I got an interesting email today. It was a little difficult to understand because although it was in English, it was written by a native French speaker. I would like to add that he did a far better job of writing in English than I ever would have in French. Nevertheless, it's required some deduction. Here's what I gather...
The cacher was looking for , our first hide. Although the GPSr was being difficult, he thinks he found the hiding spot - but there were three policemen nearby and he dared not put the cache at risk. He was hoping to log a find in New York, but lost the waiting game with the men in blue because he eventually had to catch his flight back to France. He took photos of where he thinks the cache spot is and has offered to email them to me, and is asking if I would allow him to log the cache despite not physically logging in. I haven't responded and haven't seen the photos yet, so I don't know if he actually found the correct spot or not.
I'm debating how to handle this. On the one hand, I am a believer that part of the game is to physically sign the log - if I can't sign the log for a cache, even with the cache in hand (such as if I can't get the container open), I won't log it as a find. On the other hand, I never have worried much about how other people play the game and don't expect that to change any time soon.
Snug as a Bug is approaching its 1-year anniversary in a very populated area of the park and so far it has avoided being muggled. As a non-micro that averages more than a find a day, I'm pretty amazed by this. I think part of the reason is that people (most of them tourists on a schedule) have been very respectful and careful when hunting this one, and I really do appreciate that the emailer didn't put his personal glory ahead of the cache's safety. But I can't deny that sending a photo of the assumed hiding spot seems like a strange way to earn a find.
I'm thinking of writing back with a thanks (for the discretion) and a challenge - that if he can convince any other cacher to find Snug as a Bug and sign his name, I'll happily endorse the log. I probably won't tell him this, but in reality if he decided to log it without doing anything more, I wouldn't delete it - life is too short for me to be a hard butt about how other people want to score themselves. Especially when this cache relies so heavily on people protecting it with their judgment. But I was thinking if he actually wants my blessing, this might be an entertaining compromise.
How would you respond, or what would you do?