Sometimes I can be very impulsive. This quality usually presents itself while I’m shopping, but every now and then I read about an exciting opportunity that I can’t wait to fully immerse myself into; like the time I read a newspaper article about geocaching.
In case you are not aware of this activity, it is like a modern day treasure hunt where people use their GPS to locate a cache (hidden container). Inside are either an ink stamp used to validate your find or a trinket to take and replace with one of your own.
I couldn’t wait to start an adventure that was easy and cheap enough for me to consider embarking upon so I convince my friend, Michele, to come along and we gather our children and set off to search for a cache stashed somewhere along the banks of the Peace River.
On this muggy morning we head to Ft. Meade lacking any proper equipment for trail walking (i.e. bottled water or sensible shoes). We park in a very small, empty lot next to the trail head just south of the middle of nowhere and set off to trek a mile and a half towards the river’s edge and locate our prized stamp.
The first thing I notice is that my cell phone’s bars are conspicuously absent and I will not be able to call 911 should an emergency arise. It took no time at all (about 6 steps) for all my irrational fears to kick in and I start constructing mental images of the exact type of serial killer who would stalk for victims in this mosquito-infested marsh. He wouldn’t look like an obvious murderer, more like an upstanding citizen who could blend in at a local chamber mixer. If he ever gets caught, all his neighbors will testify that they never would’ve suspected him capable of such heinous acts.
I begin complaining of the heat and general creepiness of the fact that our phones are useless when I abandon the killer scenario and mentally switch gears to the possibility of being attacked to death by a carnivorous beast. My friend’s son is wearing flip flops so he won’t be able to run for it; easy pickings. I determine that it will be up to me to save these innocent children and decide I need a stick so I snap off the shaft end of a palm frond.
While my right brain is hard at work fabricating vivid images of bear teeth ripping into my flesh, my left brain is frantically scanning its mental files for anything resembling statistics on nature trail deaths due to animal mauling in the Central Florida area. I yell at the kids to stay close and my friend is busy telling me that I’m acting crazy when we come upon a patch of mud.
In this mud are footprints; large, bearlike animal footprints. It rained the previous night so these tracks are fresh from this morning. Michele finally succumbs to my paranoid delusions and we decide to abandon our mission.
The kids are less than enthusiastic as we quickly stumble our way back through the woods. I’m trying to figure out the best way to kill a bear with my bare hands and a palm frond shaft while attempting to predict how cooperative said animal will be in assisting with its own demise, but we manage to make it back uneventfully and vow to never do this again without our big, strong husbands present.
Thus ends my one and only adventure with geocaching. I suppose we’ll try to stick to more public caches in the future.
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