Showing posts with label Adventure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Adventure. Show all posts

Monday, August 20, 2018

Hide & Seek

If you enjoy a challenge and finding hidden treasure----if you always found the most Easter Eggs---if you could find someone in a game of Hide & Seek in record time---Try it 2018 style:

Do you have a GPS, or another device such as a phone that has a GPS feature? GPS stands for 'Global Positioning System'. It's what you use when you let your phone guide you to a destination while driving.


You can try Geocaching... ("jee-o-cashing"). It's like hunting for treasure, but using technology.

Here's your word of the day....Definition of a cache by the Merriam-Webster Dictionary: Cache (pronounced kash):
1a : a hiding place especially for concealing and preserving provisions or implements
b : a secure place of storage
2: something hidden or stored in a cache
3: a computer memory with very short access time used for storage of frequently or recently used instructions or data —called also cache memory

**And don't worry if you don't have a GPS: there are ideas at the end for treasure hunts as well.**

The idea is, someone has hidden something and the challenge is for you to find it using a GPS device. It can get you to the general area, but you will then have to hunt for the item using your own wits.

                                                      a cache hidden in the home of a gnome (apparently)

The 'cache' or hidden treasure will be a container with a log book and other items. When you find it, sign the log book and, if you want, take something from the container, but then put something else in. Items traded should be of similar value, and will not be anything truly expensive. You may find a rubber duck left by someone else and trade it for a fancy pencil, for example. Put the lid back on and put it back where you found it.

                                         Typical cache with journal and pen and some treasures...



Do you know the latitude and longitude of your home? Look it up: http://www.worldatlas.com/aatlas/latitude_and_longitude_finder.htm#.UdxfAF0o5ZQ


For more on geocaching, check out this website:
http://www.geocaching.com/

tricky: a fake rock with cache in it..



Hidden in a hollow tree stump....no Keebler elves here...


and another--look at the collection of stuff!

As an alternative, without a GPS, you and your friends can hide something and write directions as to how to get to the item. Another group of friends can do the same, and then each team tries to find the other's cache.  See how well you write directions and follow them--how fast does it get found?

There could be a map.......

                                Just because you don't live near water doesn't mean you can't pretend you do. 


                                                              OK, here's the back yard version, if you must be a realist......

Walk the route to get to the treasure---don't be too direct, make them work. Write down the number of steps and which direction you walked. Another way would be to record how to walk and have the person listen to the recording, or you could take pictures and tell them to find what's in the pictures.

You might leave clues that lead to other clues: "Follow the driveway to the mailbox and look for a white rock" and then have a clue under that rock. That clue tells the person "A red thing in the back yard will tell you more" ...then he or she has to find the red thing...etc. Or, you might issue a key and let them find several items that lock, but the key only opens one of the things.

If you use a map, make it fairly puzzling and a bit confusing.

Once the treasure/cache has been found, move it and see if it can be found once again. You can set a timer to see who finds the cache faster. Maybe the cache will be a container of treats to be enjoyed by the victor.

Ready......set..........search!


Monday, July 10, 2017

Skydiving: Jumping out of a Perfectly Good Plane for Fun

Have you ever wondered what it's like to go sky-diving?





The first step is to find a place that will instruct you how to do it and take you up.

One jump will cost about $200 and another $100 if you want a video of your dive.

If you weigh less than 210 pounds dressed you can jump tandem; that's when an instructor (who may be called a Tandem Master) and you are strapped together and the instructor controls the dive and parachute.


The gear to do skydiving is quite expensive-it may cost over $5000-so unless you plan to do it regularly, it is not advised that you purchase a lot of gear.

Your most important gear, of course, is your parachute.



You also need a jumpsuit to protect you from the weather and also from anything you might land on

You need a helmet, padding, and perhaps a spine protector; the most dangerous time is the landing.

Check out this video of a man sky-diving with a 'bat suit'--that is, he had a sort of webbing that helped him soar for a long time before he opened his chute:

http://www.wimp.com/extremeskydiving/ 

If you do want to approach it as a sport, you need to complete the following:

1. Student training
2. Solo jump with a coach or instructor
3. Complete 25 dives and show your skills, and then you can jump with any other licensed diver.

