Jump to content

Most Geocaches Found list


Recommended Posts

Is there an existing list of who the top geocachers are?? I think it would be interesting to keep a tally somewhere of who's found the most geocaches. Certainly don't want to start a competition, but I think it would be neat to see who's collected the most caches, or who has found caches on different continents.

 

Just a thought. Hope everybody's well!! :angry:

Link to comment

Are you speaking of including all cachers, or just cachers that actually go out and find a cache?

 

I know what you'd like to see, but don't believe it could be done with any reliability to exclude "armchair cachers", "throw-down cachers" or cachers who "found the area" but not the cache.

 

I am sure that somebody somewhere keeps some type of tally. Hang around, it just may appear here. :angry:

Link to comment

Is there an existing list of who the top geocachers are?? I think it would be interesting to keep a tally somewhere of who's found the most geocaches. Certainly don't want to start a competition, but I think it would be neat to see who's collected the most caches, or who has found caches on different continents.

 

Just a thought. Hope everybody's well!! ;)

 

You only need to find 42,109 more to beat Alamogul. But, of course, this increased during the time I was typing this. :angry:

Link to comment
hehe, yeah, your name is removed but there's a big blank spot is where your name should be. Apparently your find count is not dropped from the list.

I think that's fair enough. Anyone who is truly against the whole numbers thing can follow GOF's example and not log "Found It" on the site (though I would suggest logging a note so that the CO and other cachers still get feedback).

Link to comment

Priorities change.

 

It used to be important to me to stay in the top 5 in Alabama, which mostly kept me among the top 25 in the world.

 

Even after I had stopped logging finds online for over a year I remained in the top ten in Alabama!

 

I dropped below the Alabama top 20 (and world top 100) a while back and thought about logging some caches just to get my ranking back up, but nah, it is no longer important to me.

 

My being in the top whatever was never important to anyone but me anyway! :D

 

Edit to add: This thread spurred me to go look... I'm still 34th in Alabama, but only 3687th in the world. ;) If there are, as Groundspeak estimates, 4 million cachers then 3687th place isn't too bad! :angry:

Edited by TheAlabamaRambler
Link to comment

I'm #1................ in my house! ;)

Meh. I'm pretty sure I'm #1 in number of finds on my street. Granted, it is a short street, but still...

Married 37 years and she still won't let me be #1 in my house. :D

 

I am pretty sure I rule my immediate neighborhood. I know I have more than the old lady next door.

 

I bought a new Chevrolet HHR this week and my wife immediately named it "His Highness's Ride". I'm not sure what she's trying to say. :angry:

Link to comment
hehe, yeah, your name is removed but there's a big blank spot is where your name should be. Apparently your find count is not dropped from the list.

I think that's fair enough. Anyone who is truly against the whole numbers thing can follow GOF's example and not log "Found It" on the site (though I would suggest logging a note so that the CO and other cachers still get feedback).

 

Logging found its doesn't mean you are into the numbers thing. Found it logs are simply the tool the website gives us to provide feedback to the cache owner, as well as let us keep track of the caches we've found. I also think it's a simple courtesy. The owner spent the money, time and effort to hide the cache so the least I can do is let him know I found it. The easiest way to do that is use the tool provided by this website for that purpose. It has nothing whatsoever to do with numbers to me.

 

A secondary reason is to keep found caches out of my pocket queries (sure I can use ignore, but why deal with the extra steps?).

 

Logging notes instead of found its to prove your "purity" is just plain silly.

Link to comment
hehe, yeah, your name is removed but there's a big blank spot is where your name should be. Apparently your find count is not dropped from the list.

I think that's fair enough. Anyone who is truly against the whole numbers thing can follow GOF's example and not log "Found It" on the site (though I would suggest logging a note so that the CO and other cachers still get feedback).

 

Logging found its doesn't mean you are into the numbers thing. Found it logs are simply the tool the website gives us to provide feedback to the cache owner, as well as let us keep track of the caches we've found. I also think it's a simple courtesy. The owner spent the money, time and effort to hide the cache so the least I can do is let him know I found it. The easiest way to do that is use the tool provided by this website for that purpose. It has nothing whatsoever to do with numbers to me.

