Have you written Jeremy a note to ask him why he is sending messages like that? Considering all he has done for the sport, I would tend to give him the benefit of the doubt before getting even slightly mad. After managing caches and groupings across the whole planet, he might have run into some situations where tight cache groupings caused problems. Maybe it resulted in high traffic in unusual areas causing locals to create policies against Geocaching that he doesn't want to see spread. Maybe he is just trying to gently prod people into exploring new spaces rather than revisiting close ones. My point is that whatever his reason, I'd say he has enough positive Cache Karma to warrant asking him before assuming anything. Jeff. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Brian Cluff" To: Sent: Wednesday, April 03, 2002 4:50 PM Subject: Re: [Az-Geocaching] Prescott Caches > Oops... Sent that last one without typeing anything. > > I just have to wonder why Jeremy is sending messages like that. It becomes > fairly obvious when you have caches near each other. I don't understand why > it's a problem... even if they ARE easy to get to. Looking at a map isn't > the way to judge them anyway. I think we should hide a ton of cache that > are along the grand canyon that are about 10 to 20 feet apart on a map, but > require a 10 mile hike to get to (One at the top and one at the bottom.). > Sometimes to need a couple of caches to get the first one found. I'll bet > if you put a cache near Bass Ackwards, that both would get found fairly > soon. > > I dunno, this has me kinda mad.... > > Brian Cluff > Team Snaptek >