Hey here's my geocaching profile while you're at it.
http://www.geocaching.com/profile/?guid=8c29aa39-201b-4bda-8e6f-b8abf27c29d4
Feel free to mock away.
Mock mock.
Mock.
Hey here's my geocaching profile while you're at it.
http://www.geocaching.com/profile/?guid=8c29aa39-201b-4bda-8e6f-b8abf27c29d4
Feel free to mock away.
This hide was made obvious and easy as not to promote routing around. I also state on the cache page,"There is no need to overturn anything or move things around to find the cache.".
The best way to avoid promoting "routing around", as you put it, would be to not locate the geocache in the middle of ruins to begin with. The fact that you did hide it there, and that you apparently felt the ruins made a good prop for your hobby, fully justifies bruset's low expectations.
I admit I do on occasion make mistakes and I try to learn from them which is why I am willing to move the cache outside the ruins. I hope someday to be as perfect as all of you are. If and when I manage to achieve perfection and can gain your approval I believe I will refrain from doing so if it means I must also judge others as you do.
No glass houses among you or are you all out of stones?
If in 100 years from now your homes are nothing but foundations and piles of vinyl siding will that make them historic or just more marks on the face of the planet left by man?
bobpbx
I have no intention of doing anything vindictive. Did I give you the impression that I planned to? I just feel some people need to understand that their view of something isn't the only view. Here is a man who has geocached, his wife still caches, and she has more hides out there than I do. Who is he to judge my family and myself? And then I need MarkBNJ telling me that my cache placement justifies bruset judging me and deciding that contacting me would do no good. Sorry but that is just ignorant.
Well thank you for your input. I am not the kind to just sit back and let people say anything they want and not call them on it. Hopefully this will all blow over soon. The more I examine the site the more I am enjoying it.
He doesn't know you, and never expected you to read it.
Teamcoz said:Mr. Ruset,
I joined your site this morning after hearing about some issues with our geocache "Ruined my Day".
After reading the thread regarding those ruins, it did get me a bit upset about how my family was portrayed and I responded after a night of definitely not enough sleep.
Please do not post my response. I have already spoken with my husband and we have no problem moving the cache. However it would have been nice if someone would have just contacted us and asked to do so rather than post in a public forum and presume how uncooperative we would be.
Thank you.
Amy
bruset said:Hi Amy,
I just read through your response and I didn't think it was bad at all. Since you don't want it posted, no problem.
I'm sorry if you feel like your family was slighted by the thread. I certainly didn't intend to come off as judging your family.
I personally have a problem with geocaches being placed on ruins, especially those that have never had any sort of arcaheological survey done. I believe the increase in traffic to the site will have a negative impact on the site. The fact that someone had built a "fort" there shows the general diresepect that most people have for archaeological sites. I don't mean to say that you or your family don't have any respect for those places, as I am sure you do, but you never know who will come along and find your cache and decide to bring a souvenir home, etc. Of course this could happen with anybody walking through the woods and finding the ruins, but I feel like posting coordinates to those places is a great risk.
As for you thinking anybody would judge you because you own a Rubicon -- I myself own a 2008 Rubicon Unlimited. Many of us on the forum own 4WD vehicles. Granted, I don't think any of us are hard-core wheelers, but I don't think that anybody would look down upon you just because you own a Jeep.
Also, Wharton is not the only place that you're allowed to wheel. Any of the State Forests, Wildlife Management Areas, etc. are open for Jeeping.
Thanks!!
Teamcoz said:Thank you for your response. I know this morning I was quite unhappy with the way the posts read, and I am quite protective of my family, especially since we go out of our way to try and do the best for our environment, it is kinda hard to read something that makes it sound like we are not.
My husband came across those ruins one day while hiking in the area, we live close to there and more than likely the "fort" you mentioned was built by kids playing paintball or intending to play paintball in the area, that is very common back there.
The site is not marked as an arcaheological site or any historical site, we honestly did not think it was really that old because of the pour type foundation in that area. We thought it might have been some type of bomb shelter because of the canned goods you can locate in the back left hand corner of the foundation. We didn't touch those, just left them there. What can be done to mark that as an historic site and post signs to protect it from others. I am sure there are laws to protect such sites and sometimes the threat of fines is enough to keep people away.
