If you knew that there were secret worlds within our everyday, mundane surroundings, would you search for them?
Aided by a smartphone or other GPS-enabled device, this is
essentially what geocaching asks you to do. In an outdoor treasure-hunting game
played across the world, over 2.8 million containers are waiting to be found,
the coordinates to their whereabouts posted online alongside hints and other
information.
Inside these containers called ‘caches’ – whose size varies
from ‘nanocaches’ less than a centimetre long to large boxes – you’ll find a
logbook to record your visit, alongside any items left by previous geocachers,
which you can trade for an item of your own. Inscribed with the traces of past
visitors, the physical logbooks correspond to virtual logbooks at
geocaching.com, where people tell the personal stories that accompany their
successful or unsuccessful attempts to find the caches.
As these stories attest, the most valuable thing about
geocaching isn’t even finding the ‘treasure’ – it is the journey you take to get there. Geocaching is a different way of
navigating space. Through the format of a treasure-hunting game, and the use of
mediating technology, it ultimately makes us care more about our surroundings. Both learning about places and
actively creating new memories there, you become both witness to and
participant within the drama of everyday life.
This post will share some of my thoughts and experiences
when undertaking geocaching over the past two months.
______________________
Re-programming the landscape
From the moment you load up the geocaching app or website,
and see the waypoints of geocaches appear on the digital map of your local area,
you enter into a new form of navigation. In the search for hidden treasure, the
game takes you not only to places you wouldn’t go normally, but crucially
enables you to see places you do visit regularly in a new light.
It’s surprising how rarely we wander off a small set of
‘usual’ routes in our daily lives. For me, this tends to be the walk to the
train station, the walk through town to the public library, the train route I
take up to London for university, the walk from the tube station to campus. But
even deviating the slightest amount from these paths can lead you to vastly
different experiences than those you would have on an average day. In some
cases, these deviations can radically alter your perception of place.
Canterbury is a place I am very familiar with, having lived
in the area my whole life, gone to school there, and now as a place I travel to
nearly every day. Yet several times in the last couple of months, when
geocaching away from my usual routes, I’ve encountered places I never even knew
existed. The best example I can think of is my discovery of the world’s
smallest chapel (according to the Guinness Book of Records) in the Hales Place
area of the city. How had I never come across this before?
My perception of Canterbury changed perhaps most
significantly, though, when on the trail of a cache in the Westgate Gardens. It’s
a place I’ve walked through plenty of times before. But when I moved slightly
off the beaten path, I came across a sign that marked the very spot where the
London Gate – one of the old Roman gates that dotted the old city wall – used
to stand. Through this gate ran Watling Street, the Roman road linking Dover
and London that passed through Canterbury. All that remains now are two stones
that mark either side of the old gate. The rest is up to your imagination – to
try to visualise a road running through what is now a grassy, walled garden
bisected by the River Stour. By seeking the geocache in a spot previously unknown
to me, I’d become newly aware of the geography of Roman Canterbury, and how it
corresponds to the present city.
However, not all of the geocaches I’ve found are in
previously unvisited locations. Many have been in spots I walk past fairly regularly,
which means I’ve had to abandon my usual, uncritical way of moving through
these places and adopt the ‘geo-sense’ needed to find the caches. This
typically involves being more sensitive to the details of your surroundings,
including looking closer at objects in the vicinity; feeling around in places
that aren’t exposed to the eye; or thinking carefully about the ‘hint’ given in
the geocache description, and how it might relate to the place you’re
searching.
For example, the cache pictured below is quite exposed as it
juts out of a hole in a tree. But because the hole is just above eye level, and
the cache is camouflaged, it took about 20 minutes of thorough searching to
find.
Here are some more caches that required heightened awareness
to find.
A microcache hidden on the back of a lamppost:
A cache hidden in a drawer built into a footbridge:
A magnetic cache hidden on the back of a railing:
All of these caches were in places I knew well. It was only
through geocaching’s playful form of navigation that these ‘ordinary’ places
became extraordinary, and my perception of these places was transformed. This
is partly why Maja Klausen writes in her fantastic article that geocaching
‘re-enchants’ the city.
Of course, as you might expect when using digital
technology, navigating in geocaching isn’t without its problems. The one I’ve
encountered most often is poor mobile data signal, which prevents you from
opening cache descriptions on the geocaching app. There is nothing more
frustrating than wasting time pacing around to find a spot with good enough
signal.
The GPS can also be troublesome due to its lack of precision
at times. In the hunt for a ‘multi-cache’ at St. Martin’s Church in Canterbury,
I had to gather numerical information
from multiple gravestones in the graveyard, using it to complete the
coordinates of the final cache location. However, because the gravestones were
so close together, it became difficult to pinpoint exactly where I should be
looking when using the app’s GPS compass. This made the search much more
time-consuming than I expected.
