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camping

A backcountry skier skis up a skin track towards a cabin. Jagged peaks rise up in the distance.
Gaia GPS

Gift a Memorable Outdoor Experience This Holiday Season

by Abby Levene December 10, 2020
written by Abby Levene

Let’s face it, outdoor lovers love to be outdoors. Cut to the chase and give a gift that lets someone do what they love. From travel, to education, to safety, there are numerous (COVID-friendly) experience gifts that can help a loved one have fun outside. Plus, gifting an experience means you don’t have to deal with the hassle of fighting crowded shops and schlepping packages to UPS.

With these considerations in mind, here are some of the best experience gifts this year for outdoor lovers and adventurers.

National Parks Pass, $80

The big walls of Yosemite loom out of red and green trees in the valley below.

Give the gift of unlimited access to America’s public lands with a national parks pass. The “America the Beautiful — the National Parks and Federal Recreational Lands Pass” unlocks the door to over 2,000 federal recreation sites. The pass covers entrances fees to national parks and national wildlife refuges, plus day use fees at national forests and grasslands, and lands managed by the Bureau of Land Management, Bureau of Reclamation and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

Purchase a national parks pass through the USGS website or REI. This pass is valid for a full year from the month of purchase. It covers a car full of people (the pass owner and three accompanying adults). If you’re gifting a parks pass to a senior, you’re in luck! Seniors can get an annual pass for $20, or a lifetime pass for $80. There is no entry fee to any of these places for children ages 15 and under.

Alternatively, encourage local exploration through gifting a State Parks Pass. Many states offer a pass that covers entry fees to state parks. These passes quickly pay for themselves after just a few visits. Note that in Hawaii, Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, Pennsylvania and Tennessee, entrance to state parks is free.

Safer & Stress-free Backcountry Skiing, $350 – $600

A backcountry skier skins up a track. Snow-covered plains sprawl out behind her.

This winter is shaping up to be a crazy season in the backcountry. Get out there safely and learn how it’s done at this one-of-a-kind backcountry ski resort. Bluebird Backcountry is a Colorado ski area without chairlifts. The backcountry ski area allows skiers and splitboarders to enjoy all the perks of uphill travel: no lift lines, powder caches, and a quality workout — but with much less risk than a typical backcountry environment. And they don’t have to stress about finding a safe backcountry zone. The resort operates on Bear Mountain, on the Continental Divide near Rabbits Ears Pass and Steamboat Springs, Colorado.

The cost of your day pass includes the safety net of having ski patrol available for emergencies, enjoying fresh tracks on avalanche controlled slopes, and a base lodge and warming hut with food and beverages services inside. Guests will delight over ample parking and have the option of camping on site. With over 1,200 acres of avalanche-evaluated terrain, skiers have plenty of space to explore and score coveted first tracks. Plus, skiers get access to 3,000 additional acres of backcountry skiing if they hire a guide. Avalanche courses are also available.

If you want to go all in, you can gift a season’s pass. If that’s too committing, Bluebird offers single day, 4-pack and 10-pack day pass packages. They also offer rental gear. Check out the options here.

Snowshoe Tour, $50+

Two pairs of feet in snow shoes lying on the snow, with a lake and snow-capped peaks in the distance.

Consider a snowshoe tour for the person who wants to make the most of winter wonderland without getting on skis. Snowshoe tours are available pretty much anywhere snow falls. Many involve hot beverages, and sometimes even a gourmet meal. Destinations like Yellowstone National Park offer a multi-day snowshoe traverse. Check other national parks near you for interpretive tours offered on snowshoes.

Avalanche Safety Training Course, $600 – $700

What gift says “I care about you” quite like the gift of safety? An avalanche safety training course is essential for anyone who wants to get into the backcountry this winter. Skiers, splitboarders, snowmobilers, snowshoers, winter hikers, and climbers will appreciate learning about how to stay safer in the snow. And, let’s be honest, this gift is equally about giving you some peace of mind when your loved one heads for the snowy backcountry this winter season.

A course from AIARE, the leading avalanche safety education organization, will help teach you how to make better decisions in avalanche terrain. You’ll also learn how to prepare and carry out a backcountry trip, understand basic decision making while in the field, and learn the avalanche rescue techniques required to dig up someone buried under snow. Find an AIARE course near you.

