One of my most recent caches was this idea, GC70M9E. If you happen to live in Northern New Mexico, and don't want to have this cache spoiled for you since you may actually go find it, then read no further. However, I'm gonna blog about it anyways, just cause.
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The idea that struck me some time back in 2013 had to do with a song that was stuck in my head.
Miles from nowhere
I guess I'll take my time
Oh yeah, to reach there
Look up at the mountain
I have to climb
Oh yeah, to reach there.
Lord my body has been a good friend
But I won't need it when I reach the end
Miles from nowhere
I guess I'll take my time
Oh yeah, to reach there
I creep through the valleysMaybe you recognize the song, an old Cat Stevens one. It got stuck in my head while I was out geocaching. I can't remember exactly where I was, but I was probably, miles from nowhere and climbing up a mountain in order to find a geocache and make me feel good. This song has geocaching written all over it. And it would get stuck in my head over and over as I was out hiking towards geocaches. It occurred to me finally that it would make a rather nice multi cache. The verses are broken up in such a way that you could have a verse for each stage. Ideally, it would be placed on a remote mountain top, miles from any nearby town, and requiring a good long hike, say 15 miles round trip. This was my original concept for a pretty straight forward multi cache. And at the time, I was living in Southern New Mexico where there are mountain ranges that are very remote, and were just perfect for a cache like this. But then I got some more ideas... what if I put a small voice recorder in the final so that when someone found the cache, they could hear the entire song, and also record their own song. This idea really grabbed hold of me, despite the fact that it requires a bit more investment in materials. How cool would it be to hear what songs get stuck in other people's heads?
And I grope through the woods
'Cause I know when I find it my honey
It's gonna make me feel good, yes...
I was starting to look at materials to make this cache a reality when we found out that we would be moving to Tennessee. The last thing I wanted to do was place more caches in an area that I wouldn't be able to maintain once we moved. Also, I wouldn't be able to come back and hear the songs people left. That was one of my prime motivators. So I sat on the idea. In Tennessee, the landscape just didn't seem to be right. Yes there were mountains, but they weren't as big, nor were they as easy to see from far away, nor were they miles from nowhere. There are a lot more little towns in the east.
As luck would have it, we recently moved back to New Mexico, so I started thinking about the idea again. I purchased a DVR (digital voice recorder), and a good final container, and I began scouting maps for a good place to hide this cache. Originally, I wanted this cache to be really remote, a true "miles from nowhere" kind of cache. But the more I thought about it, the more I wanted to make it somewhere that I could check on frequently. My sights turned to one of Santa Fe's local hills, Moon Mountain. Located right in town, but apparently a location that has never had a geocache on it. It wasn't really "miles from nowhere", but it was a decent little mountain, requiring a couple miles of hiking, and I would be able to run up and check on it really easily. Plus, being in an urban location would give it a bit of a better chance of actually getting found, and with the investment I was putting into this, I really wanted it to be found more than just a couple times (like my Organ Saint series, sigh....).
The final push for me to get this idea out was when another geocacher published a cache on Moon mountain, scooping my spot! GC70D5M was published and my first reaction was to assume that my spot was gone, and that I had waited too long. But on closer inspection, I realized that there was room enough on the summit of Moon mountain. So got my containers together, put together the geocaching.com listing and my Earworm Multi was born! GC70M9E! So far it has been found by two geocachers, and I have already ran up to the summit to listen to the earworms that get stuck in other people's heads. Awesome! Now that it is in the real world, I am even more excited about it than when it was just an idea in my head.
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