 

A secondary reason is to keep found caches out of my pocket queries (sure I can use ignore, but why deal with the extra steps?).

 

I think hiding caches for other COs to find is plenty of return for their effort. If you don't like the way I play too flipp'n bad.

Logging notes instead of found its to prove your "purity" is just plain silly.

Link to comment
hehe, yeah, your name is removed but there's a big blank spot is where your name should be. Apparently your find count is not dropped from the list.

I think that's fair enough. Anyone who is truly against the whole numbers thing can follow GOF's example and not log "Found It" on the site (though I would suggest logging a note so that the CO and other cachers still get feedback).

 

Logging found its doesn't mean you are into the numbers thing. Found it logs are simply the tool the website gives us to provide feedback to the cache owner, as well as let us keep track of the caches we've found. I also think it's a simple courtesy. The owner spent the money, time and effort to hide the cache so the least I can do is let him know I found it. The easiest way to do that is use the tool provided by this website for that purpose. It has nothing whatsoever to do with numbers to me.

 

A secondary reason is to keep found caches out of my pocket queries (sure I can use ignore, but why deal with the extra steps?).

 

Logging notes instead of found its to prove your "purity" is just plain silly.

 

I agree with this, and that's why this nearly 2,000 finder log's 'em online.

 

Well, actually, I'll disagree with the very last sentence, seeing as I know Gof1 personally, and several other people who engage in this "silly" practice. :blink:

 

Holy crud, you're right. I'm #98 in New Yawk, but I'd be number 2 in Rhode Island (in more ways than one). Woohooo!!!

Edited by TheWhiteUrkel
Link to comment
Holy crud, you're right. I'm #98 in New Yawk, but I'd be number 2 in Rhode Island (in more ways than one). Woohooo!!!

I'll be #1 in Afghanistan, Albania, Bermuda, Bolivia and Bulgaria. And I still have 24 other letters of the alphabet to go.

 

There are only 715 caches in all of those countries combined. There are probably more caches than that to be found within 10 miles of where you currently live.

 

It's amazing that for the island of Bermuda, which only has 63 caches on the island, that there are couple of people that have over 600 finds.

Link to comment
There are only 715 caches in all of those countries combined. There are probably more caches than that to be found within 10 miles of where you currently live.

 

It's amazing that for the island of Bermuda, which only has 63 caches on the island, that there are couple of people that have over 600 finds.

Very true, and yet another reason why numbers alone don't tell much. Numbers are fun. It's only when we start to take them too seriously that we get into trouble. Of course, same goes for many other things. Like geocaching. And ourselves.

Link to comment
It's amazing that for the island of Bermuda, which only has 63 caches on the island, that there are couple of people that have over 600 finds.

 

After you find them the first time the next nine times are a lot easier. :blink:

That's not true. According to the rules, the second time is done without a GPSr, the third with one hand tied behind your back. By the time you make your 10th find on the same cache, you're blindfolded, both hands handcuffed together, right leg shackled to a heavy ball, and 3 other geocachers guiding you there with cattle prods.

Link to comment
It's amazing that for the island of Bermuda, which only has 63 caches on the island, that there are couple of people that have over 600 finds.

 

After you find them the first time the next nine times are a lot easier. :blink:

That's not true. According to the rules, the second time is done without a GPSr, the third with one hand tied behind your back. By the time you make your 10th find on the same cache, you're blindfolded, both hands handcuffed together, right leg shackled to a heavy ball, and 3 other geocachers guiding you there with cattle prods.

 

Yeah, I forgot about the cattle prods. BZZZT. OUCH!

Link to comment
There are only 715 caches in all of those countries combined. There are probably more caches than that to be found within 10 miles of where you currently live.

 

It's amazing that for the island of Bermuda, which only has 63 caches on the island, that there are couple of people that have over 600 finds.

