Hi Folks,
I have accepted a Manufacturing Operations Manager
position with a company in Forest Grove, Oregon, (Portland area) and will
therefore soon be relocating there with my family. I will be leaving June
14th and will only return once or twice to sell the house, etc. and then deal
with the movers and get the family, dog, & cat on a plane to
Oregon.
I would like to keep as many of our caches
here active as possible, however to do that, someone will have to adopt
them.
The caches I would like to see adopted
are:
Cactus Point Vista
GC7D1D
Crismon Tide
GC80A4 (now that the hot weather is here,
I can replace this one).
Dance School Joke
Stash GC446C
Fall Nymph
#1 GC9864
Fall Nymph
#2 GC9B6A
Fall Nymph
#3 GCGZ6Q
Rescue Me's Hilly
Hideout GC35C6
Rocket Men and Machines
Cache GCB95F
If anyone would kindly like to adopt these caches,
please let me know.
I just want to say thank you to everyone who has
hidden the caches that we have found and contributed to the Guy's
Family time that my boys and I have experienced while Geocaching. Most of
the caches that we have done together were done while my wife, (who works most
Friday nights as a Labor and Delivery nurse) gets her rest on a Saturday.
It's provided a real bond for my boys and I and also mercifully removed
us from the house Saturdays so that my wife could get some much needed
rest. She works 2 - 12 hour nights a week, and she works Friday nights so
that our younger boys are only in daycare once per week.
Caching has taken us to places we had no idea
existed, and given us time to enjoy all the playground equipment on hundreds of
parks and green areas in the Valley. Just try to get through a microcache
in a park with playground equipment and try to get my toddler out of there
without some playtime. Factor in diaper changes, getting them something to
eat, bathroom breaks, pure meltdowns, getting out the baby backpack, loading
Erik into it, forgetting sunscreen, unloading, applying, catching, loading, oops
forgot GPS in SUV, hiking to cache, , unloading him, Trying to keep my toddler
from taking every car he ever saw in a cache, trying to sign log while trying to
catch him, loading up for return trip, halfway down realizing I still have the
pen from the cache, hiking back up, going back, getting tired after a long day
so dumping the extra water that I always carry for the hikes, dealing with 12
y.o. sarcasm as we hike back DOWN the hill - I can beat him up with the backpack
most times, however years of playing football and wrestling have made it so any
decent just KILLS my knees so he can beat me down, getting back to car,
getting backpack off back, getting toddler in safety seat, cussing because I
can't fasten it, putting backpack in back of car, leaving GPS on the back bumper
and driving off, returning 5 minutes later stunned that it is still there,
driving home while all kids are asleep and looking in the rearview mirror and
realize how much I love to spend this time with them...Marathon caching has
never been an option for us...nor would we ever want it to be.
So, in closing I can truthfully say that Arizona
Geocaching has been an adventure for us, especially with an event that occurred
that we never thought we would find. So again, we thank you all.
Good luck to all of you and have fun out there caching. We're looking
forward to finding out how they do things in Oregon.
Again, if anyone would like to adopt one of the
above caches, please let me know.
Joe Brekke
TeamBlunder