I placed all the travel bugs that I had in a ziplock bag so that they would be easily found when I wanted to place one. Typically, I would pick up a TB and then wouldn’t have it handy when I finally found a cache that could hold it. [Too many micros, not even caches large enough for a travel bug.] So I thought I was organized. At least until I couldn’t find the bag of travel bugs. Then I started to get e-mails from the owners—”You’ve held my TB long enough. Please get it moving.”
I was doing some house cleaning over the Labor Day weekend and found the “lost” TB bag under my nightstand. I let the owners know that they had been found and prompted placed most of them in Connie’s 50th B-Day TB Hotel and then picked up Connie’s 50th B-day TB as a trade. I’m happy to report that all the TBs I placed that day have now been picked up and are on their way to other caches. The Connie’s 50th B-day TB wants to make the 50-state circuit. I did my part in moving it in and out of caches in Nevada, Arizona, and Utah and then left it in St. George, Utah in FoxHogs #11.
The trip to Utah was too quick and too busy to do much geocaching. I enjoy visiting areas that are new to me—lots of virgin geocaching territory—but this trip had other purposes. Actually, I really didn’t worry about caching. I was busy with more important things.
Posted by coakford