testtest

The Lost Art? How to Read a Map

Oh yeah , certainly are , and * usually * works for me .

But a couple of times it had been enough decades passed since USGS Field Survey , or the Legacy original state level mapping at the dawn of Automobile Era , that the legacy road / trail had been totally reclaimed by nature , and other road / trails in vicinity were never officially mapped .

Two areas l have in mind , l want to go back with full GPS capabilities, and explore . But at the time , l had to admit defeat and turn around, and follow my metaphoric bread crumbs back out the way l came in .
 
^^^ Practical maybe. Don't forget flares, warm clothing and rain gear, food and water, ammo. I also carry a MSR WhisperLite Universal stove, titanium cookware, fire, bag and gore-tex bivvy, whistle.
 
when i was instructing students at the trucking school, you'd not be surprised at how many said they will not buy the rand-mcnally truckers atlas..

they are too dependant on gizmos..

and look at all the dumbasses driving on the boardwalks on the beaches, of bike paths, ot the "Tail of the Dragon"

screw-em........

i DO have a GPS that was given to me as a retirement gift, comes in handy at times, but i still have my truckers road atlas.......as NO GPS can give you ALL the information a truckers atlas can.
 
I always bought the large pages, large print, laminated super-deluxe trucker's atlas in the odd number years. I also had a grease pencil so I could make notes for a specific run if I wanted to. Too expensive for every year and I figured very very little would have changed. I also had a GPS. I'd put it in after figuring out my route on my own. It was handy for the final few miles the atlas wasn't detailed enough to show.
 
I always bought the large pages, large print, laminated super-deluxe trucker's atlas in the odd number years. I also had a grease pencil so I could make notes for a specific run if I wanted to. Too expensive for every year and I figured very very little would have changed. I also had a GPS. I'd put it in after figuring out my route on my own. It was handy for the final few miles the atlas wasn't detailed enough to show.
i too only bought a truckers atlas, once every 3 to 4 years. roads under construction show up each printing, so by the time i got my new one, many times that road was finished, only to have another started.

GPS does not give you that, just a "go around", which i had personally seen were wrong.

i loved the laminated books, costly but always on sale somewhere.

i used dry erase markers.
 
I went through the Army Special Forces Jungle Warfare course, Fort Sherman, Panama. They dropped us off at midnight at the top of a mountain covered in triple canopy jungle, said go through it and find your way out. We had a Marine-issue lensatic compass, canteens and machetes. I got filthier in the first two hours in that place than if I'd spent two weeks in the Carolina pine scrub. The jungle was like dusk even at high noon. It stank. The terrain was unbelievably rugged; steep, muddy, ridge after ridge, deep ravines between them with rushing white water...and all covered by this thick green insanity.

The four of us were all combat vet Marine NCO's with land nav skills and still it took us four days before we emerged and found daylight on the bank of a wide brown river. The jungle was so thick, I doubt if GPS would've shortened our time that much.
 
Back
Top