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Author

Abby Levene

Abby Levene

Abby Levene is a writer, editor, and podcast producer for Gaia GPS. She's also a professional endurance athlete based in Boulder, Colorado. In her free time you can find her sweating in the mountains by foot, bike, and skis, or at home painting or curled up with a book.

Someone holds their phone out infront of snow-capped mountains.
Gaia GPSHow-To

How to Find Your Location Without Cell Service

by Abby Levene November 21, 2021
written by Abby Levene

You’re on an adventure having the time of your life, until all of a sudden you’re lost. You can’t find the trail, and you don’t have cell service. Whether you’re hiking, offroading, running, or biking, we’ve all experienced that moment of panic. In fact, that’s a large reason why Gaia GPS was born.

Don’t worry, Gaia GPS has a feature to save you from hours of frantically trying to retrace your steps in vein. In fact, you can find out where you are in seconds, even when you can’t get a cell signal. All you have to do is pull out your phone, open Gaia GPS, and locate yourself on the map. Here’s how to do it.

Plan Ahead — Download Maps for Offline use

In order to locate yourself on the map, there is one catch. You must have your maps downloaded for offline use. Thankfully, downloading a map is easy to do. You just need a Premium Membership. Then you can download maps for the entire region that you’re traveling to, or even an entire state.

Pro tip: Before you leave the trailhead, start recording your tracks so you leave a bread-crumb trail of your steps right on the map. That way you can always retrace your steps and find your way back.

Locate Yourself on the Map

Lost and have no clue where you are? Find yourself on the map in seconds thanks to the “Locate” icon. Simply open the Gaia GPS app, and tap the circular icon with the four compass points in the very center of the top toolbar in the app. The arrow icon (called the “Map Arrow”) now shows your exact position on the map. Zoom in or out and pan around the map to get a better sense of your bearings.

Pro tip: You can quickly see how far away you are from the trail or the trailhead. Simply tap your desired destination on the map, and a drawer will pop up on the bottom of the screen showing the distance to it.

Navigate Your Way Back

Once you’ve located where you are on the map, you can use Gaia GPS to find your way back to familiar ground. If you are recording your tracks, hold your phone out in front of you and turn your body until the map arrow points in the direction of your breadcrumb trail. Start walking along your recorded track and your arrow should move right along with you.

If you’re not recording your tracks, don’t despair. Examine the map to find the trail, trailhead, or a particular feature on the map you’d like to reach. Once you’ve pinpointed your destination, you can even drop a waypoint onto the map for easy reference. Using the map arrow as a guide, work your way back.

Unlock the Backcountry with a Premium Membership

Stay found on your adventures with a Gaia GPS Premium membership. Access the map even when your phone is completely offline and in airplane mode so you can locate yourself on the map, create routes, create and edit waypoints to mark important spots like campsites and water sources, and record tracks and follow them back.

A Premium Membership also gives you access to Gaia GPS’s entire map catalog. Download hundreds of maps, including National Geographic Trails Illustrated, high-resolution satellite maps, weather overlays, and government-issued topo maps like USFS topo, all the USGS quad maps, and MVUMs.

November 21, 2021
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A selfie of Mac on a ridge line.
Gaia GPSOut and Back Podcast

Planning a Thru-Hike Next Year? Here’s What You Need to Know.

by Abby Levene October 21, 2021
written by Abby Levene

How to listen: iTunes | Google Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | Pocket Casts | RadioPublic | Breaker | Castbox

Before Mac of Halfway Anywhere thru-hiked the Pacific Crest Trail in 2013, he struggled to find useful information about the trail. Sure, he read anecdotal thru-hiking accounts. But what worked one for one person might not work for him. He wanted data. So after completing the trail that year, Mac started a PCT survey to gather that data for himself.

The results somewhat dismayed him.

“I’m a very good representation of just the average hiker,” Mac (whose “real” name is Tyler Fox) says. “I thought I was doing something cool. But I was actually just doing something that all the people who are just like me are also doing.”

In 2019, the last year of robust data from the trail, 60 percent of respondents identified as male. Nearly a whopping third (30 percent) were in their mid to late 20’s. And over a third (37 percent) of PCT hikers did not train before their hike — just like Mac.

But as Mac surmised, the data also proved useful. Mac’s findings suggest hikers wildly underestimate how much a thru-hike costs. The average amount spent on a successful 2020 PCT thru-hike was $8,059 or $58.79 a day.

