So what was your found treasure?
As in most geocaches, the real treasure is in the search. Often the cache itself is no more than a simple log sheet on which to sign your name. The journey to find the cache however, brings you to some very interesting and beautiful places.
Dawn over Phoenix
Turtle,
You've posted a number of sunrise and sunset photos, so I though you might like the one below.
I took it a couple of years ago hunting.
Turtle,
You've posted a number of sunrise and sunset photos, so I though you might like the one below.
I took it a couple of years ago hunting.
Bottom right almost looks like an angel figure. I was going to guess you were around an old cemetery until I enlarged that great photo.
Another one from when I worked downtown:
Bottom right almost looks like an angel figure. I was going to guess you were around an old cemetery until I enlarged that great photo.
Packrat,
That is actually the top of the dead fallen tree on which I was sitting.
That's one of the things I love about hunting. After you settle in about an hour before sunrise, the birds, squirrels, and sunrise fill in around you as if you are not there. Occasionally, I'll get a second look from a squirrel, noticing something out of place, but otherwise nature just follows its morning routine.
Agreed. I’ve hunted all over NA for more than 50 years. Not as much since driving, though.
These are really great images.
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I get out of my truck regularly and explore on foot for both the pleasure of it and the minimal exercise that walking provides. I often am surprised by the things I discover. Occasionally I'll find a fun restaurant or a sports club. One morning, in Fort Payne Alabama, I came upon this wild Morning Glory blossom. The way the morning sun was hitting it caused it to appear to have it's own luminescence.