The final
technological issue was the life of my phone battery. I usually make sure it’s
fully charged if I know I’m going to be geocaching for a long time. But because
of the combination of using the app, mobile data, location settings and higher
screen brightness when outside, geocaching can be a particularly sapping
activity for batteries as well as legs.
So, when I say that geocaching ‘re-programmes’ the
landscape, I mean to say that the new perspective it affords is dependent on a
nexus of technologies that aren’t always reliable. Nonetheless, the playful
navigation that this technology facilitates is one that can redraw your mental
maps and reorganise the perception of your surroundings, transforming the
environment into a game – something
fun, challenging, and contingent – but ultimately more meaningful.
The secret society
While this game is now enjoyed by over 10 million players
worldwide, geocaching is still an unknown quantity for the vast majority of
people. When they walk outside, they almost certainly won’t be thinking that
there are hidden objects in their surroundings. They’ll be occupied by the more
mundane tasks of everyday life. As such – rather appropriately, in my view –
geocachers call non-players ‘muggles’, after the term for non-magical beings in
the Harry Potter universe.
However, even though muggles are unaware of the game, they
still have a stake in it. If a muggle unknowingly discovers a cache – which can
and does happen – there is a risk that it will be misplaced, damaged or stolen
(‘muggled’). It’s also possible that the abnormal behaviour of players, both in
hiding containers and searching for them in public spaces, will arouse
suspicion and lead to security alerts and/or legal issues. This creates an
additional challenge for players to negotiate, which requires care during both
stages of the game: hiding and
seeking.
During the hiding
stage, geocachers must try to ensure that the cache can only found by those
looking for it. This is especially the case in urban areas, where larger
numbers of passersby make it difficult to be discreet. As a result, many
geocachers have turned to increasingly elaborate ways of hiding caches, which
have the additional benefit of providing a more interesting and fun play
experience.
Although I’ve found many caches that are cleverly hidden
(some of which you’ve already seen), my favourite example of an elaborate cache
is one I found in Canterbury in April. After about 20 minutes of searching, I
finally found a camouflaged flask which I thought was the cache. As it turned
out, this was only half of it. Inside the flask was a set of keys, with
instructions to press an electronic buzzer that was also included in the flask.
When I pressed the buzzer, I heard a birdcall sound that led me to a fake
birdbox attached to a tree. Using the keys to unlock the birdbox, the bottom
opened out to reveal the final logbook for me to sign.
These kinds of caches are always the best to find, leaving
you with a mixture of satisfaction, after
the effort needed to find the cache; and
admiration, at the effort and creativity of the cache owner to create such
a fun experience.
Creativity is also often deployed when seeking geocaches. This is because geocachers have to somehow avoid
drawing the attention of muggles, which unsurprisingly can be difficult when
you are crawling head-first into a bush, for example (this actually happened). On
the whole, using public spaces for anything other than moving from one place to
another, or buying/consuming something, tends to come across as somewhat abnormal
– hence why it is very easy to spot tourists when they stand still and look up
wide-eyed at old buildings. To evade this kind of attention, geocachers
therefore have to perform acts of ‘stealth’ as they search for caches.
I was caught in a particularly tricky predicament in April when
geocaching by a pub in Canterbury. Because the weather was so nice, there were
quite a few onlookers who were sitting at tables outside the pub. I knew that
the cache was hidden on the underside of the bench I was sitting on, but I
struggled to find a way to look for it without drawing attention to myself.
After briefly considering abandoning my attempt, I managed
to devise a tactic where I bent down to pick up a pen I’d ‘accidentally’
dropped beforehand, using the opportunity to swiftly grab the small magnetic
box attached underneath. Of course, I also had to be discreet when replacing
the cache, after I’d signed the logbook. This time, I used what I call the
‘body-shield’ tactic – putting yourself in between the onlooker and the cache
location. I got up from the bench and stood on the other side to block the view
of the muggles, and then pretended to be looking for something in my bag as I
nonchalantly slipped the cache back into position.
As you might imagine, it certainly feels like you’re playing
the role of a ‘secret agent’ at times when geocaching. As part of this ‘secret
society’, it is your responsibility to protect its secrets from those who could
ruin the magic. This can be challenging, because in an outdoor, real-world
environment filled with real people, there is always the potential for
unexpected and unpredictable situations to occur. However, it is also this
unpredictability that makes geocaching a continually enchanting and enjoyable
experience for geocachers, as they improvise and adapt to their surroundings – whether
that is by creating a fake ‘CCTV in operation’ sign to hide a cache in a car
park, or pretending to tie your shoelaces when searching for a cache at
ground-level. As Bradley Garrett writes about urban exploration, it is by
becoming a gatekeeper to such “intimate spatial knowledge” that participants
experience moments that are “empowering and exciting”.
A benevolent community
While acts of secrecy and intimacy are essential for
creating these powerful experiences, they wouldn’t be possible in the first
place without the commitment of the
geocaching community to share interesting places, and their stories, with other
people.
