Nuts wrote:You could carry 2 GPS's ?
Bush_walker wrote:Ever had your batteries go flat at a critical time? carry spare batteries.
Ever had your GPS freeze and then reset itself to factory settings wiping all your waypoints and routes when you have rebooted it? carry a backup memory card - they are cheaper than a second GPS
Ever dropped your "waterproof" GPS onto rocks and had it bounce into a nearby waterhole and then slowly sink as it fills with water? duh!Put all your eGear in waterproof ziplocks
Ever struggled with the buttons on your GPS in the dark while wearing gloves and with your glasses covered in condensation? No, but I doubt you can read a map under those conditions either
walkinTas wrote:
My answer to all of the above! NO.
photohiker wrote:Being able to read a map or GPS would rate higher than any of these questions.
walkinTas wrote:Bush_walker wrote:Ever had your batteries go flat at a critical time? carry spare batteries.
Ever had your GPS freeze and then reset itself to factory settings wiping all your waypoints and routes when you have rebooted it? carry a backup memory card - they are cheaper than a second GPS
Ever dropped your "waterproof" GPS onto rocks and had it bounce into a nearby waterhole and then slowly sink as it fills with water? duh!Put all your eGear in waterproof ziplocks
Ever struggled with the buttons on your GPS in the dark while wearing gloves and with your glasses covered in condensation? No, but I doubt you can read a map under those conditions either
Ever had your maps get soggy in the rain?
Ever had your maps blow away in the wind?
Ever had the ink run on your inkjet printed maps?
Ever had widely varying reads from your compass?
Ever dropped your compass onto rocks and had it bounce into a nearby waterhole?
Ever go lost in the bush?
... but nothing is safe from ID-10-T errors!
My answer to all of the above! NO.
ollster wrote:
Just as important, learn to read the terrain and see the signs. Not much use having maps/GPS if you can translate that to what you're seeing, and then make good choices based on the terrain/pad/track in front of you.
Bush_walker wrote:Ever thought that with the purchase of your upmarket colour screen GPS (or for that matter an iPhone) that you don't need to take a map with you any longer? Wrong, wrong, wrong .....
walkinTas wrote:... but nothing is safe from ID-10-T errors!
corvus wrote:I am with you ollster,if you cannot read the terrain or know where North/South is without aids you are a wee bit behind the proverbial 8 ball.
c
I do think a drop proof, waterproof Ipad with changeable batteries and an integrated high sensitivity GPS combined with Bitmap 3.0 would kick some serious butt.
photohiker: You should have seen me floundering around on the first day of my Scotland trip. My innate sense of direction went AWOL in the Northern Hemisphere
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