Responsible Geocachers are very respectful of historic sites and will do their best not to disturb them, we didn't think placing the cache there would be a problem as you didn't have to move anything to find it.
I really thing the following post by Redneck was a bit much and a little uncalled for.
Ben,
He owns a 2007 Rubicon! (Say it ain't so!)
I checked out the cacher's profile and his posts on Geocaching.com. He posted a pic of his Rubicon in one of his posts.
He is deputy municipal clerk in x-ville NJ and loves the piss out of geocaching..
He enjoys ATV'ing with his family and thinks geocaching is as intriguing as fire.
I would expect a cache to be placed inside the Atsion mansion as soon as it opens.
Seriously, just contacting us with a nice "Hey, we noticed you placed a cache at xyz location, it is historic ruins and in an effort to preserve those, could you please move it from within the ruins"
Along with an explanation as to why would have gone alot further than the posts that were made would have gone alot further as far as public relations for what you are trying to promote in the Pine Barrens.
I have been to your site before and looked around while researching stuff on the Batona Trail, my husband has hiked about half of it now and will be finishing the rest. It is a great site for that type of information.
In any case my husband has already noted that he will move the cache from inside the ruins.
bruset said:Hi Amy,
I have a lot of respect for all of the folks that do the cleanup at Wharton each year. A few of the folks from this site go each year, and I donated a pair of FRS radios to the raffle one year. I generally do the Forked River Mountain cleanup which is on the same day as the Wharton cleanup.
Unfortunately most ruins in the woods are not marked or protected in any way. I believe that building was either a support building for the sawmill that operated nearby, or was a packing house for the abandoned cranberry and blueberry bogs nearby. I did have an archaeologist friend out there and she suggested that the building dated from the mid to late 1800s. The poured concrete foundation would put it earlier than you would expect -- most modern ruins (post 1920's) have cinder block construction.
Unfortunately no amount of fines or laws will keep people from ruining historic sites. If you get enough of the "wrong element" back there, significant damage will be done.
A few years ago several members found an abandoned campground on the Nescochague River. The place had been abandoned in the late 1980s, and was in pristine shape. We mentioned it on the site, and posted a few pictures and not long after that, the place was filled with graphitti, an old rotary pay phone that was still on the building was stolen, etc. Eventually the state came in and bulldozed the place because of the damage that people had done. We never posted GPS coordinates to it, but the fact that so much damage happened after it had been mentioned here convinced me that any undue attention to these sites carries a big risk. The fact that such a pristine site was destroyed because the "wrong element" found it on my site weighs very heavy on my conscious.
I can't apologize for Scott (RedneckF350) but I'm sorry that I did not talk to you myself before I posted what I did. I've had poor results with talking to other geocachers who put caches on ruins, and had mistakenly assumed it would have been more of the same.
Now that you're a member, you should consider sticking around. We're actually a great community of people and there's a lot of good Pine Barrens history discussed here.
Thanks!
-ben
I was tempted to email the owner of the cache and ask them to move it, but I doubt it would lead to anything productive.
QUOTE]
Ben,
He owns a 2007 Rubicon! (Say it ain't so!)
I checked out the cacher's profile and his posts on Geocaching.com. He posted a pic of his Rubicon in one of his posts.
He is deputy municipal clerk in x-ville NJ and loves the piss out of geocaching..
He enjoys ATV'ing with his family and thinks geocaching is as intriguing as fire.
I would expect a cache to be placed inside the Atsion mansion as soon as it opens.
Saying that contacting us would not be productive is making the judgement that we are uncooperative
Well, while I am hanging myself out for comment I might as well go all the way. Not only am I a cacher but I am the vice president of the New Jersey Jeep Association. Yes we are a group that wheels in the pines along with other locations. I have already read much of the views that many on the site have on this hobby too.
I would not have been surprised if the reviewer had denied my current cache location as per the rules but it was approved.
As I said I am more than willing at this time to relocate the cache outside the ruins themselves. I may be wrong but I don't believe this will satisfy anyone who has posted in this thread.
It seems that putting a cache anywhere in this area, or any area that contains anything considered to be ruins or historic, is unacceptable by many on this site. I myself don't believe history that is kept hidden dose anyone any good. I have read the story of what happened with the campground and I am sorry to hear what happened. I would like to point out that what was posted on this site may not have had anything to do with the destruction of the location. If a responsible person happened apon the campgroung anybody could have happened apon it.