In fact, underestimating thru-hike finances proves to be one of the primary reasons people abandon the trail.

“Money is a big factor that sneaks up on people,” Mac says. “They don’t realize it is going to be as big of an issue as it ends up being. Before I headed onto the trail, I was like, ‘I’m going to be out there just like five months in the wilderness, whatever. I’m not going to stay in hotels. I’m not going to hang out in town.’ And then in reality you’re out there for like 10 days and it’s been raining for five and all your stuff’s covered in mud and you’re like, ‘Whatever, I’m definitely going to go stay in a hotel.’”

Mac smiles in a selfie while hiking over snow.

After Mac thru-hiked the Continental Divide Trail in 2017, he started a survey for that thru-hike as well. Surprising to many, the CDT mostly sticks to well-defined trail. But unlike other long trails, the CDT provides numerous “alternates” hikers can take to supplement or supplant the official route. Mac found that the majority of thru-hikers take many of the same alternates, including the Gila River alt in New Mexico (96 percent), the Cirque of the Towers alt in Wyoming (84 percent), and the Spotted Bear Pass alt in Montana (82 percent).

A self-proclaimed random guy on the internet, Mac has no proven validity to his findings. But he’s here to help prospective thru-hikers actually glean information that will be useful in their monumental undertaking. Mac may not be a scientist, he thinks with the precision of one, constantly trying to refine and improve the surveys with each iteration.

Half the challenge with these surveys is simply finding people to take them. The key is to loop people in before they start hiking, otherwise Mac ends up with a skewed sample of finishers and doesn’t get that critical data from people who quit the trail along the way. If you’re planning on thru-hiking the PCT or the CDT next year, sign up to take the survey when it becomes available.

Mac sits on the trail while eating a piece of pizza.

You may have noticed the elephant in the room: Mac has not thru-hiked the Appalachian Trail and does not conduct an AT survey. In fact, Mac swears he will never hike the east’s longest trail. Tune in to the Out and Back podcast to hear AT thru-hike veteran Shanty try and change his mind.

In this episode of Out and Back, Mac weaves his eight years of survey data together with his first hand observations to illuminate how the PCT has evolved over the past decade. Hint: he doesn’t think it’s all been for the better. Mac dishes his controversial view of trail angels and trail magic. Plus, Mac explains why he hates the word “tramly” (aka “trail family”).

Comb through the vast PCT and CDT survey data on Mac’s website, Halfway Anywhere. You’ll also find all types of useful insight and analysis, including gear guides for both the PCT and CDT. Sign up for Mac’s newsletter, and follow Mac’s adventures on Instagram.

Last episode: A Definitive Guide to the Best Camp Coffee

Heather Anderson sits with a cup of coffee in her tent.

Brewing the perfect cup of coffee in the backcountry can be complicated. A pour-over leaves you with messy grounds to haul out, and instant coffee often falls short on taste. In the last episode of Out and Back, we turned to some of our favorite professional hikers — Heather “Anish” Anderson, the Hiking Viking, Adventure Alan Dixon, and Liz “Snorkel” Thomas — to unmask the secrets to brewing the best cup of coffee in camp.

Learn Anish’s hack to getting in coffee-flavored caffeine and lots of sustaining calories without actually brewing a cup of joe. Get Viking’s hilarious take on why coffee is an essential backcountry tool, even though he doesn’t really care about the taste. A trained barista, Alan provides his meticulously researched lightest and best tasting backcountry coffee setup. And last but not least, Snorkel shares the findings from her scientific, blind study on 14 brands of instant coffee. The testers: a panel of professional coffee connoisseurs.

Follow these four thru-hikers on Instagram: @anishhikes, @therealhikingviking, @1adventurealan,@lizthomashiking.

October 21, 2021
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turn by turn on iphone
Gaia GPSNew Features

Turn-By-Turn Directions Now Available on Gaia GPS

by Abby Levene October 14, 2021
written by Abby Levene

Never miss a turn on the trail again. Turn-by-turn directions are now available in both iOS and Android. Enjoy the same type of step-by-step navigation you’re accustomed to while driving, now while hiking, running, or biking deep off the grid.

