take a lesson before having a go.
Do you cover much distance on your average geo-caching day out?
Like Mourneman, I have a Etrex and it works best in mountains. It is an added feature to your walk and you can organise your route to take in a few geocaches. I would suggest that you do about 3 or 4 as sometimes it takes time to reach each location and then actually looking for it. There are different types of geocaches. The one I usually go for are Traditional Caches whereby you go to the one location and find it. The another type is Multi Caches whereby, it co-ords takes you to a location, you answer a question (usually the answer are digits)and then you fill in a grid for another co-ods which then brings you to the cache. Sometimes you have to answer three of four questions and go to different locations in order to find the one cache. It is up to you what you want to do. There are of course urban ones which I am not a great fan of but have done a few.
Again like Mourneman, if you want to go geocaching, feel free to PM me. I am off on a Mon & Fri and the weekend.
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heading to the mournes first light geocaching
;D
What time tomorrow?
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first thing
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Definately go for the likes of a Garmin... The phone apps depend on a 3G signal and there's parts of Belfast that don't have coverage never mind anywhere really remote! Garmin or other GPS work anywhere tho!
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TBH you're better going for a newer model that's designed for geocaching. The older etrex model above doesn't have mapping and isn't best suited for caching. It can be done, I've been caching with my old Tomtom, but it just makes things harder.
The newer ones's, i.e. last 3 years or thereabouts, are much better. You can upload free maps and when you upload geocaches you'll get all the info on the GPS; hints, description, comments from previous finders.
I believe prior to this you'd print out the info of all the caches you want to find that day :-\
I got a Garmin Dakota 10 from Amazon almost two years ago for £150 [now £110]. It's a touch screen model and runs on 2 x AA's. Very rugged and very easy to use :)
IMO you're definitely better getting a device purely for GPS rather than as an addon to a phone. They'll get better signal where the 3G network won't. Also most GPS models can take a knock or two whereas most phones will not. Another big plus is you can switch out batteries if you're running low. My torch, GPS and point & shoot all take AA's ;D
Mine is probably at the lower end of the scale but suits me perfectly. Works great for geocaching and measuring tracks when out walking.
You can easily pay £500+ for a GPS model with a camera, wireless sharing and other such stuff but it's not necessary for caching and hill walking.
99% of cachers I have met have Garmins. A lot of them have the Etrex Vista / Legend but I've seen a few higher end models like the Oregon.
We did an Intro To Geocaching last year at Carnfunnock. It allowed people to get to play with a variety of models and geocaches. You really can just jump in and go. You can geocache on your own or go to some the meets they have and go out with others. There's guaranteed to be several within a few miles of your home ;) ;D
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Garmin-Dakota-10-Handheld-GPS/dp/B002G1YPIE/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1332085434&sr=8-1
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Hi i was looking for a GPS for hiking primarily (maybe get into geocaching later), the dekota looks good for £100 but is there others that would be better if you are interested in hiking?
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The 'missing bits' from the Dakota 10 is the electronic compass, barometric altimeter, no micro SD card and cannot transfer data wirelessly between units.
It still has a compass and altimeter within it but I guess not as good as the upgraded models. I have found the memory capacity in mine to be great; holds a few maps and 2,000 geocaches.
I'm not totally sure what features would be needed for serious hiking but am pretty sure the Dakota 10 would tick most boxes.
- Rugged and waterproof
- Ability to add maps, both free and paid
- Long battery life
- Can have 50 routes
- 1,000 waypoint locations (handy for marking your car's location)
- Bearing to next waypoint
- Nice compact size
Another nice feature is that it logs your walk and shows this on the map. Useful if you're going straight there and back.
Another decent GPS is the Garmin eTrex Vista HCx. I've had a play with that one for a few days. Not touch screen but has all the 'missing bits' above mine doesn't.
Only £90 and Amazon's No.1 seller. I believe it is a top of the range model but not part of their newest range. That doesn't mean it's not a great GPS :)
Don't think there's many cheaper new GPS's. Ebay definitely worth a look for a bargain or maybe some Geocaching forums.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Garmin-eTrex-Vista-HCx-Handheld/dp/B000UH1YZ8/ref=zg_bs_322406031_1
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I've ended up with a Garmin etrex Legend,
got it on ebay, for just above £50. So I should be getting a hold of it in a couple of days.
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thanks, i will consider getting one of the ones you recommended, it's much better buying kit that people can vouch for, thank you
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definitely get one that takes maps, it will make life a LOT easier, and the maps for garmins can be downloaded for free from talkytoaster
if buying new i'd go for the garmin etrex 20 or 30 as they do paperless geocaching