When geocachers decide on a place to hide a cache, they
nearly always think carefully about why their particular spot is worth bringing
people to. This could be a site with an interesting history; an area of natural
beauty; or even somewhere to which the cache owner has a strong personal
attachment. When the cache is approved and published online, this information
is then often shared in the cache description alongside coordinates.
Reading these descriptions can give you a whole new level of
understanding about the place you’re in. Before finding a cache hidden near the
Marlowe Theatre in Canterbury, I read its description to discover a wealth of
history about the theatre and its site that I’d never known about before. It
turns out that the location where the current theatre stands used to be an
Odeon cinema until 1984, when it was converted into the Marlowe’s second building.
Its first building was demolished just before, and is where the current Marlowe
Arcade shopping area now lies. Simply by reading this description that the
owner made the effort to write – because they took an interest in the site – this interest was passed on to me, and I
became newly aware of the history behind multiple areas of my city.
It’s not simply factual knowledge that gets passed on,
though. In the description for a cache hidden in the Spring Lane area of
Canterbury, the cache owner poignantly revealed that “this is near my old
school which sadly closed down”. He was referring to Chaucer Technology School,
a secondary school located a stone’s throw away from my own secondary school,
whose sounds of lunchtime life I heard in the distance during my search for the
cache.
As I walked past the old school, I thought about the stories
of everyone who attended it over the decades – how this now abandoned site
played such a formative part in the lives of so many people. I also pondered
nostalgically about my own time at secondary school, as its sounds continued to
echo through the streets. Through the sharing of stories and personal
connections, geocaching immerses you in the narrative tissue of neighbourhoods,
uncovering the emotional attachments that people form with places.
Alongside the cache descriptions, stories are also shared in
the logs that people write after searching for caches. Although the physical
logbooks in the cache containers usually only record the dates and names of
finders, geocachers also write virtual logs on the online pages for each cache.
In these virtual logs, it is customary for geocachers to tell short anecdotes from
their time spent seeking the cache. Accounts typically include descriptions of
the journey taken to the cache, muggle activity, the length of time spent
searching, and ending with a thanks to the cache owner for the experience. Taken
altogether, by inscribing your presence in a place through the act of logging,
geocachers take part in a process of ‘story-stacking’ that ultimately fosters a
shared interest in places amongst the geocaching community.
Logging also enables the geocaching community to sustain
itself in a more practical sense, through the monitoring and maintenance
of caches. In the event that a geocacher does not find a cache, they can write
a different kind of log called a ‘Did Not Find’ (‘DNF’). If a cache owner sees
that there are a number of successive DNF logs on their cache, they might suspect
that their cache is missing or has been ‘muggled’, and can therefore make the
decision to give it a check-up and replace it if necessary.
Occasionally, caches are still in place but need some kind
of maintenance. From my experience, this is most commonly due to logbooks being
full or damaged – therefore preventing other users from signing it – or damage
to the cache container itself. As you can see from the pictures below, in two
recent cases the logbooks I found were waterlogged.
For the first example, I wrote a ‘Needs Maintenance’ log on
the cache page, including pictures of the saturated logbook. Explaining the
situation, I also suggested to the cache owner that logbooks should be kept in
a waterproof bag to prevent any moisture from causing damage.
In the second case I was geocaching with my Dad, who
happened to have some spare paper in his car. We put the old logbook at the
bottom of the container, covered it in a bit of plastic bag, and put the new
paper inside a waterproof bag, making sure it was properly fastened.
Both of these kinds of actions are common in geocaching, and
illustrate how the community is largely self-sustaining.
It is almost totally through the motivation of fellow geocachers to share
interesting places and fun experiences with other people that the game can
continue. Whether it is through revealing historical facts, telling personal
stories or physically maintaining caches, the geocaching community is benevolent because it is bound by a
shared concern: encouraging people to care
about the places they live in.
_______________________
As you can probably tell, the world of geocaching is one in
which I’ve thoroughly immersed myself over the past couple of months. But this
exciting, secretive realm isn’t a different
world – it is our world. It is the
one we live in every day. The magic is hidden in the mundane, if you know how
to look for it.
Unfortunately, access isn’t equal. I’ve indulged myself with
a premium geocaching membership over the last two months, which has cost me
£4.63 per month (although it is much less - £2.08/month - if you decide to buy
an annual membership). As soon as I upgraded, a multitude of premium-only
caches appeared on my geocaching map. As a premium member, I also have access
to more services on the geocaching app and website. The free service is great
for newcomers who want to try it out, but I’d find it hard to let go of my membership now.
Clearly, geocaching isn’t an unproblematic activity. The technology can
be inaccurate and poor network coverage can be a hindrance. Muggles can be difficult to
avoid, especially in cities. Walking around can be tiring (but good exercise). The
weather can be terrible. And some caches can be extremely hard to find.
Yet it is this contingency that keeps you wanting to
explore, because every single experience is different. Geocaching takes the
diversity, unpredictability and uniqueness of the places we live in and turns
it into a game – something we want to
participate in, learn about, and enjoy.
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