Follow turn-by-turn directions for any saved route in the app, regardless of whether you have cell service. Plus, no more guessing how much longer the climb will drag on. In iOS, see your route’s elevation profile and where you are along it. Read on to learn about turn-by-turn directions and how to use them on your next hike, ride, or offroad adventure.

Stay on Track with Turn-by-Turn

turn by turn on Android

Turn-by-turn gives you a visual, on-screen guide of where to head next. It also tells you how far to the next turn, how much of your route you’ve covered, total trip distance, and elevation gain and lost. Follow your route with turn-by-turn directions in the Gaia GPS app and with voice direction.

Whether you’re hiking, biking, or offroading, you can now follow your route with turn-by-turn directions. Once you start turn-by-turn, a compass arrow on top of the screen will show you which direction to head towards. You will also see the distance until your next turn. Click that top bar to get more details, including how much of the route you’ve covered, total distance travelled, and estimated arrival time.

If you’re hiking with poles or biking a technical trail and don’t want to look at your phone for directions, turn on voice command to guide you to your destination.

Turn-by-turn works even when you’re out of cell range or operating in airplane mode to conserve phone battery. If you’re stopping for lunch and want the pause the directions, no problem. Just tap “End” at the top of the screen. From there, you can hit “pause.” Resume directions whenever you like.

Turn-by-turn directions work for routes saved to your phone. However, turn-by-turn may not work for some saved routes, namely those that do not snap to the trail and in places where the route data remains unavailable. In these cases, you will be guided in a straight line to your destination.

See Where you Stand with the Elevation Profile

elevation profile on iPhone

Wondering how far to go until the climb ends? If you’re in iOS, just tap the turn-by-turn banner at the top of the screen to see exactly where you are along the elevation profile of the route. You can also see how many feet of ascent and descent you’ve covered, and how far until the high point.

How to Use Turn-by-Turn Directions

Turn-by-turn routes are available for all modes of transportation, from hiking to biking to offroading. Here’s how to get turn-by-turn directions:

  1. Map out the route you want to follow. Make sure you use the snap-to-trail route planning function in the app or on the web so that you’re route follows the contours of the trail. Alternatively, choose from any route you’ve already saved on the web or in the app.
  2. Download the map if you want to navigate without cell service.
  3. When you’re ready to start your activity, tap on the route. Click the “More” button. Select “Guide Me.” This will pull up turn-by-turn directions.
  4. In iOS, “Guide Me” will start recording your track automatically. In Android, you have the option of recording your track.
  5. See more details like elevation profile, waypoints, and route stats by tapping the turn-by-turn banner at the top of the screen. This details page also includes the route elevation profile and where you are along it.
  6. Once you’re done, simply tap “End” and then press the next “end.”
October 14, 2021
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Man looking at a map in Gaia GPS on his phone
Company NewsGaia GPS

Unlock Adventure with Gaia GPS on Outside+

by Abby Levene September 30, 2021
written by Abby Levene

Gaia GPS has joined forces with Outside Inc. to bring you not only the best backcountry navigation tools, but also leading outdoor journalism from our award-winning titles like Outside magazine, BACKPACKER, Trail Runner, SKI, Climbing, and more.

What does this mean as a Gaia GPS user? You can continue to use Gaia GPS just as you are now. Or you can access all the benefits of Gaia GPS Premium and Outside+ in one membership. You have three options to take your adventures to the next level:

Option 1: Gaia GPS Premium

If you just want access to all of Gaia GPS, no problem. A Gaia GPS Premium subscription unlocks the full capabilities of planning, navigating, and recording your adventures.

With a Gaia GPS Premium membership, you get access to our entire map catalog, including National Geographic Trails Illustrated, high resolution satellite imagery, slope angle shading, and USGS maps. Layer maps on top of each other to find free camping, new trails, and to avoid burn zones. Plus, download your maps for offline use so you can always find your way in the backcountry, even when you’re far from cell service.

Option 2: Outside+ (Gaia GPS Premium included)

Visual representation of Outside+ offerings.

Enjoy all of the benefits of a Gaia GPS Premium account plus print magazines, books, and exclusive media content all in one Outside+ membership. Outside+ bundles Outside Magazine, Backpacker, and Ski with 30 other leading titles. Outside+ gives members best-in-class storytelling, premium access to OutsideTV, online courses, discounted event access, and print books and magazines. By joining Outside+ you’re also supporting in-depth, independent journalism, as well as helping us to make the best backcountry app for your adventures.

