Sometimes there is a logical progression from one "season" to another. As the robotics storage closet got cleared out I, as usual, got a bunch of stuff that had to come home with me. I refer to my basement as Area 51. And some things actually proved useful for geocache construction.
I take my geocaches seriously. Oh, lots of folks just cram a piece of paper into a film container, maybe add a little camo tape and call it good. I regard that as unambitious. I want my containers to look cool and to remain water and damage proof for years. Trying to keep up roughly 30 caches when I'm busy with other things is a pain.
One series I've had fun with is Strange Fish. I try to catch some weird denizen of the muddy depths, then commemorate them with a geocache on the spot. When possible, in the shape of a fish.
One of these was Channel Cat, Strange Fish number 6.
It was getting a bit weathered and beat up after a couple of winters "in the wild". Time for a new one.
Lets start with a section of PVC pipe.
When you want something to be waterproof....start with a pipe designed to keep water in. Should work to keep it out too. There are end caps that we'll get to shortly, but I wanted this to look a bit "fishier". A series of plastic discs cut with a hole saw and glued into place. The bolt is tightened in and serves as an anchor point for the tail.
Like everything else so far, the tail is made of old robot supplies, in this case thin polycarbonate plastic, later covered with black duct tape.
Tail assembled, attached and covered, similar set of fins made the same way.
The head is just an end cap, not glued on of course, with a couple of bolts for eyes. Memo to self, purchase more stick on googly eyes. The cache now being near complete it only required a bit of covering tape( the grippy stuff used on baseball bats) and whiskers, and to be released into the wild....
I know it does not look too much like a channel catfish, but I enjoy a bit of whimsey in such matters. There are various ways to mount these with hangers and such, but the head is press fit well enough that a ground hide should be fine, especially since the paper log and a small pencil are contained inside a heavy duty ziplock.
I look forward to refining the technique further to approximate other Strange Fish. Good thing I don't live near an ocean, a flounder would be a tough mod!
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