[pct-l] personal locator beacons
Ken Powers
ken at gottawalk.com
Mon Mar 4 16:41:21 CST 2013
The accuracy of maps is all in your perception.
I have been working on a detailed mapping of a long distance trail. I WAS a
long term user of National Geographic Topo! I used a Topo! trace of the
trail as a start of my project. I converted it to a GPX file. Then I
converted it to Google Earths KML file. The program I used with my GPX file
wasn't bad, but it still relied on human developed maps. Converting to
Google Earth was the eye opener. Neither a trace downloaded from a newer
GPS, nor my hand drawn trail, nor a trail drawn on a published map was as
good as what I could draw on Google Earth.
Since then I have found other programs that use photographs of the earth for
mapping. Almost all the programs using photos blow the old hand developed
maps away.
Ken
www.GottaWalk.com
----- Original Message -----
From: <surferskir at aol.com>
To: <rgraybill44 at gmail.com>; <pct-l at backcountry.net>
Sent: Monday, March 04, 2013 1:45 PM
Subject: Re: [pct-l] personal locator beacons
I agree about the Delorme maps. I took a trial subscription, downloaded it,
as located an area in the Sierras I go to evry couple of years.
The trail shown wasn't even close. I know that area very well, and their
map wasn't even close (well it was in the same county).
As you say, their maps are worthless. I don't think they are scanned.
My National Geographic TOPO! is rigth on. Been using it for years.
--Dennis--
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