Option 3: Limited Gaia GPS for Free

Plan new routes at home, record your tracks in the field, and check out our flagship worldwide Gaia Topo map with a free Gaia GPS account. To take your maps offline, layer maps together, and add custom map sources, upgrade to Gaia GPS Premium.

Choose Your Membership

Thanks for joining us on this ride! We’re working hard to make Gaia GPS even better for your adventures.

September 30, 2021
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owl face in the dark
Gaia GPSOut and Back Podcast

Owls and UFOs with Ultralight Expert Mike Clelland

by Abby Levene September 9, 2021
written by Abby Levene

How to listen: iTunes | Google Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | Pocket Casts | RadioPublic | Breaker | Castbox

Ultralight backpacking expert Mike Clelland has slept outside as often as possible for decades. Cowboy camping one night 15 years ago, something happened that changed Mike’s life forever. He tried to dismiss it, but it happened again. And again. That series of events sent Mike down the unlikely path of studying how powerful coincidences connect us to the supernatural.

In this very special episode of Out and Back, Mike dives into the mysterious world of owl synchronicities — and their connection to UFO abductions. Yes, you read that correctly.

Mike sits on a rock while prepping lunch.

It all started with a highly charged owl encounter on top of a mountain.

“I saw the owls. And I heard a voice in my head that said, ‘This has something to do with the UFO’s. You are an abductee,” Mike recounts on Out and Back. “To feel that, and to hear it in my head, it changed the direction of my life. I started exploring the symbolic meaning of owls and their connection to the UFO contact experience. And it took over my life.”

Mike is a masterful storyteller and will leave you clutching your seat (or trekking poles) as he shares his first-hand encounters with owls and extraterrestrial life. He weaves his own narrative into the rich history of owl lore, dreams, shamanistic stories, and other first-hand accounts to reveal this mystical world lurking in plain sight.

Whether you’re a believer or a skeptic, you’ll want to tune in to hear Mike’s perspective. At the very least, you will never see the world the same way again.

Check out Mike’s book The Messengers, which dives into the overlapping worlds of owls, synchronicities, and UFO abduction. His companion book Stories from The Messengers goes further into the symbolic and literal links between owls and UFOs. Mike is also the illustrator and author behind a series of books on mastering outdoor techniques. And finally, check out Mike’s longstanding blog, Hidden Experience, and his podcast, The Unseen with Mike Clelland.

Last Episode: Overcoming Backpacking Fears with She Dreams of Alpine

Allison smiles next to a trail sign on the JMT.

Newbie and seasoned backpackers alike all hold fears around backcountry travel. Outdoor Backpacking Educator and Empowerment Coach Allison Boyle shares how to overcome them on the last episode of the Out and Back podcast. Allison is the face behind the ultra-popular blog and coaching service She Dreams of Alpine, which teaches women how to become safe, confident, and self-sufficient in the backcountry.

Allison shares her stumbling blocks when she started adventuring outside, and how her fears initially continued to grow as she gained more experience. She talks about the top three fears beginner backpackers face, and how to overcome them. She explains “trip resistance,” that dark cloud of anxiety that seems to float over your head the week before any trip — no matter your experience level. Learn how to quiet that inner voice telling you to abandon your plans, so you can get out and have a blast on the trail. Tune in to learn Allison’s favorite breakfast foods in the backcountry, the one item she can’t leave behind, and how she turned her outdoor passion into a career.

Follow She Dreams of Alpine on Instagram, check out the blog for tried and true advice (including the free Ultimate Outdoor Adventure Starter Kit), and consider signing up for She Dreams of Alpine’s Backpacking Badass program to learn how to become a confident and self-sufficient backpacker.

September 9, 2021
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Allison smiles next to a trail sign on the JMT.
Gaia GPSOut and Back Podcast

Overcoming Backpacking Fears with She Dreams of Alpine

by Abby Levene August 26, 2021
written by Abby Levene
 

How to listen: iTunes | Google Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | Pocket Casts | RadioPublic | Breaker | Castbox

Newbie and seasoned backpackers alike all hold fears around backcountry travel. Outdoor Backpacking Educator and Empowerment Coach Allison Boyle shares how to overcome them this week on the Out and Back podcast. Allison is the face behind the ultra-popular blog and coaching service She Dreams of Alpine, which teaches women how to become safe, confident, and self-sufficient in the backcountry.