Very true, and yet another reason why numbers alone don't tell much. Numbers are fun. It's only when we start to take them too seriously that we get into trouble. Of course, same goes for many other things. Like geocaching. And ourselves.

 

I have sort of been awaiting for an opening for describing all the different reasons why numbers alone don't tell much and this is as good as any.

 

It might be interesting to some to know who has the most finds (Alamogul, 41925 and counting) but once you go down the list the numbers don't mean all that much for a variety of reasons.

 

Someone that has been geocaching since 2001 is likely going to have more finds than someone that has only been caching for a year or two (BobCam seems to be an obvious exception). It's like running a race against someone with a several year headstart.

 

Those that live in cache rich areas are more likely going to have more finds than someone living in a cache sparse area. Someone living in San Diego where there are over 2000 caches available caches within a 10 miles radius is just going to have a lot more opportunities to add to their find count then someone living in area where there are only a couple of hundred within a 10 mile radius. Couple that with the fact that areas with a high density of caches generally have a lot more people hiding new caches (faster than one can find them all) there are always new caches to be found. In areas with a low density of caches, anyone that has been in the game for more than a couple of years can quickly clear out a radius such that the time required to travel the nearest unfound cache would be greater than the amount of free time one has available. I've read lots of accounts from those that are able to go caching on their lunch break or at the very least be able to out and find a cache every day. Those that live in cache sparse areas effectively can't go geocaching as often as those in dense area simply due to the distance and time involved to get to the nearest unfound cache.

 

Those that live in areas where "power trails" have become popular have the opportunity to add numbers to their find count at ridunculous proportions to those that live in areas where power trails are non-existent.

 

There is no consensus as to what constitutes a find. Some have no qualms about armchair logging of virtuals. Some will post multiple finds on event caches based on the number of temporary caches for the event. Some will log finds on caches that they have placed themselves, taken to the extreme of logging over 600 finds on caches placed for a power trail as part of a team of hiders. Some won't log a cache unless they found the cache on their own and physically signed the log themselves. Others will cache as part of a group and once one has found the cache, they'll sign for everyone else. Some will log a find if they got "close" to the location but didn't actually put their hands on the cache.

 

Some cachers use a team account with multiple members finding caches in different locations but all logging under the same team account. Some predominately cache as a group, providing more eyes to search for a cache and quicker find times then someone that primarily caches alone. I've seen lots of logs from some that cache as a group which indicate that they "got help" from someone in the group that, as it turns out, had found the cache during a previous visit.

 

Some people just have a lot more free time available to go geocaching than others. Someone that has a full time job and full time family obligations just doesn't get the opportunity to find caches than someone that is retired (and doesn't have financial constraints). For those that do have family obligations, some of the families are less supportive about free time to go caching. I've noticed this especially when looking at the find numbers while traveling on vacation for others where the whole family is involved in geocaching versus, in my case, where my family mostly tolerates it.

 

Some geocachers prefer to find different cache types. If I wanted to find a lot of geocaches there are a few places that I can drive to (granted, they're typically an hour away) where I can rack up some relatively high find counts by grabbing caches off of guard rails, LPCs, and other park-n-grabs. Or I can spend the same amount of time taking some long hikes, visiting areas where caches are few and far between, and end up with a few finds in a day. Those that one can describe as "numbers hounds", where the smiley is more important than the smile, can rack up some large numbers finding easy park and grabs while those that are looking for a good hike are going to achieve find counts while pale in comparison.

 

Given all the different factors that can influence the total number of finds for any given geocacher it's absurd to compare one geocachers find count to another. The find count numbers really don't mean all that much.

Link to comment

Wow, only 16515 cachers with one or more finds. I thought there would be more.

I don't think their data is very accurate below 1k. Cacherstats shows almost 90,000 geocachers with 200 or more finds, and their list can (and likely does) miss out certain cachers.

