Tuesday, June 15, 2010

GeoCaching



Jared introduced us to Geocaching last week. Its were you go online and get the GPS coordinates for hidden Caches, put the coordinates into your GPS, then go out there and find the Caches. We told the boys that we were going Treasure Hunting. They thought it was pretty cool. They didn't like when we had to sit in the car and drive around to different spots. Once they got out of the car they had a great time searching all around for the "treasures". In a lot of the caches you will find little trinkets that you can take, just as long as you bring something to trade. A lot of the caches we found just had log books that we would sign showing that we had found the cache. Here are some pictures of the "treasure hunting".

Enoch area Caches

Our first cache

Scotty decided that every tin can he found after this was a treasure

Best Buddies
this was at one of the caches....it was just too darn cute not to share


One of the caches was hidden as part of this plastic bird

Christopher and his Cache


Parowan Gap Caches
hiking up to find the cache

that little silver dot in the center is my car, just an idea how far up we hiked

and now we found our cache....or treasure I mean
L to R: George, Christopher, Scotty, & Triston
we found a "Travel Bug" at this cache. We logged this travel bug and now we have to move it to a new cache for someone else to find. Will be interesting to see how long it will take someone to find and log where we put the travel bug.

Some not so nice looking clouds coming our way
we got back to the car just in time for the rain, and then the hail

Parowan Gap Petroglyphs

Parowan Gap is a canyon and passage through the Red Hills west of Parowan Valley. When the first Mormon Pioneers came there in 1849, Chief Wakara, a widely revered and greatly respected Paiute tribal leader, told them that Parowan Gap was "God's Own House." Recent research and observation is making both the scientist and casual visitor take this statement very seriously. There are solar and lunar events that happen there which were created by no human intervention. Phenomena occur which create a natural calendric structuring of the year's times and seasons with a kind of "Primal Logic of Nature". The pre-Columbian Fremont Peoples of the Parowan Valley noticed these yearly events and recorded them by date number and in many symbolic petroglyphic inscriptions. You can learn more about these at www.parowangap.org

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