In this fun and informative conversation, Allison tells hosts Mary and Abby how a city girl from Houston, Texas ended up becoming a backpacking expert. It certainly didn’t happen overnight. Allison shares her stumbling blocks when she started adventuring outside, and how her fears initially continued to grow as she gained more experience. She talks about the top three fears beginner backpackers face, and how to overcome them.

“We’re scared of what we don’t know,” Allison says on Out and Back. “Things we do in our everyday life, like drive or walk down a busy city street, are more dangerous than anything we would do in the outdoors. It’s just, they’re more familiar to us and we’re able to step into those scenarios more. And if you’re a new backpacker, you can’t imagine yourself in the outdoors at all. Once you start building those experiences for yourself, those fears start to go away.”

Alison explains “trip resistance,” that dark cloud of anxiety that seems to float over your head the week before any trip — no matter your experience level. Learn how to quiet that inner voice telling you to abandon your plans, so you can get out and have a blast on the trail. Tune in to learn Allison’s favorite breakfast foods in the backcountry, the one item she can’t leave behind, and how she turned her outdoor passion into a career.

Allison smiles on the trail while holding her hiking poles over her head.

Follow She Dreams of Alpine on Instagram, check out the blog for tried and true advice (including the free Ultimate Outdoor Adventure Starter Kit), and consider signing up for She Dreams of Alpine’s Backpacking Badass program to learn how to become a confident and self-sufficient backpacker.

Next Episode: UFOs with Ultralight Expert Mike Clelland

Yes, you read that correctly. In the next very special episode of Out and Back, author, ultralight backpacking expert, and UFO historian Mike Clelland dives into the mysterious world of alien abductions.

Mike is a masterful storyteller and will leave you clutching your seat (or trekking poles) as he shares his first-hand encounters with extraterrestrial life. He tells the story of how an owl gave him a message on a mountaintop, leading to his fascination with UFOs. Whether you’re a believer or a skeptic, you’ll want to tune in to hear what Mike has to say about the natural and supernatural worlds.

In the meantime, check out Mike’s book The Messengers, which dives into the overlapping worlds of owls, synchronicities, and UFO abduction. His companion book Stories from The Messengers goes further into the symbolic and literal links between owls and UFOs. Mike is also the illustrator and author behind a series of books on mastering outdoor techniques. And finally, check out Mike’s longstanding blog, Hidden Experience, and his podcast, The Unseen with Mike Clelland.

Last Episode: Life With Fire

Amanda smiles for the camera in a hardhat.

As wildfires derail recreation plans across the West, former wildland firefighter Amanda Monthei makes sense of this new “normal.” Tune in to the last episode of Out and Back to get a behind-the-scenes view on what it’s like to fight fire, and how we can manage wildfires going forward.

“You can’t just exist superficially within the landscape,” Amanda says on Out and Back. “You have to be an active member of it. We’ve been suppressing fire for too long. We need to like recognize that fire very much belongs in these places.”

Amanda unearths why wildfires remain vital for ecosystem health, and how humans misunderstand this life force. She gets into the history of wildfire management in the U.S. and how we’ve primed conditions for fires of unprecedented scope. Amanda dives into what we can learn from indigenous fire management practices, and how we can better coexist with fire going forward.

Follow Amanda on Instagram, and check out her brilliant podcast on all things fire, Life with Fire.

August 26, 2021
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Amanda smiles for the camera in a hardhat.
Gaia GPSOut and Back Podcast

Amanda Monthei on Life with Fire

by Abby Levene August 9, 2021
written by Abby Levene

How to listen: iTunes | Google Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | Pocket Casts | RadioPublic | Breaker | Castbox

As wildfires derail recreation plans across the West, how can we account for longer and fiercer fire seasons? Former wildland firefighter Amanda Monthei lifts up the curtain on fire management and misperceptions this week on the Out and Back podcast. Armed with four years of experience working on engine and hotshot crews in Idaho and Oregon as well as her experience as a wildfire Public Information Officer, Amanda sheds a light on wildfire you’ve probably never seen.

“You can’t just exist superficially within the landscape,” Amanda says on Out and Back. “You have to be an active member of it. We’ve been suppressing fire for too long. We need to like recognize that fire very much belongs in these places.”

Amanda holds a giant set of antlers next to her head. She's in a hardhat and her firefighting clothes.