Call for Help from Anywhere on Earth: Satellite Communicator, $200 – $350

Okay, this gift is cheating slightly — it involves a physical object. But by keeping you connected to the outside world and only one button away from a rescue, the true gift is one of safety and communication. Never worry about cell service in the backcountry again when you have a satellite device on hand. Brands like ZOLEO pair with an app on your smart phone to let you send and receive messages anywhere on earth. Most importantly, the SOS button puts you in touch with the GEOS International Emergency Response Coordination Center within a matter of seconds, who will coordinate a rescue if necessary.

If the someone you have in mind already owns a satellite device, you can gift the service fee for a month, a year, or as long as you wish. Check out our satellite communication device guide here, complete with a price comparison, and cash in on a special offer from ZOLEO offered through the end of 2020.

Wilderness Course, $75+

Andrew Skurka teaches backcountry navigation with map and compass in Rocky Mountain national Park. He stands in a meadow facing a group of people sitting on the ground.
Andrew Skurka teaches backcountry navigation with map and compass in Rocky Mountain national Park.

Acknowledge and support someone’s goals with a navigation class, ultralight backpacking course, or a wilderness first aid class.

Navigation classes teach you how to confidently move through the wilderness. Learn how to route find, use a compass and topographical maps, read an altimeter, and enhance your terrain awareness. If you want to lighten your pack load, go further and faster, or simply minimize backpacking stress, an ultralight backpacking course may be for you. Take a wilderness first aid class and have more fun outside by learning how to take care of scrapes and sprains before they turn into something much worse.

Many organizations offer these classes. A few tried and true courses include Andrew Skurka’s Planning Course and guided instructional ultralight backpacking trips, REI’s Wilderness Safety Training with NOLS, NOLS courses, Wilderness Medical Associates’ wilderness first aid classes, and YAMNUSKA courses in the Canadian Rockies.

You can even gift a virtual class for a hassle-free, socially distant, and convenient way to learn. Active Interest Media offers a host of courses with experts in the field.

Backcountry Meal Planning, $25+

A closeup of a bowl of pesto pasta with sundried tomatoes.

For the person in your life who loves to camp or backpack but comes home complaining about how poorly they ate on the trail, Backcountry Foodie offers recipe and meal planning services that give the gift of health, energy, and joy in the backcountry.

Enhance your nutrition and culinary satisfaction, save precious pack weight, and take the stress out of planning with Backcountry Foodie’s recipes and meal plans. She offers three tiers of help to choose from: recipes; recipes plus meal planning; and custom meal planning.

Night Photography Class, $200

Three tents sit in the snow, surrounded by snow-covered trees and a sky full of stars overhead.

Learn how to capture the wonder of a glittering star-strewn sky with a night photography class. There are numerous in-person and online classes, including ones from Active Interest Media and Dave Morrow.

The Perfect Camp Site, $5+

Feet poke out of a tent. Pine trees and the ocean are visible in the distance.

Snag that prime camp spot now, and your loved one will thank you this spring when it’s sold out. Not sure where you want to go? Many states sell gift cards that can be used to purchase camping reservations at state parks. You can find camping and wilderness permit reservations on recreation.gov, ReserveAmerica.com and campnab.com. You can also find camping spots, RV sites, and even glamping gems on HipCamp.

(Rent a) Home on Wheels, $200+

A yellow camper bus drives down a desert road towards red-walled rock towers.

Explore new places via the open road! A van or camper rental is the perfect gift for someone with wonderlust during a harder time to travel. Pack all of your food in advance, and enjoy a week of solitude and limited social interaction.

Find campervans, trailers, RVs, Sprinters to rent via Outdoorsy. You can also find local companies in your area.

A Donation in Their Name

A group of snowshoers smile for the camera on a snow-covered trail. Someone in the middle is holding a sign with the Outdoor Afro logo.

For the person who thinks even an experiential gift is too much. If you’re looking for ideas, you can join us in supporting some of these organizations working to make the outdoors more inclusive and accessible to all.

Gift of Adventure: Gaia GPS Membership, $59.90+

Perhaps there is no better gift than the gift of exploration. Give the gift of a Gaia GPS membership to the person in your life who is excited about exploring their backyard and beyond.

A Gaia GPS membership lets you plan a route from the comfort of your couch and upload that route for use in the backcountry so you stay found and safe. You can also use Gaia GPS to explore popular trails and routes, and to make the most of your next trip to a national park. Plus, you can download any of Gaia GPS’s hundreds of maps for offline use outside the range of cell service. Thanks to maps ranging from the whole suit of National Geographic Trails Illustrated to USFS Roads and Trails, Gaia GPS enhances the experience of everyone from the avid backpacker to the casual day hiker. Browse the whole map catalog here.

