Comox Valley,  Get Outdoors! Camping & Hiking Trips

Families Travel! Geocaching with kids

Geocaching may be the perfect Cascadia sport. It’s a puzzle (appealing to our inner geek), it’s an outdoor excursion (appealing to our inner jock), it’s a social trading game (yes, even cheerleaders can play).

Geocachers hide containers with tradeable trinkets – pick one and keep it, and leave your trade inside. Cache stashes could offer small plastic toys, movie tickets, foreign money or stickers. Note your visit in the logbook with a stamp or signature, also kept in the container.

Caches can be tucked away anywhere: city park, campground stream, old-growth tree or a mountain peak.

How do you find these containers? With your Global Positioning System (GPS) device or cellphone, after retrieving instructions from a geocaching website (the most popular is geocaching.com, although regional sites also offer hide ‘n’ seek clues).  It’s a game you can play anywhere – even when on a family vacation.

This week, we’ll find out more about the kid-friendly sport of geocaching with Lisa and Martin Pedersen of the site FamilyNavigation.com, which focuses on their family life, geocaching and children’s activities.  Lisa and Martin live in the Comox Valley of BC’s Vancouver Island, and are the parents of Annika, 5, and twins Bryce and Jada, 2. All photos below are courtesy of the Pedersens, and certainly bring geocaching to life!

Q: How do you geocache with kids?

Our kids are all young, so they just help us find the cache once we locate the area. Finding caches is a lot of fun, but hiding caches for other people to find is also important.  Our oldest child has hidden a cache of her own and she enjoyed deciding on the trading items.

Q: What sort of toys did your daughter put into the cache?

For Annika’s cache, she decided that she wanted to include international coins. We had a lot of coins from our previous travels, which we put inside her cache. People are trading coins for ones in their collection.  In other caches we hidden we’ve put geocaching supplies or small plastic toys that kids like.

Q: Is it an all-season outdoor sport or best in summer?

Geocaching is an all season activity, it just depends on how much one enjoys going outside in the winter months.  Many caches are hidden at ground level so they can be a real challenge to find in the snow.

Like most outdoor activities, geocaching is most popular on warm sunny days.

Q: Why is BC a great place to go geocaching with kids?

BC is an outdoor paradise (yes, we are biased) so we love an outdoor activity that shows some of the hidden area gems. Many forests, mountain parks, lakes, rivers, beaches and towns are filled with geocaches, for all difficulty levels. Many geocachers live in BC, so there are lots of caches to find wherever you go.

Q: Do you need any special equipment to go geocaching?

To go geocaching you need a GPS receiver that can direct you to the coordinates of the hidden geocache. Like any electronic device, the cost can vary depending on the features you’re looking for.  You can buy a GPS receiver under $100, and you can pay much more.

We spent $300 for one that had special geocaching features and came with topographic maps.  There are a lot of good, used GPS units for sale.  If you are unsure if geocaching is for you then you may want to rent a GPS unit from an outdoor outfitter, or see if you can tag along with an experienced geocacher.  Some cell phones now come with GPS capabilities as well.

Q: Any geocaching tech that kids really enjoy?

Travel bugs are a cool thing that kids can get into.  You purchase these small tags that attach to a trading toy.  You put the toys (with tag) into a cache and other geocachers will find the toys and move them on to another cache.  Travel bugs are tracked on the geocaching.com website, so kids can follow their travel bugs and read the stories of their adventure.

Q: What’s the coolest cache you’ve found?

We like tricky caches hidden in a very clever container or those requiring us to solve a tough puzzle. We’ve found caches inside fake sprinkler nozzles, rocks, logs, among others.

A fun cache we found lately took us to a street sign, where we found a small sticker with numbers on it.  You had to figure out that this was the number of a book that was on the shelf in the local library.  The geocacher had made arrangements with the library to shelve a logbook where people could find and then sign their name.

After you have been geocaching for a while these sort of tricks become easier to figure out.  This was a very unique cache and a fun one to do with the family.  There are many extremely tough puzzle caches, or multiple step caches, for people who really like challenges.

Q: Which caches do your kids like best?

Our kids — mostly due to their age — like any large container with lots of things to trade.  In their eyes the best caches are full of toys where they can trade something of equal or greater value for something new they like. Sometimes choosing a toy takes longer than actually finding the cache.

Our kids think there is nothing like going for a hike in the woods and returning with a new toy.

Q: What would you suggest to families just getting started or who want to learn more?

If geocaching sounds interesting, then visit geocaching.com, the official website listing all the geocaches hidden worldwide.

It’s very easy to get started but it may take a little while to get the hang of it, if you’ve never used a GPS before.  There are many local geocaching groups you can find online. We have found that geocachers are very approachable and like to help out new cachers.

You can also find out on the geocaching.com website if there are any free events in your area put on by local cachers (usually a very casual potluck) where you can meet people and get lots of tips.

Q: Any parting thoughts?

We recently moved back to Vancouver Island, to a town we did not know very well.  Through geocaching we’ve now visited many of the local sites and found some hidden gems like swimming holes or shell collecting beaches.

We’ve found that geocaching is a great excuse to go outside and spend time as a family.  A word of warning, however: It is a very addictive activity.

Lora Shinn writes about family travel, Pacific NW travel, grown-up travel...and travel in general. Her travel-related articles and essays have appeared in Family Fun, Parenting, AFAR, National Geographic Traveler, AAA magazines and Redbook, among others.

6 Comments

  • Anna

    Love it! Especially the suggestion to buy a used GPS. That’s what’s held me back (aside from the fact that we never go anywhere), but I just looked at craigslist, and there were a bunch for $40-100… hmmmm….

  • Chris

    There’s a Magellan Triton, I think it was open-box, at Nanaimo London Drugs near Best Buy for only 99$. Normally that’s a $250 unit. I’m half tempted to pick it up as a backup.

  • Lora

    Anna, you can geocache right in your neighborhood. So you don’t have to go anywhere. But it might be a fun thing to do when visiting family or going to the larger regional parks for the day.

  • Travelers Barista

    Wow, how neat!!! I’ve never heard of such a thing! Very cool and something I’m going to look more into.
    .-= Travelers Barista´s last blog ..Tips on Tipping – Add these items to your Travel expense list! =-.

  • Lora (Tripping with Kids)

    What a great interview. And thank you also for taking part in the May Geocache Bloggers Event. I also didn’t think of looking for used GPS units on craigslist, fantastic idea. We are headed your way this summer so hope to find some good areas to traipse(sp?) through.
    .-= Lora (Tripping with Kids)´s last blog ..MORE summer camps =-.