In a deep and far reaching chat with Abby, Amanda unearths why wildfires remain vital for ecosystem health, and how humans misunderstand this life force. She gets into the history of wildfire management in the U.S. and how we’ve primed conditions for fires of unprecedented scope. Amanda dives into what we can learn from indigenous fire management practices, and how we can better coexist with fire going forward.

A Michigander, Amanda shares her unlikely path to growing infatuated with fire. Hear her biggest lesson from working as a wildland firefighter — it’s not what you would expect. She also paints a vivid picture of what it’s like to work around the clock with a crew in completely uncertain and often dangerous conditions. Listen through to the end to hear why despite the deep physical and psychological satisfaction of wildland firefighting work, Amanda ultimately decided to part with the field.

Finally, Amanda connects wildfire to our backcountry adventures. Learn how you can make the most of new life teeming in burn scars, and how you can fold fire into your life. Follow Amanda on Instagram, and check out her brilliant podcast on all things fire, Life with Fire.

Last Episode: Gaia GPS Offroad Podcast Debuts with Burning Jeep Tale

Jeep on fire in the desert.

We’ve launched a podcast all about roaming the world on four wheels! And if you have a thirst for adventure, you won’t want to miss the debut episode of the Gaia GPS Offroad Podcast sponsored by Trails Offroad. Host, fighter jet pilot, and overlander Wade May dives deep under the hood with experts in the field. International travelers and backyard explorers alike transport you to their most harrowing encounters, biggest lessons, and most epic adventures on the trail.

The first episode launches with a story from Casey Kaiser, an experienced overlander with a penchant for finding abandoned homesteads in the desert. Casey takes us on a complete misadventure. Thirty miles off the grid, Casey’s fully upgraded Jeep Wrangler Rubicon JKU suddenly caught fire. The flames quickly engulfed Casey’s entire vehicle, leaving him stranded in Oregon’s high desert at night. Casey made it home safely to tell us what he learned from this unforeseen catastrophe.

The Gaia GPS Offroad podcast drops every other week. Catch it in between episodes of Out and Back. Give it a follow on our offroad and overland Instagram channel @gaiagpsoffroad.

August 9, 2021
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iphone screenshot of offline routing.
AndroidApp UpdatesGaia GPSiOSNew Features

Offline Snap-to-Trail Route Planning Now Available on Gaia GPS

by Abby Levene August 5, 2021
written by Abby Levene

You can now modify your plans on the road, create new routes from your tent late at night, and see the exact distance to the summit while on the trail. Snap-to-trail route planning is available without cell service!

The gold standard for route planning, snap-to-trail mapping does all the heavy lifting for you. Choose your activity type and let our intelligent planning tool build the route in a matter of seconds. Just make sure you’ve downloaded the map and the offline routing data ahead of time. Here’s how.

Create Snap-to-Trail Routes on the Fly

Gaia GPS users know and love our quick and easy snap-to-trail route planning function. Snap-to-trail automatically follows the contours of the trail for you. This gives you the most accurate distance and elevation metrics available, and builds your route quickly and precisely. You can now enjoy this seamless route planning tool with your Android and iOS devices, from anywhere at any time. No wifi or cell service needed.

Our intelligent route planning tool connects the dots on the map to create the best route for you. If you’re on a hike and wondering how far you have to go to reach the summit, just drop a line from your position to your destination. Snap-to-trail will create a precise route, complete with all the stats you want like how far you still have to go, and how much more you have to climb.

How to Access Offline Snap-to-Trail Routing

iPhone screenshots of downloading a map on Gaia GPS, including offline routing data.

Creating snap-to-trail routes offline requires that you download the map and its offline route data. Here’s how to do so in both iOS and Android.

When you download a new map, the route data will automatically also be downloaded as the default setting. If you don’t want to download this additional data, untoggle “Include data to create and navigate routes offline.”

Once you’ve downloaded route data for an area, you can create snap-to-trail routes offline with any map source in your library. Make and modify routes regardless of whether you have cell signal.

To access offline snap-to-trail routing over areas for which you’ve already downloaded the map, you will need to delete those downloads. Make sure your Gaia GPS app is up to date. Then you so you can download the maps plus the offline route data.

