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Author

Maggie Wallace

Maggie Wallace

AdventuresFeaturedGaia GPSUser Profiles

Adventurer Emma Walker Goes Off-Trail with Gaia GPS

by Maggie Wallace December 1, 2016
written by Maggie Wallace

Gaia GPS user and self-proclaimed professional camper Emma Walker hates crowds. “You couldn’t walk 20 yards without stumbling into somebody’s campsite,” Walker said of her hike in the James Peak Wilderness this summer, “So we opened up the app, found the nearest lake without a trail leading to it, and made our way there.”

Walker scrambled through downed trees, swamps, and dense brush, following her position on the screen of her phone. “I’m a pretty confident navigator, but it would’ve been tough to manage with a paper map and compass,” said Walker. Her persistence paid off; after a mile and a half, she found prime camping at an alpine lake, surrounded by wildflowers instead of tents.

walker_byron-glacier

Walker and her husband climbing Byron Glacier in Alaska.

Alaskan Odyssey

Walker grew up in Colorado but spent her graduate school years in the less developed frontier of Alaska, pursuing what she calls a “degree in camping,” a master of science in outdoor and environmental education. While getting that degree, Walker created a travel blog known as My Alaskan Odyssey where she continues to chronicle her backcountry adventures. She received her wilderness first responder and avalanche level 2 certifications, and “spent weeks at a time in remote mountain ranges and on glaciers,” eventually returning home to lead volunteers in the stewardship of public lands for Denver-based nonprofit Volunteers for Outdoor Colorado.

Walker climbing at Smith Rock State Park, Oregon.

Walker climbing at Smith Rock State Park, Oregon.

From Map to App

After growing up using a map and compass for navigation, Walker said it took her a long time to get used to a device. She first learned about Gaia GPS two years ago from instructors at the Alaska Avalanche School. “Now I’m rarely in the backcountry without it.”

When it comes to the outdoors, Walker always chases the authentic experience. She spent weeks a time in the remote mountain ranges of Alaska, and her bucket list includes paddling the Yukon River and ski mountaineering in the far reaches of Mongolia. Currently she’s training to get more comfortable with class 3 climbs like Washington’s Mt. Rainier and fostering stewardship and conservation.

Walker primarily uses Gaia to track her elevation change and distance on-trail and to plot her own routes in the remote backcountry, where Gaia’s overlays are a big asset. “Connecting tracks and routes to photos and multiple map layers gives such a better sense of what a place actually looks and feels like.” Many of the places that Walker explores are off the beaten path, so existing trip information isn’t plentiful.

Walker pack pack rafting the Colorado River in Moab, Utah.

Walker pack pack rafting the Colorado River in Moab, Utah.

“I love that Gaia creates a really three-dimensional navigating experience,” she said, referring to Gaia’s multiple features and overlays. Recently, she started using GaiaPro for tide information provided by NEXRAD weather overlays and NOAA nautical charts. She hasn’t used the feature in landlocked Colorado, “but it sure made a difference as we were hiking across Waipi’o Valley and sea kayaking in Kealakekua Bay on the Big Island.”

The Great Unknown

Walker will go to any lengths for privacy. On her latest adventure, an overnight hike into Waimanu Valley on Hawaii’s Big Island, she said “a local guidebook promised we’d be more likely to run into feral pigs than other backpackers.” A downpour and subsequent flooding ensured her her husband’s privacy and also put Gaia’s tide charts to good use.

For Walker, Gaia GPS is a way to catalogue and define the unknown. It offers more than navigation; it provides a map without borders, an adventure without a trail, and a campsite with the night sky for her only companion.

Walker on Big Island, Hawaii.

Walker on Big Island, Hawaii.

Read more about Emma Walker’s adventures in Alaska and beyond on her blog, My Alaskan Odyssey.