Go the extra mile and pair this gift with even evening of stargazing, a backpacking or backcountry ski weekend, or an overlanding trip — you map out and plan the route, and they savor it too.

December 10, 2020
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Scott Jurek and his two young children prepare a soba noodle dish on a picnic table at an outdoor pavilion.
Gaia GPSHow-To

8 Easy Car Camping Meals

by Abby Levene July 24, 2020
written by Abby Levene

The best part about car camping is you can bring almost anything with you. You can sleep in luxury on a memory foam mattress, rinse off with a portable shower, and bring as many games with you as you like. Perhaps most importantly, you don’t have to sacrifice culinary quality to chow under the stars. Bring a heavy cast iron dutch oven to bake lasagna, a cooler to keep your drinks icy cold, and even a grill to make kebabs. Car camping meals have almost no limit. To spark your creativity, eight outdoor enthusiasts shared their favorite easy car camping recipes.

Scott & Jenny Jurek: Japanese Noodles

A close up shows a bowl of soba noodles topped with steamed spinach, mushrooms, and tofu, and diced cherry tomatoes.

Scott and Jenny Jurek may be best known for setting the thru-hike record on the Appalachian Trail. But they accomplished an arguably more impressive feat last year when they bike packed around Japan for a month with their children, ages three and one at the time. Carrying all of their gear, the Jureks covered 600 miles and camped in a new location each night. “The kids had a blast,” Jenny says. “They didn’t want to leave!”

This family-friendly noodle recipe helped power them through their journey.

Recipe (feeds two to four)

  • 4 bundles of dry Japanese buckwheat noodles (360g)
  • 1 14oz package of extra firm organic tofu, cubed
  • 8 medium sized mushrooms
  • 1 cup cherry tomatoes, quartered
  • 3 cups fresh spinach, washed and stemmed
  • 3 tablespoons sesame oil
  • Soy sauce, drizzle to taste
  • Furikake (seaweed seasoned mix you can find at Trader Joe’s, Whole Foods, any natural grocery store), sprinkle to taste

Instructions

  • Wash and cut the mushrooms into 1/4-inch slices.
  • In a large pot, add mushrooms and noodles to 3 quarts of boiling water, cook about 5 minutes, stirring occasionally.
  • Add spinach to the pot for the final minute.
  • Drain well. Gently stir in sesame oil, being careful not to break the noodles.
  • Add tofu and tomatoes, drizzle soy sauce to your liking, and garnish with furikake.
  • If you like a little spice, sprinkle with any type of powdered chili. In Japan, the Jureks used Ichimi Togarashi. Enjoy!

You can find more recipes from Scott in his New York Times best seller Eat and Run.

Kelly Newlon: Roasted Sweet Potato with Chorizo and Greens

A close up shows a bowl of roasted sweet potatoes, sausage, and kale.

Kelly Newlon serves as the head chef and mastermind behind Real Athlete Diets, a performance-oriented catering service for athletes. A graduate of The Culinary Institute of America/Hyde Park, Newlon started working in professional kitchens at age 15. Newlon and her husband Morgan live just outside of Boulder, Colorado, where they spend much of their free time recreating and camping in the Rocky Mountains.

“We really love this one as far as camping and car camping are concerned,” Newlon says. “It is so easy to bake a sweet potato at home, bring it along and put the rest together when ready after a long day out in the woods. Three ingredients, SUPER easy, and really tasty. Any leftovers can always be rolled into a burrito for breakfast the next morning.”

Thanks to the seasoning and fat from the chorizo, no extra oil or spices are needed for the entire recipe.

Recipe (feeds two)

  • 1 lb. ground chorizo or (favorite vegan alternative + 1 tbs. olive oil)
  • 1 large sweet potato (keep that skin on!)
  • 2 cups chopped raw kale

Instructions

  • Before you leave home, preheat oven to 375°F.
  • Roast sweet potato, skin on, until very soft and fork tender. (60 to 75 minutes.)
  • Store sweet potato in sealed container, bag, or wrapping.
  • Cook chorizo in a large sauté pan over camp stove until done. When chorizo is done, turn off the heat. Add the sweet potato and gently break up with a wooden spoon or spatula. Once the sweet potato has been combined, add all of the kale at once and fold together. The heat from the chorizo and sweet potato will gently wilt the kale.

Thomas Woodson: Veggie Wraps

a tortilla wrap filled with avocado, cheese, sliced cucumber, spring mix, halved cherry tomatoes, and dressing sits cut in half on a cutting board.