 

http://www.cacherstats.com/cgi-bin/Geocach...erName=Gamaliel

 

You're #233 in Florida and #5151 in the U.S. Get caching, you slacker! :ph34r:

Edited by Chrysalides
Link to comment

Given all the different factors that can influence the total number of finds for any given geocacher it's absurd to compare one geocachers find count to another. The find count numbers really don't mean all that much.

 

I do tend to agree with you. Everyone has different abilities for whatever reason, the biggest of which I think is scheduling... when one works a lot, they don't have a lot of time to go caching. When one is retired, they have more time, and all the multitudes of other reasons.

 

One reason why I'm glad this game isn't *really* about the numbers.

Link to comment

If it's not a competition then what is the point of keeping track of who has how many finds? Just go out and have fun and don't worry about how you stack up against the masses.

 

Wow, apparently I hit a raw nerve. I'm certainly not in competition with anybody, I just thought it would be interesting and judging by the response I'm not the only person curious about it.

 

Thanks to everybody for their input and guidance. With six caches to my name, I'm eagerly looking forward to joining the 10+ club this weekend.

 

Good luck everybody, be safe and remember...it's a jungle out there.

Link to comment

If it's not a competition then what is the point of keeping track of who has how many finds? Just go out and have fun and don't worry about how you stack up against the masses.

 

Wow, apparently I hit a raw nerve. I'm certainly not in competition with anybody, I just thought it would be interesting and judging by the response I'm not the only person curious about it.

 

Thanks to everybody for their input and guidance. With six caches to my name, I'm eagerly looking forward to joining the 10+ club this weekend.

 

Good luck everybody, be safe and remember...it's a jungle out there.

 

It's super easy to hit nerves on these forums, so no worries. Wow, 6 caches?! You ARE new!! Have a blast this weekend! It's supposed to mostly rain where we are so not sure we'll be able to hit too many.

Link to comment

Someone that has been geocaching since 2001 is likely going to have more finds than someone that has only been caching for a year or two (BobCam seems to be an obvious exception). It's like running a race against someone with a several year headstart.

 

Not always. When I started caching in 2004, there were ~300 caches in the state (RI). We are over 1300 now. This meant that when I went caching to an area, there were only 1 or 2 in that area. When a new one popped up, I would wait until there were more in that area before I made the drive.

 

With so many caches now (and a couple of power trails) people head to one parking lot and can grab 10 or more caches without even trying.

Link to comment

If it's not a competition then what is the point of keeping track of who has how many finds? Just go out and have fun and don't worry about how you stack up against the masses.

 

I don't really care about the masses. However there are certain cachers that, maintaining a greater find count than, really DOES matter. For a few others, it is a matter of not permitting them to increase their margin of lead since they started a few years before me.

 

Without competition, life would be too boring. Kinda like playing tennis with someone who is not worth a carp....borrrrring!! "Oh let's go out and just bat it back and forth some". No, you go and play tennis with your sister.

 

Ergo it really IS about the numbers. The size of the numbers them selves does not matter much. The relative size of them does.

Edited by Team Cotati
Link to comment

Someone that has been geocaching since 2001 is likely going to have more finds than someone that has only been caching for a year or two (BobCam seems to be an obvious exception). It's like running a race against someone with a several year headstart.

 

Not always. When I started caching in 2004, there were ~300 caches in the state (RI). We are over 1300 now. This meant that when I went caching to an area, there were only 1 or 2 in that area. When a new one popped up, I would wait until there were more in that area before I made the drive.

 

With so many caches now (and a couple of power trails) people head to one parking lot and can grab 10 or more caches without even trying.

When I started caching, there was 53 in the state. I remember when the first cacher in the area hit 500! now people can do that in a day. Back in the day, people were slowed down waiting for caches to be placed, now the only limit is how many days a week you can go caching.

Link to comment

Someone that has been geocaching since 2001 is likely going to have more finds than someone that has only been caching for a year or two (BobCam seems to be an obvious exception). It's like running a race against someone with a several year headstart.

 

Not always. When I started caching in 2004, there were ~300 caches in the state (RI). We are over 1300 now. This meant that when I went caching to an area, there were only 1 or 2 in that area. When a new one popped up, I would wait until there were more in that area before I made the drive.

