[pct-l] GPS for distance
James Vesely
JVesely at sstinternational.com
Mon Feb 2 15:51:10 CST 2015
If you have an Android phone download Backcountry Navigator Pro you won't be sorry. It’s a great app with free topo and imagery maps that you can cache to your phones memory. It does almost everything a separate GPS unit does and the maps are free to download.
Jim
-----Original Message-----
From: Pct-L [mailto:pct-l-bounces at backcountry.net] On Behalf Of shon mcganty
Sent: Friday, January 30, 2015 9:30 AM
To: pct-l at backcountry.net
Subject: [pct-l] GPS for distance
I don't like gadgets and thought I'd never want a GPS, but I really want a good way to determine how many miles I hiked for my trail journals. I'm worried that I might drop several hundred dollars on a GPS unit and find that they don't correctly calculate you're distance. I went down to REI but the employee I asked was not helpful (he admitted to not knowing much).
So I wanted to ask anyone on this list who is knowledgeable about using GPS for distance calculation. Does it work well? I live/hike in a heavily forested environment. Is it common for GPS to loose contact with satellites in forest cover?
I was wondering if a hand held GPS would be more powerful and accurate over a wrist watch GPS. The REI guy said a hand held unit would be better in the forest only if it was held correctly, with the antenna pointed up at the satellites. In no way will I be hiking while holding onto a GPS, so it's got to work while stored either on a pack's side pouch or strapped to the top.
Any information would be helpful. Thank you.
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