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We stopped at the park a week ago and found the cache missing. None of the groups that do maintenance at the park took the box, so we have to assume it was stolen. The Milford Cabinet will run a news item about this, with contact information. We hope to get the box back so we can scan the photos to post here. Whether or not we get the cache box back, we intend to retire the cache. I may well place a cache closer to home in Wilton. I’ll post about it when that happens. In the meantime, many thanks to the people who signed the log and left memories. It made our first geocache quite a memorable one. -= Gryphon =- As of September 23, 2005, this blog has officially been retired. The archives will be maintained for any who wish to browse them, but there will be no new posts. My adventures continue, however, and you can keep reading them at my new blog, I Knit Around. Thank you for reading, and I hope you’ll stay with me on the next leg of my journey. As of tomorrow, this blog and four others will be retired. They will be replaced with my new blog, I Knit Around, to which I have been cross-posting this week. The blogs that are retiring are:
I have found that under my current reality, I want a single blog that presents an integrated view of these aspects of my life, since any given day may see several of these subjects mixed together. If you are a regular reader of any of these five blogs, please join me at the new site. It will contain all the topics you’ve been reading about until now, only they will be presented in context as a part of my whole life, not just one aspect. The URL to bookmark is: Three other blogs will remain separate. They are: The first of these is my beading blog, and that subject still has enough life of its own to merit a dedicated blog. The last two aren’t entirely used as blogs – they are more like project-specific databases. And so they stay as well. At some point, I’ll be changing my homepage as well. It has served as a central hub for all my blogs, and obviously that purpose changes somewhat now. I will likely be using a blog format there, with links on the sidebar and current news and updates listed in the posts. My thanks to all of you (it’s what, at least three, right?) who have been reading my oft-times odd posts. I enjoy what blogging does as it helps me examine my life and strive to find better focus and understanding. Gryphon and I haven’t been able to get out and geocache much for most of a month. With the brake lines on his truck needing replacing – and not being able to pay a garage to do it – we’ve been stuck at home every weekend while Gryphon does the job himself. It’s been quite the saga, and Gryphon’s telling the story in a multi-chapter format over at his blog. The first chapter can be found here. The brake lines are finished as of last weekend, though, and they seem to be holding up. So we have every reason to expect that, come this weekend, we may be able to get out and find another cache somewhere. Just keep your fingers crossed for the weather! I wrote a thank you letter to the Milford Cabinet – also thanking the Toadstool Book Shop and reporter Daymond Steer – for everyone’s involvement with the Milford Memory Box. It was published in this week’s paper. The Memory Box continues to see visitors. Team Monarchs are the most recent, and they picked up Larry the TB to take home with them for a visit. I’m glad to see people are having so much fun with this simple idea – sharing memories. And I’m very glad to see people discovering Emerson Park, too. The response is pretty universal – “I never knew this was here!” Well, now they do, and they’re generally glad of it! Gryphon and I released Larry the Cucumber Travel Bug into the Milford Memory Box Saturday. We’ve had a pleasant visit with Larry while he stayed here, but I think even he was ready to move on. As we placed him in the box, he said “Oookaaaaay!” Larry, it’s been nice knowing you. Happy travels! Meanwhile, we’ve had difficulty finding enough time to go geocaching. Gryphon’s truck sprung a leak in the brake line, and he’s been working on that for the last two weekends. He fixed the first part of the line, but that forced a weak spot in another part to become a leak, and so on. So, our geocache hunts are on hold for the moment, due to practical necessity. We’ll get back out there as soon as we can, though! It’s been 24 hours since the comment spam, and I am going to cautiously turn comments back on for this blog. You will still have to be a registered user to post a comment, but that is free and a simple matter of creating a log-in. I am also investigating alternative, third-party software to add to this and my other blogs that will allow comments, but give me greater control over them. I’ll keep you posted. Thanks for your patience. Due to the arrival of a new spam comment every few minutes tonight, I have been forced to turn OFF comments to this blog until further notice. For my regular readers, there are other ways to reach me if you like. The observant will find them right on this page. I have written to Blogger about this matter, and I hope they will find a way to take action. This is unacceptable. Well, I’ve had my reply back from Groundspeak, and while it makes complete sense to me the way they explained it, it’s still disappointing:
As I say, I can fully understand this position. It does mean, however, that Larry has become something of an orphan, effectively fending for himself. We’ll be releasing him back into the wild sometime this weekend. I’ll post here when it’s happened. Meanwhile, Larry’s been making himself comfortable during his stay: I’ll no doubt watch Larry’s listing after we send him along. I’ve grown attached to the little guy, and I want to make sure he’s okay out there. |
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