 

With so many caches now (and a couple of power trails) people head to one parking lot and can grab 10 or more caches without even trying.

 

That only means that someone new to the game can rack up finds faster than when you started. Those same caches are available for you to find and add to all the ones you found when you first started. In any case, length of time caching is just one of the factors. Cache density, and the types of caches being created (a proliferation of P&Gs) is, IMHO, has the greatest impact on total find counts. I'd already mentioned power trails. I live in a relatively sparse area and the only thing resembling a power trail is a group of 30 or so caches about 40 miles from me. It took me 20 months to achieve 600 finds. With one power trail there have been a bunch of people that have found the same number of caches in 24 hours.

 

I've done a little cacheing in RI so I've seen how many new caches are available. I drove an hour or so out of my way and passed a lot of those caches just to grab your Brenton Point cache (the oldest in RI).

Link to comment

I love the numbers and, paradoxically, I'll never be a high-number cacher. I'll do a numbers run with friends, but left to myself, I go out for one or two smilies and a great day hiking or seeing something interesting.

 

I can still go back through my logs and remember pretty much every cache on the list. So low numbers, but every single smiley is significant.

Link to comment

Someone that has been geocaching since 2001 is likely going to have more finds than someone that has only been caching for a year or two (BobCam seems to be an obvious exception). It's like running a race against someone with a several year headstart.

 

Not always. When I started caching in 2004, there were ~300 caches in the state (RI). We are over 1300 now. This meant that when I went caching to an area, there were only 1 or 2 in that area. When a new one popped up, I would wait until there were more in that area before I made the drive.

 

With so many caches now (and a couple of power trails) people head to one parking lot and can grab 10 or more caches without even trying.

 

You know, Rhode Island is so small (approximately the size of the County I live in), that maybe cacherstats.com has a hard time detecting who lives there? Do you guys know of anyone who is mistakenly listed in Mass. or Conn.? That leaderboard is horrible, even North Dakota blows you away. :laughing:

 

I've done a little cacheing in RI so I've seen how many new caches are available. I drove an hour or so out of my way and passed a lot of those caches just to grab your Brenton Point cache (the oldest in RI).

 

An hour out of your way would be the entire length of the State. :laughing: Done that many times (Woonsocket to Newport). Yes, Brenton Point, a great find. #1 in R.I. and #256 in the world. Found the original 2000 placed container back when Cool Librarian was the owner.

Link to comment

My name should show up on cacherstats.com at the next refresh, near the bottom. I've just recently passed the 200 mark and that includes a couple of the monitored caches they use for sampling. But it won't seem right to me until I've logged 206 finds. Though I've been a member here for a long time, I only started looking for caches regularly for the past year and a half. I have six finds scattered back over many years -- but when I hit 206 I'll have logged 200 recent finds.

Edited by lee_rimar
Link to comment

Is there an existing list of who the top geocachers are?? I think it would be interesting to keep a tally somewhere of who's found the most geocaches. Certainly don't want to start a competition, but I think it would be neat to see who's collected the most caches, or who has found caches on different continents.

 

Just a thought. Hope everybody's well!! :P

 

You only need to find 42,109 more to beat Alamogul. But, of course, this increased during the time I was typing this. :lol:

 

This Alamogul guy seems kind of fishy to me! He claims a daily best of 917 finds. Dusting off the old calculator, this means that if her was on for 24 hours straight he would have had to have found every 94.22 seconds. Assuming that they were not in violation of the anti-swamping rule, meaning that they must be at least 0.1 miles apart (and of course if they were not then they could not have been official caches and therefore rendering his claim invalid), and neglecting any allowance for actually finding the cache, signing the log and returning it to it location, he would have had to really be moving!

 

I prefer quality caches that are more difficult and require a greater degree of thought and stealth then running around like an ant on crack!

 

Guyfromdenver

Link to comment
There are only 715 caches in all of those countries combined. There are probably more caches than that to be found within 10 miles of where you currently live.

