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Informative Press Releases for Travel
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TRAVERSE CITY, MI In the world of geocaching, it’s easy to be an old-timer.
The quirky high-tech treasure-hunting game has only been around since
2000, when
So when Ray Ruediger says that his six-year-old TC Winter Convergence is
the world’s longest-running geocaching event, he’s probably right. Each year
since 2002, enthusiasts from all over the Upper Midwest have gathered in the
woods near Ruediger’s hometown of
“We could only find one other get-together, someplace out on the West Coast, that goes back to the same year,” he says. “But ours is several months older.”
Geocaching’s growth as a pastime has been explosive over the past eight
years. Today there are more than 440,000 registered geocaches --- hidden
containers that typically contain a logbook and other items of "treasure" -- in
222 countries around the world and on all seven continents, including
The game’s rules are fairly simple. Anyone can set up and conceal a
cache, recording the GPS coordinates and posting them on the international
geocaching web site, www.geocaching.com. Other players then use
the coordinates to find the cache, which sometimes contains rewards – perhaps a
trinket or postcard. (Generally, if you take something out of a cache, you’re
expected to leave something else in its place.) Winning players then sign
the log book, conceal the cache again and contact the web site to tell the story
of how they found it.
Because of its high-tech origins, geocaching isn’t necessarily a sociable
pastime; many of the game’s aficionados are more comfortable talking with each
other on Internet forums than meeting face to face. But Ruediger wasn’t one of
them. Once he started playing the game and reading the entries other players
left on the Internet, he wanted to meet some of his fellow
competitors.
“There are some real personalities out there, and I thought it would be
great to get together with them,” he said.
Thirteen players responded to his original Internet posting by showing up for the 2002 convergence, but attendance has grown steadily each year. When the 2008 event takes place on Jan. 18, over 100 participants from places as far as Ohio, Indiana and Missouri are expected to attend -- bringing folding chairs, firewood, snowshoes and an array of what Ruediger calls “dead animal hats.”
Almost immediately after the first Winter Convergence, other geocaching
events began popping up around the globe. Today there are hundreds, from the
Steinburger Geocacher-Treffen
in
Past TC Winter Convergences have been held at several locations around
Between bouts of treasure-hunting, players gather around a big campfire
to eat warm food, enjoy each other’s company and swap stories of caches they’ve
unearthed in other parts of the world. And no one seems to mind the frequent
snowfalls; it’s all part of what Ruediger calls “geocaching Up North
style.”
For information on the 2008 Winter Convergence, log on to www.geocaching.com and search for “TC
Winter Convergence.” (The site also gives a good basic introduction to the game
for those who’ve never played before.)
And to learn about
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