- 77 Posts
- 49 Comments
Phlogiston@sh.itjust.worksOPto
Canning & Food Preservation@midwest.social•The latest batch fo pickled vegEnglish
3·1 年前Interesting, I’ve had no such issues so far. The few batches I’ve made, I loosely followed the recipe but mostly eyeballed the amount, and it’s always come out tasty. I’ve yet to try this round, though
Phlogiston@sh.itjust.worksOPto
Canning & Food Preservation@midwest.social•The latest batch fo pickled vegEnglish
3·1 年前Just brine, and some peppercorn and mustard seed
Any area I’ve cached, there have always been plently of caches that don’t require a TOTT – so no, you don’t need one, but it might come in handy, depending on what you want to find.
Around where I live, probably the most common TOTT is a long pole to get caches down from trees. Don’t exchange this for a ladder – a lot of the caches are up in thin spindly trees growing on uneven ground. They’re designed for you to get them with a pole, with both feet on the ground. You can buy golf ball retrievers for not too much money at a sporting goods store, these usually work well.
Other TOTTs I’ve seen are batteries for gadget caches or a UV flashlight. If you read the cache page, you should be able to get a sense of what you need. But every so often, a cache owner will get creative and make you use something you’ve never thought of before ;)
Phlogiston@sh.itjust.worksto
Geocaching@lemmy.world•[Slightly offtopic] The app street-complete allows to hunt for information and contribute to OpenStreetMapsEnglish
11·1 年前Had to check it out on Google Play: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=de.westnordost.streetcomplete
That looks pretty cool! Love that you can play it like a game as a team. I need to try this out
Phlogiston@sh.itjust.worksOPto
Geocaching@lemmy.world•Cosmic Quest: We have achieved Lift-offEnglish
01·1 年前Yes, there were two others you could get – one at some low number of points, and another at 100 I believe
Phlogiston@sh.itjust.worksto
Geocaching@lemmy.world•CITO California Coastal Cleanup Day EventEnglish
01·1 年前Yes! Beach clean-up are always a good time where I am. I’ve made some pretty strange garbage finds over the years – keeps things entertaining when you find microwaves, kiddie pools, toilets and more in the woods!
I did not know they offered free trials – that’s awesome, glad you are enjoying it so far!
Phlogiston@sh.itjust.worksto
Geocaching@lemmy.world•Came across a fairy forest while geocaching todayEnglish
31·1 年前Cute! Was the cache inside on of the little houses?
Got to get them hooked early on!
I found a nano cache inside of a padlock once. The part where the key would go was drilled out, and replaced with a tiny cache container. Took me ages, awesome find.
Phlogiston@sh.itjust.worksto
Geocaching@lemmy.world•What's the Best Geocaching Loot you Found or Know of?English
11·1 年前I’ve gotten Tim Hortons gift cards for FTF before, that was pretty nice. Pins are also always cool to find
Phlogiston@sh.itjust.worksOPto
Canning & Food Preservation@midwest.social•Marmalade in the makingEnglish
51·2 年前I did a mixture of these 3 recipes,
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https://www.alphafoodie.com/simple-ginger-marmalade-ginger-jam/#wprm-recipe-container-33888
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https://untoldrecipesbynosheen.com/spiced-citrus-ginger-marmalade/#recipe
I’ll try to do a write-up, but was mostly flying by the seat of my pants…
5 large (about the size of my hand) pieces of ginger 2 lemons 1/2 navel orange 2.5 cups sugar 1 packet gelatin Cloves, star anise, turmeric
Cut ginger into slices and simmer for 30 minutes. Drain, but save the cooking water as ginger tea, with a bit of sugar added. The last 10 minutes, I added some cloves and star anise to the simmering pot, but the flavour wasn’t really noticeable in the final product, so may want to try adding them sooner. Then puree the boiled ginger in a blender - could probably skip this step if chopped small enough, but I don’t really like chewy pieces in my jam
Cut 1/4" off the ends of the lemons, then quarter them, and slice as thinly as possible, removing seeds as you go (I used the lemons whole, pith and all, surprisingly it wasn’t too bitter at all).
Peel 1/2 orange with a peeler and cut the peel into small pieces. Remove the pith, quarter and slice the orange thinly (I didn’t use the pith this time because it is so much thicker)
Simmer the lemons, orange, ginger, sugar and a pinch of turmeric for 45 minutes. I started with 2 cups of sugar and 30 minutes cooking time, but it just wasn’t thickening up, so I added another 1/2 cup of sugar, gelatin, and cooked for another 15 mins and it turned out nice and thick.
Made 3.5 jars total
Good luck!
Phlogiston@sh.itjust.worksto
Geocaching@lemmy.world•I carved a custom stamp for my letterbox geocacheEnglish
31·2 年前This doesn’t see to be showing up across instances [email protected]
For me, I started doing it alone and it kept me sane during Covid lockdown. After events started back up again, I met a bunch of people, and haven’t really solo cached since then
Phlogiston@sh.itjust.worksOPto
Geocaching@lemmy.world•Spotted in a recent geocache findEnglish
11·2 年前Yup, geocaching has definitely taken me pretty far off the beaten path in the past.
Entirely possible that there are premium geocaches in that area, which you’d have to pay to see. Or it could also be puzzle caches, which would show up in a different (but likely close by) spot on the map
There’s a website, geocaching.com – it’s free to make an account, and there is a world map showing where geocaches are hidden.
The easiest type (traditional caches) will just have a location on the map where you go to find the container. Some of the more difficult ones, you might have to solve a puzzle before you can find out where you need to go looking





In a hollow stump. Not actially buried