Richard Garriott is a man on a mission. The active geocacher holds two extreme records in the world of geocaching. He’s placed the highest and the deepest caches. One cache is on the International Space Station, the other in an ocean trench off of Europe. Hear why he’s spent millions to push the treasure hunt to the edge.
See all the Lost & Found videos, from an 88 year old geocacher to how Geocaching.com got it’s start, here.
How come I can’t find this user or these caches on the site?
danal70
considering the zero gravity on ISS terrain should be rated as 1. the only problem for a while is the very expensive shuttle ticket. so that cache must be rated 1/1 with atribute of “very expensive fee”.
Diane
I easily found the profile for LordBritish.
Crouchcrew
I was very disappointed he allowed someone to log it who was not really there. He took a picture of himself and gave it to an astronaut. That Astronaut took a picture at the cache sight of the geocacher and the CO allowed him to call it a find!
What’s at Latitude 47?
Geocaching.com is located in Seattle, Washington at 47 Degrees North Latitude, 122 Degrees West Longitude. The office is in Fremont, also known for being the center of the universe.
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