Outdoor photographer, film maker, and avid outdoorsman Thomas Woodson works a Coleman stove as deftly as he navigates rapids on the Colorado River while holding a RED video camera. Woodson, who has built out, lived in, and sold, three Sprinter vans, has spent much of his adult life cooking in a car.

While he limits his car camping to photoshoots and adventures now, he thoroughly understands the need for delicious, easy to prepare and clean camping meals.

“I like this meal because tortillas are great for no-dish meals,” Woodson says. “Avocados and tomatoes don’t take up much cooler space, and they leave little trash to pack out.”

An open tortilla sits on a cutting board, topped with spring mix, halved cherry tomatoes, and salad dressing. A halved avocado, a cucumber, and some cheese also sit on the table.

Recipe (feeds one)

  • Flour tortilla
  • Avocado
  • Spring Mix
  • Cucumber
  • Cherry tomato
  • Asiago cheese
  • Cesar dressing

Instructions

  • Place ingredients on tortilla.
  • Fold tortilla into a burrito.
  • Grill!

Rick Stowe: Steak Kebobs

Rick Stowe, web editor Outdoor X4 Magazine, brings the same culinary attitude towards cooking outdoors as he does to cooking at home.

“We try to focus on simple dishes made with local meat and vegetables as much as possible,” Stowe says. “With some seasonings, good ingredients, and a nice bed of coals to impart some flavor you almost can’t go wrong.”

This philosophy explains why he loves making Steak Kebobs while on an adventure.

“Probably one of the best in-camp steak dishes we’ve made was on a backpacking trip on the Cumberland Trail,” Stowe says. “We packed in vacuum-sealed steaks, Yukon Gold potatoes, and vegetables and cooked them on a ridge surrounded by huge rock formations. It was such a great meal after hiking up to the summit that day. Freeze-dried options may be lighter, but on one-or-two-night trips it’s tough to beat something like that.”

The best part? The clean up is almost nonexistent.

A vegetable kebab sits on a cutting board, which is resting on top of a cooler. A person sits in the sand next to the cooler, gazing at a boat beached on the shore of a lake.

Recipe (feeds two)

  • two servings of steak
  • two servings of kabob-friendly vegetables. Rick used small peppers, zucchini, squash, onions, and mushrooms make good options.
  • 1 Tbsp course ground salt
  • 1 Tbsp black pepper
  • Olive oil

Instructions

  • Establish a good cooking fire. Rick usually uses his Firebox stove for adventurous grilling. If space allows, he prefers to combine 12 to 18 charcoal briquets with a small wood fire to get a consistently high temperature.
  • While the charcoal warms up, start the food prep: cut the steak into one-inch cubes and feed them onto the kabob sticks. Remember to leave room on the end to maneuver the sticks.
  • Season the steak with the salt. Alternatively, you can add your favorite steak season as well.
  • Once the grilling surface has heated up, place the kabobs over the highest heat. Try not to move them for a minute or two so that nice crust can form and trap the juices inside.
  • While the steak kabobs are cooking, you can prepare the peppers (or the vegetables of your choice) for grilling. For the peppers, cut off the caps and remove the seeds.
  • Thread the pepper slices onto their own kabob sicks. Lightly coat the peppers in olive oil.
  • Cook time for the steak varies, but Rick aims to only turn them once at around 3 minutes.
  • Once the steak is mostly cooked, move them to the side of the cooking surface and place the vegetable kabobs over the highest heat.
  • Depending on the temperature of your fire, the vegetables may only take a few minutes to grill to preference.
  • Once everything is ready, let it rest a moment, and then enjoy!

Nicole “Nik” Snell: Curried Quinoa Recipe

Nicole kneels in a campground next to a camping chair and tent, her car in the background.

Self-defense instructor and international speaker Nicole “Nik” Snell serves as the CEO of Girls Fight Back and a hike leader for Black Girls Trekkin’.

“For car camping, I usually pack and eat the simplest of items,” Snell says. “Since I’m vegan I usually bring my meals with me and reheat them over the fire or pack an ice chest and have something cold.”

Her Curried Quinoa recipe can be made ahead of time for a quick, easy, and nutritious meal away from home. You can also easily whip this dish up over a camp stove.

“The ingredients aren’t precise,” Snell says. “I like to have flexibility with the taste and what I have on hand!”