December 1, 2016
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FeaturedGaia GPSUser Profiles

Gaia GPS User Profile – Jonathan Preuss

by Maggie Wallace November 16, 2016
written by Maggie Wallace

As he drove home from a rock climbing adventure earlier this year, backcountry guide and SAR volunteer Jonathan Preuss received an emergency call for a hiker lost on Devil’s Bedstead East. “I … saw the search come in, pulled up my Gaia app, made sure I had that map saved, and turned around and went back to the trailhead.”

A helicopter flew by shortly after the call and spotted the missing hiker, but by that point, Preuss had already started up the trail. The ability to quickly access digital maps from a mobile device allows Search and Rescue volunteers like Preuss to respond quickly and more accurately than ever before.

All in a Day

Preuss works as a ski, alpine, and rock-climbing guide for Sun Valley Trekking and Sawtooth Mountain Guides in Idaho’s Sawtooth National Forest. “It’s not the typical Monday through Friday job,” said Preuss, in which a day of work can mean 4 hours of setting up ropes on a rock wall, or guiding a 10 to 15 hour trip over 12,662-foot Mount Borah, the “Everest of Idaho.” Facing everything from altitude sickness to shifting weather patterns, an Idaho mountain guide’s ability to change plans quickly can make all the difference.

“With ski guiding, you could go out there and have a plan to go to a certain run or two,” Preuss said, but when conditions change, “You gotta make a change on the go.” For this reason, Preuss keeps multiple overlays and maps loaded on Gaia for the area he’s touring that day.
profilepicPreuss approaching the CMC face of Mt. Moran in Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming.

Technology’s New Role in Risk Management

For those working in the backcountry without access to phone service, solid preparation allows for flexible decision making. “Being a guide also means a lot of research… we have to have a tour plan for everything,” said Preuss, who downloads and studies maps on Gaia GPS to prepare for his day. Ski guiding, he uses the satellite imagery to get an overhead view of the terrain above tree line. Hiking and trail running, he maps his routes ahead of time. “I’m constantly selling Gaia to clients because they just don’t realize it exists. They think you have to go out and buy a GPS,” Preuss said, referring to a recent shift in navigation preferences in the outdoor industry.
shortropingupmountsneffelsPreuss short-roping a client during an American Mountain Guide Association Ski Guide Course going up Mount Sneffels (14,157′) in the San Juan mountain range of Colorado.

“It’s always good to have a hard copy of a map anyways in case your phone doesn’t work or runs out of battery, but it kind of takes a short cut to be able to load it in your phone and just go with it,” Preuss said, adding that new technology can help with risk assessment and avalanche prediction, “There’s some people out there, they’re just using very old knowledge and it is very important for the ski industry because the avalanche studies every year change.”

Avalanches can occur on ski slopes from 30 to 55 degrees. Preuss explains, “38 degrees is the most triggered slope – which is black diamond terrain, so it’s the terrain everyone wants to go ski.” For this, Gaia offers the Caltopo slope angle overlay – a color-coded guide for the angle of a slope – so skiers know where they need to be more cautious.

After three years of working with the Idaho SAR team, Preuss has personally witnessed the life-and-death repercussions of backcountry mistakes. Last year, Preuss participated in a month-long SAR for another hiker who went missing on Devil’s Bedstead East. “He went up this ridge line that’s not the usual way to get up. It has some fifth class climbing and he was by himself,” said Preuss. With his SAR team, Preuss later located the body and sent GPS coordinates to the sheriff’s office.

diggingsnowpitPreuss digging a snow cave and reading the snowpack for avalanche hazard in the Smoky Mountains of the Sawtooth National Forest, Idaho.

The Takeaway: Preparation

Whether he’s searching for a lost hiker, guiding clients, or backcountry skiing with friends, Preuss stays prepared with the right equipment, maps, and planning. “You never leave without an avalanche beacon, your shovel to dig someone out, and a probe to find them,” Preuss explains, adding “And if I didn’t have my Gaia app … I would feel naked. It’s that important to me.”

Learn more about Jonathan Preuss and support his American Mountain Guide Association Certification through his website, http://www.jpadventures.com/

November 16, 2016
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