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Product foundation

What is Geotrackable?

A Geotrackable is a real object with a digital trail: a code, a public page, a mission, and a history of where it has been found, moved, or discovered.

GoTrackable gives objects a public adventure page.

In normal geocaching, an object found in a cache might be a simple trade item. A trackable is different because it is not mainly about keeping the object; it is about helping the object continue its trip. GoTrackable is designed around that idea. The item carries a code or QR tag, the page explains the item’s goal, and finders can record what happened next.

That makes the object feel alive. A painted rock can try to reach every state park in a region. A keychain can collect photos from bridges. A club coin can appear at each monthly meetup. A classroom mascot can travel between schools and gather notes from students. Instead of being a one-time find, the object becomes a shared story.

The most important parts are simple: a durable physical item, a readable public code, a clear mission, and a logging flow that tells finders what to do.

Illustrated mission card with a route and goal

Core concepts

The vocabulary of a trackable journey.

Trackable item

The real object that travels. It may be a tag, coin, toy, token, laminated card, craft, or another durable object.

Public code

The readable code or QR placed on the physical item so a finder can access the public page in the field.

Mission

The owner’s goal for the item, such as visiting specific places, collecting photos, or moving through a chain of events.

Travel log

The record of finds, moves, photos, notes, and map points that show how the item’s story has grown over time.

What GoTrackable is not

It is not meant to replace common sense, permission rules, park rules, geocache owner preferences, or group safety policies. It is a storytelling and logging layer for objects that people are already allowed to place, hand off, discover, or move. The site should teach visitors to release items responsibly, avoid private or unsafe locations, and keep owner-only codes private.

Why a multipage site matters

People arrive with different questions. One person searches “how do trackable geocaching items work.” Another searches “QR code scavenger hunt for school.” A club leader searches “shared geocaching trackables for meetup group.” This theme creates separate indexable pages for those intents so each visitor lands on a page that speaks directly to their use case.

Next: how it works