 

It's amazing that for the island of Bermuda, which only has 63 caches on the island, that there are couple of people that have over 600 finds.

Very true, and yet another reason why numbers alone don't tell much. Numbers are fun. It's only when we start to take them too seriously that we get into trouble. Of course, same goes for many other things. Like geocaching. And ourselves.

 

I have sort of been awaiting for an opening for describing all the different reasons why numbers alone don't tell much and this is as good as any.

 

It might be interesting to some to know who has the most finds (Alamogul, 41925 and counting) but once you go down the list the numbers don't mean all that much for a variety of reasons.

 

Someone that has been geocaching since 2001 is likely going to have more finds than someone that has only been caching for a year or two (BobCam seems to be an obvious exception). It's like running a race against someone with a several year headstart.

 

Those that live in cache rich areas are more likely going to have more finds than someone living in a cache sparse area. Someone living in San Diego where there are over 2000 caches available caches within a 10 miles radius is just going to have a lot more opportunities to add to their find count then someone living in area where there are only a couple of hundred within a 10 mile radius. Couple that with the fact that areas with a high density of caches generally have a lot more people hiding new caches (faster than one can find them all) there are always new caches to be found. In areas with a low density of caches, anyone that has been in the game for more than a couple of years can quickly clear out a radius such that the time required to travel the nearest unfound cache would be greater than the amount of free time one has available. I've read lots of accounts from those that are able to go caching on their lunch break or at the very least be able to out and find a cache every day. Those that live in cache sparse areas effectively can't go geocaching as often as those in dense area simply due to the distance and time involved to get to the nearest unfound cache.

 

Those that live in areas where "power trails" have become popular have the opportunity to add numbers to their find count at ridunculous proportions to those that live in areas where power trails are non-existent.

 

There is no consensus as to what constitutes a find. Some have no qualms about armchair logging of virtuals. Some will post multiple finds on event caches based on the number of temporary caches for the event. Some will log finds on caches that they have placed themselves, taken to the extreme of logging over 600 finds on caches placed for a power trail as part of a team of hiders. Some won't log a cache unless they found the cache on their own and physically signed the log themselves. Others will cache as part of a group and once one has found the cache, they'll sign for everyone else. Some will log a find if they got "close" to the location but didn't actually put their hands on the cache.

 

Some cachers use a team account with multiple members finding caches in different locations but all logging under the same team account. Some predominately cache as a group, providing more eyes to search for a cache and quicker find times then someone that primarily caches alone. I've seen lots of logs from some that cache as a group which indicate that they "got help" from someone in the group that, as it turns out, had found the cache during a previous visit.

 

Some people just have a lot more free time available to go geocaching than others. Someone that has a full time job and full time family obligations just doesn't get the opportunity to find caches than someone that is retired (and doesn't have financial constraints). For those that do have family obligations, some of the families are less supportive about free time to go caching. I've noticed this especially when looking at the find numbers while traveling on vacation for others where the whole family is involved in geocaching versus, in my case, where my family mostly tolerates it.

 

Some geocachers prefer to find different cache types. If I wanted to find a lot of geocaches there are a few places that I can drive to (granted, they're typically an hour away) where I can rack up some relatively high find counts by grabbing caches off of guard rails, LPCs, and other park-n-grabs. Or I can spend the same amount of time taking some long hikes, visiting areas where caches are few and far between, and end up with a few finds in a day. Those that one can describe as "numbers hounds", where the smiley is more important than the smile, can rack up some large numbers finding easy park and grabs while those that are looking for a good hike are going to achieve find counts while pale in comparison.

 

Given all the different factors that can influence the total number of finds for any given geocacher it's absurd to compare one geocachers find count to another. The find count numbers really don't mean all that much.

 

[Removed]! Find it and log it. If you go out of your way to defy this fundamental basis of Geocaching then you are playing a differnt game all together!

 

Guyfromdenver

 

[Edited by moderator to remove potty language. Don't use potty language.]

Edited by Keystone
Link to comment

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...