Get Offline Routing with a Premium Membership

Offline snap-to-trail routing is available with a Gaia GPS Premium membership. Premium also lets you download maps for offline use so you can always find your way in the field. Going Premium comes with the ability to layer maps on top of each other, so you can look at incoming weather over your route, view today’s air quality, or look at public and private land boundaries to ensure you’re not trespassing. You also get Gaia GPS’s entire map catalog. Download hundreds of maps, including National Geographic Trails Illustrated, high-resolution satellite maps, weather overlays, and government-issued topo maps like USFS topo, all the USGS quad maps, and MVUMs.

August 5, 2021
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Gaia GPSNew Features

Find the Best Trails for Your Activity with Gaia Topo Color Coded Trails

by Abby Levene July 29, 2021
written by Abby Levene

Discover the preeminent trails around the world to hike, bike, off-road, and horseback ride with new color-coded trails in Gaia Topo. Trails on our worldwide map are now clearly marked to show you which activities are allowed at your next destination.

Hikers can find peaceful trails unencumbered by mountain bikes and four-wheelers. And conversely, mountain bikers and offroaders can easily see where they’re permitted. Read on to learn how to use this fresh update to find the perfect trail for you.

Get Worldwide Trail Information from Gaia Topo

Whether you’re hiking, biking, or overlanding, Gaia Topo gives you detailed information for trails around the world. Now color-coding make it easy to quickly identify if your activity is permitted on a specific trail. Pull up the Gaia Topo legend to see what each color represents, or just tap on the trail to learn more.

  • Gray = foot travel is the only known permitted activity
  • Green = Horses allowed
  • Red = Bicycles allowed
  • Purple = Motorized vehicles allowed

When you select a trail, a pop-up displays more information, including the trail name, all of the allowed uses, and the trail specifications and characteristics.

Gaia Topo: Tiny and Fast to Download

Richer detail and styling improvements keep making Gaia Topo better and better. Best of all, these updates don’t compromise Gaia Topo’s bedrock feature — downloading efficiency. You can expect the same industry-leading download speeds and tiny sizes that you’re used to seeing from Gaia Topo’s revolutionary design.

Downloading maps prevails as a key feature for all recreationists, regardless of activity. Download the map for your entire state and navigate offline, even when you’re far away from service. Whether you’re overloading across multiple states, sightseeing in a vast national park, or backpacking across hundreds of miles of wilderness, you can still download one huge section of the Gaia Topo map to cover your entire journey.

How to Get Color Coded Trails on Gaia Topo

Gaia Topo is available to everyone for free online and in the app. Go to gaiagps.com on the web or open up the Gaia GPS map to see the updated color-coded trails. If you’ve already downloaded the maps for this area or you don’t see the color-coded trails, remove and re-add the Gaia Topo map source (iOS/Android). And be sure to get a Premium membership to download Gaia Topo and take it anywhere in the world — with or without cell service.

July 29, 2021
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Gaia GPSNew Maps

Avoid Wildfire Smoke with Free Smoke Forecast and Air Quality Maps

by Abby Levene July 22, 2021
written by Abby Levene

Burning eyes, runny nose, and hazy skies indicate that wildfire season has engulfed the U.S. Steer clear of smokey, polluted air on your next adventure with three brand new Smoke Forecast maps. Smoke Forecast (today), Smoke Forecast (24h), and Smoke Forecast (48h) give you a sense of smoke levels all over the continental US for today, tomorrow, and an entire weekend.

Whether you’re backpacking near a wildfire-ravaged area or overlanding thousands of miles away, get a quick and accurate sense of how much smoke blows over so you can circumvent the bad air and enjoy clear views.

Smoke Forecast Today, 24h, and 48h

The new Smoke Forecast layers show an estimate of the concentration of wildfire smoke present near the ground. These predictions take into account smoke billowing from nearby wildfires, as well as smoke blown across the atmosphere from fires burning far away. The Smoke Forecast data comes from a NOAA weather model called High Resolution Rapid Refresh (HRRR). HRRR measures particulates on a 3km grid spanning the continental US.

RELATED: FIND CLEAR AIR WITH OUR SUITE OF FREE AIR QUALITY MAPS

Color-coded shading on the map gives you a quick sense of wildfire smoke in or coming to your area. Like a tape measure, the higher the number the denser (and more harmful) the particulate concentration. Lower smoke concentrations appear gray on the map, progressing to yellow, orange, and finally red for the highest concentrations.