 
 
 
 
 
And what of safety, you ask?

In 2013, there were approximately 3.2 million jumps, 24 deaths, and 915 injuries. This means one in 133,333 jumps resulted in a death.




Skydiving in a kayak: https://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=skly+diving&&view=detail&mid=CD91EABF56EF37284BA4CD91EABF56EF37284BA4&FORM=VRDGAR

What it's like:

   This guy and his dog do absolutely EVERYTHING together.
 
Felix Baumgartner actually went into space and jumped; A special parachute took his 'space module' up, then he jumped out. His suit looks similar to an astronaut's suit:   https://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=felix+baumgartner+jump+from+space&&view=detail&mid=7EAF2EB6E18C7AFAF8AF7EAF2EB6E18C7AFAF8AF&FORM=VRDGAR
                                                        
 


So, what do you think? Are you up for it? 

Monday, January 23, 2017

And That's Just The First Line 2.0

Is the world making you feel upset, scared, angry, powerless? Do you want something to escape and to calm you, to take you somewhere else for a while?


Read!!


What are your favorite books? Do you remember the first line of them, or any memorable lines? Why did you like them? You could consider re-reading them, or.....


Imagine how these books turn out eventually:


"A Screaming Comes Over the Sky."                                              Gravity's Rainbow
                                                                                                                   -Pynchon
"Happy families are all alike, every unhappy family
is unhappy in its own way."                                                              Anna Karenina
                                                                                                             -Tolstoy



"I am an invisible man."                                                                    The Invisible Man
                                                                                                                  -Ellison


"124 was spiteful."                                                                             Beloved
                                                                                                            -Morrison


"It was the day my grandmother exploded."                                    Crow Road
                                                                                                              -Banks


"Once upon a time, there was a woman who
discovered she had turned into the wrong person."                       Back When We Were Grownups
                                                                                                       -Tyler


"I was 17 years old when I saw my first dead body."                  Where Things Come Back
                                                                                                               -Whaley
"The first thing you find out when yer dog learns
to talk is that dogs don't got nothing much to say."                            Mortal Engines
                                                                                                                  -Reeve


"Here is a weird one for you."                                                          Signifying Nothing
                                                                                                              -Wallace
"The magician's underwear has just been found
in a cardboard suitcase floating in a stagnant pond
on the outskirts of Miami."                                                     Another Roadside Attraction
                                                                                                        -Robbins


"Dear anyone who reads this, do not blame the drugs."             Cruddy
                                                                                                      -Barry


"Pale freckled eggs."                                                                 The Conservationist
                                                                                                   -Gordimer


"It was a wrong number that started it."                                              City of Glass
                                                                                                               -Austen


And the traditional opening line that Snoopy loves so much:
"It was a dark and stormy night."                                                         Paul Clifford
                                                                                                                 -Bulwer-Lyon


Do any of these stir up some interest? Find them at your local library in the usual book form, or borrow them as e-books on your phone, tablet, or computer (did you know that ebooks take up virtually no room in your computer?) and settle in for some good reads. If you haven't used your library to download an e-book, their librarians can guide you through it, it's easy!


Many e-books are available for free download from Amazon https://www.amazon.com  , Bookbub:  https://www.bookbub.com/home/ , the Gutenberg Project. http://www.gutenberg.org/ ,Goodreads:  https://www.goodreads.com/ebooks or at Open Culture: http://www.openculture.com/free_ebooks .


If you visit one of these sites and search free classic books you will find lots of them that can be downloaded for free, such as:
Tale of Two Cities
The Great Gatsby
Pride and Prejudice
1984
The Hobbit
Jane Eyre
The Scarlet Letter
Tess of the D'Urbervilles
Frankenstein
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
Tom Sawyer
The Time Machine
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
--and other works by Dickens, F Scott Fitzgerald.... Look around, find something interesting, and settle in for a good read.