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Traditionele cache

Tongatapu

The southern part

door Team Brummi     Duitsland > Niedersachsen > Braunschweig, Kreisfreie Stadt

Attentie! Deze cache is "Gearchiveerd"! Er bevind zich geen behuizing op de aangegeven (of uitgerekende) coördinaten. Het is dan ook raadzaam om deze cache niet te gaan zoeken!

N 52° 13.358' E 010° 30.668' (WGS84)

 andere coördinaatstelsel
 Grootte: klein
Status: Gearchiveerd
 Verborgen op: 09. juni 2017
 Published on: 09. juni 2017
 Laatste verandering: 12. mei 2020
 Listing: https://opencaching.de/OC12DD7

10 Gevonden
0 Niet gevonden
0 Opmerkingen
1 Maintenance log
0 Volgers
0 Negeerders
58 Bekeken
2 Log pictures
Geokrety verleden
1 Aanbevelingen

Large map

   

Time
Seasonal
Listing

Beschrijving    Deutsch  ·  English (Engels)

DER or rather DIE Südsee?

 

South Sea is another name for the South Pacific. Geographically, the South Sea covers all areas south of the 9th latitude.

The central island groups are the French Islands (French Polynesia / Tahiti), the Samoa Archipelago and the Fiji Islands. The term "South Sea" is often used for Oceania and in the narrower sense for Polynesia.

In fact, the name "South Sea" was coined by the Spanish conquistador Vasco Núñez de Balboa in 1513, when he crossed the narrow strip of land of Panama and called the ocean, the Pacific, which he was the first European to see, "Mar del sur" ("South Sea").

James Cook traveled several times in the South Seas. On his second trip to Tahiti, James Cook accompanied the two German scientists Johann Reinhold Forster and Georg Forster in 1773.

In the literature, Louis Antoine de Bougainville's travelogue "Voyage autour du monde" and Georg Forster's "A Voyage Round The World" published in 1777 spread the human image of the "noble savage" that the Europeans believed to have found in Tahiti. Jean-Jacques Rousseau describes it as "the Garden of Eden" that would give its inhabitants everything they needed to live.

The French painter Paul Gauguin also contributed to this picture. His paintings show the exotic paradise that the painter has dreamed of. Paul Gauguin reached Tahiti in April 1891 and painted 66 paintings. He left the island due to health and financial difficulties in 1892, but returned 1895 from Paris to Papeete. He died in 1903 on the Marquesas.

Emil Nolde took part in an expedition to Papua New Guinea in 1913-14. Max Pechstein lived from May 1914 until the outbreak of the First World War on the Micronesian Palau Islands. Henri Matisse visited Tahiti in 1931.

 

As we see, many well-known explorers and artists moved to the South Seas.

Well, who would not like to go to the South Seas?

If you now exchange "DIE" for "DER" it is perhaps not so paradisiacal, but closer. And this South Seas can be circulated without a boat or vehicle. And hey, we have islands here too.

We wish you lots of fun while traveling around the South Seas.

 

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Logs van Tongatapu    Gevonden 10x Niet gevonden 0x Opmerking 0x Maintenance 1x

Gearchiveerd 12. mei 2020 Team Brummi has archived the cache

weg

Gevonden 19. april 2020, 18:21 Karsten und Elif heeft de cache gevonden

Leider nur noch der Deckel vorhanden...

Gevonden 18. april 2020, 15:27 10H3ra10 heeft de cache gevonden

Gevonden The geocache needs maintenance. 19. januari 2020, 14:50 blueleon75 heeft de cache gevonden

Gut gefunden aber falscher Behälter, Logbuch total nass. Thx fürs Auslegen. Blueleon 75

Gevonden 21. december 2019, 14:39 Pantheon2 heeft de cache gevonden

Bei herrlichem Adventswetter am Braunschweiger Südsee unterwegs und ein paar Caches besucht. Dieser gehörte auch dazu. Hat Spaß gemacht den Cache zu finden. Trotz durchnässtem Logbuch eingetragen. DfdC
Gruß aus Salzgitter Pantheon2

14:39 Uhr, #11

Afbeeldingen voor deze log:
Logbuch durchnässt 😠Logbuch durchnässt 😠