The color-coded scale in the map roughly translates to the Air Quality Index, the EPA’s index for reporting air quality. Note that gray on the Smoke Forecast scale equates to green on AQI. You can use this color-coded system as a loose guide for when it’s safe to recreate outside, or when you should modify your plans.

source: Smart Air.

To see the exact estimated particulate amount, simply tap that location on the map. The sidebar on the web and the tap drawer on your phone will give you the smoke concentration (in μg/m³) and time that forecast was recorded (in UTC). Smoke Forecast (today) is updated hourly. Smoke Forecast (24h) and (48h) are updated every six hours.

This is a model-derived forecast layer, not an exact reading. These layers carry the same level of forecast uncertainty as other weather predictions, such as our Precipitation and Snow Forecast maps. In addition, very recent or small wildfires may not be included in the smoke prediction. This means that these maps may underestimate the amount of surface smoke present.

How to Use Smoke Forecast Maps

  1. Pull up the relevant Smoke Forecast map for your trip. If you’re heading out today, look at the Smoke Forecast (Current) map. If your trip will extend into tomorrow or span an entire weekend, pull up the Smoke Forecast (24h) or (48h), respectively.
  2. Pair the Smoke Forecast layer on top of your favorite base map, such as Gaia Topo or Satellite Imagery with Labels to see exactly how the air quality looks along each part of your route.
  3. Look at the color-coded shading over your route.
    • Clear or light gray — good to go
    • Yellow — moderate. Proceed with caution.
    • Orange — Unhealthy for sensitive individuals.
    • Red — Unhealthy to hazardous. Modify your plans or stay home.
  4. Next, use the Smoke Forecast layers in conjunction with our Wildfire (Satellite) and Wildfire (Current) maps to get a comprehensive understanding of how where fires are burning and how to bypass them.
  5. Finally, add the Air Quality (Current) and Air Quality (Tomorrow) maps to get an even richer sense of how wildfire smoke compounds with ozone and other air pollutants to influence the overall air quality in your area. Learn more about the wildfire and air quality maps here.

Why Checking for Wildfire Smoke Matters

Wildfire risk extends beyond simply encountering the fire itself. Smoke can travel thousands of miles away, exposing you to major toxins including:

  • ground-level ozone
  • particle pollution (also known as particulate matter, including PM 2.5 and PM 10)
  • carbon monoxide
  • sulfur dioxide
  • nitrogen dioxide

The Smoke Forecast layers measure PM 2.5 particulates. PM 2.5 refers to particulate matter with a size of two and a half microns or less. The width of the largest of these particles comes in at less than 30 times smaller than a human hair. The smallest particles are so microscopic that several thousand could sit together into the period at the end of this sentence.

These super fine particles can penetrate deep into your lungs, making your eyes burn and your nose run. Potent wildfire smoke aggravates chronic heart and lung diseases, and exposure to this particular pollution is even linked to premature death, the EPA reports.

If you’re heading on a hike, bikepacking trip, overlanding adventure (you name it) from June to December, check these map layers to help inform your route choice so you can keep your lungs happy and healthy. Even east coasters may be surprised by how much wildfire smoke blows in from the west and settles overhead.

How to Access Smoke Forecast Maps

All three Smoke Forecast Maps are available for free on gaiagps.com and in the app. To add the Smoke Forecast layers to your active maps in the iOS or Android app or on the web, simply select the map layers button, tap “Add map layers” and select “Feature/Weather Overlays.” Choose from Smoke Forecast (Today), Smoke Forecast (24h), and Smoke Forecast (48h).

Since refreshing for updated smoke data requires a wifi connection, these maps are not available for offline downloads. However, you can keep a recent visual on your phone: viewing the forecast over an area in a map will cache that data, leaving it available to view in the app for 24 hours.

Use of this map layer for any purpose is at your own risk. Trailbehind Inc (maker of Gaia GPS) is not responsible for any actions you take based on the information contained in any map.

While the Smoke Forecast maps are available for free, get a premium membership to download your favorite maps and take them offline with you in areas without cell service. A Premium Membership also gives you access to Gaia GPS’s entire map catalog. Download hundreds of maps, including National Geographic Trails Illustrated, high-resolution satellite maps, weather overlays, and government-issued topo maps like USFS topo, all the USGS quad maps, and MVUMs.

July 22, 2021
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