by pdforeme » Sun Jun 01, 2008 4:03 pm
alank...just to pick a fun fight....
<p>
At 4am on an unfamiliar trail, and one that has explicity bad directions (the skyline below the picnic tables, (museum route)...that has misleading painted arrow....shoot, i'd much rather have a ton of detail
<p>
Since the bits are free....i don't feel compelled to economize on the track/route i use.
that said, on a standard well mapped trail, yeah, a few waypoints are sufficient
<p>
Sort of on the same line. Last year i went up a familiar Mt Rainier route; that is, a day hike to Camp Muir. I had compass, topo, plus great 1 pager w/ key landmarks from Park Service. Then i added a friends GPS w/ 5 or so key waypoints. But on our descent (which is why i brought all this stuff)..the typical fog rolled in. The waypoints became worthless for a comfortable hike...that is, too much intermediate hills and valleys....so if you went on direct heading between waypoints you'd exert far more than if you simply followed the nice route you took in the morning when it was sunny.
Lucky for us the RMI guys put wands in the snowfields, so we just had to follow those.
Point being, for complicated routes, there's nothing like having a linear track if you will, to follow.
Desert Rat since 1957