Within three days, several people saw Ulmer's post, hunted Tiffany KNOTS EARRINGS the cache and posted descriptions of their adventures online. Then other people began hiding caches and posting the coordinates. A sport was born. In September 2000, a Web developer named Jeremy Irish created, which made it vastly easier for those interested in the hobby to post their caches and log their finds. At the time, there were HEART LINK DROP EARRINGS caches in the world, and Irish maintained the website in his spare time on a home computer. Now, www.geocaching. com is a business employing 42 people, and the number of caches listed in the database topped 1 million in March, said Jen Sonstelie, marketing manager for the company. "Tiffany Cushion Drop earrings now estimate that there are over 4 million geo- cachers worldwide," Sonstelie said. "It has been growing pretty quickly." Geocachers say it is usually a family member or a friend who gets them hooked. Mark Hahn, 50, of Stockton said his brother was late to a barbecue two summers ago. The reason: His brother had been trying to find a difficult cache. "Once Frank Gehry Fish earrings explains the game to us, we eat as fast as we can, jump in the car and end up caching for the rest of the day. I bought myself a GPS the following day and began planning my adventures," Hahn said. Hahn, who works as an inventory manager for The Home Depot, is known in the online caching world as Concealer. That's because his specialty is building caches that are difficult to see.
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