Recipe (feeds one to two)

  • 1 cup raw quinoa
  • 2 tbsp (maybe more) Vegannaise
  • 2 stalks celery
  • 1/8 cup chopped red onions (or more to taste)
  • 1 can of beans (whatever you like best!)
  • 1-2tsp Cumin
  • 1-2tsp Turmeric
  • 1-2tsp Curry Powder
  • Salt – to taste
  • 1tbsp lemon juice
  • 1/4 cup raisins

Instructions

  • Rinse quinoa then put in a pot with 2 cups water and bring to boil. Once boiling, bring to low heat, cover, and simmer for 12 minutes or until all water is absorbed. Remove from heat and allow to cool completely.
  • Chop celery into small pieces.
  • Chop onions into small pieces.
  • Rinse beans.
  • Mix in Vegannaise, celery, onion, beans, and spices. Mix well and coat thoroughly. If you need more of any ingredient, feel free to add to your own taste!
  • Add in raisins and stir.

Erin Shaw: Tin Foil Packet Dinner

New mom and ultra runner Erin Shaw spends nearly every weekend in the summer car camping with her toddler, Ethan, and husband, Matt. Her car camping meal go-to: tin foil packet dinners.

“The best part about these is that you can really do whatever you want,” Shaw says.

Shaw’s basic template includes potatoes (she likes small red rose or Yukon gold since they don’t require peeling, or sweet potato), onion, and two additional vegetables. She adds a protein, usually chicken or sausage, but you could substitute tofu. And olive oil or butter and fresh or dried herbs.

“Don’t forget the salt and pepper,” Shaw says. “And get creative!”

Recipe (feeds one)

  • Red rose or Yukon gold potatoes
  • Green beans
  • 1/4 yellow onion cut into strips
  • 1 zucchini
  • 1/4 red bell pepper
  • 1 small chicken breast chopped
  • oil
  • salt and pepper
  • garlic powder
  • fresh rosemary
  • red pepper flakes

Instructions

  • Get your fire going. You want all the glowing coals at the bottom of the fire.
  • Toss all the ingredients in olive oil, salt, pepper, red pepper flakes, and garlic powder (be liberal with the salt because potatoes need it. Use red pepper flakes to your heat preference and about 1/2 tsp. of garlic powder).
  • Add a sprig of rosemary.
  • Wrap the foil packet by folding in the sides like an envelope. Add a second layer to get a tight leak-proof packet.
  • Arrange the hot coals so there is a layer at the edge of the fire.
  • Place the foil packet on the coals at the edge of the fire. You will want to keep an eye on them and listen. If they aren’t getting hot, you can move them closer, and If they seem to be getting too hot, you can move them further away. Generally, they take about 15-30 min to cook.
  • Pull your packet off the fire. Cut or peel open and enjoy!

Eliza Earle: Egg Tacos

Two tortillas each filled with a friend egg, avocado, salsa, and cheese sit on a plate. A block of cheese and half an avocado sit on a cutting board beside.

Photographer, filmmaker and all-around adventure athlete Eliza Earle reminds us that a proper car camping trip would be remiss without a hearty breakfast dish. Even if you don’t need the prospect of a warm breakfast to lure you from your warm sleeping bag in the morning, breakfast for dinner rarely disappoints.

But a good car camping recipe isn’t just delicious, it’s also easy to make and easy to clean up. Earle’s ingenious egg tacos hit the trifecta.

“These egg tacos are pretty simple,” Earle says. “But it’s the way that they’re made that really makes them a breakfast success. It’s mostly just a fun and easy way to cook everything at the same time, plus cooking the egg and cheese into the tortilla just creates a perfect taco without needing to assemble everything after cooking.”

Recipe (serves two)

  • 2 eggs
  • 2 tortillas
  • Cheese (as much as you like)
  • 1 avocado
  • Salsa
  • Salt and Pepper
  • Butter or oil
  • Whatever else you want to add!

Instructions

  • Heat a skillet with butter or oil and crack eggs as if you’re cooking a fried egg.
  • Place cheese and tortillas on top of the eggs as they fry in the pan (it should look upside down). As the egg fries, the cheese and tortilla cook with it. When ready, flip egg, cheese, and tortilla altogether. Now the egg will cook through the tortilla and the cheese will continue to melt.
  • When finished, transfer to a plate ad add avocado, salsa, salt and pepper.

Andrew Skurka: Beans and Rice

Car camping meals don’t have to be complicated. Mountain guide and adventure athlete Andrew Skurka’s backcountry Beans and Rice proves so easy and delicious that it’s worth bringing to the front country.

“There are memes made about this meal,” trail runner and long-distance backpacker Eli Zabielski says. “It’s stupid good.”

The secret to this humble pantry staple: Fritos. Skurka can’t remember exactly how or when this stroke of crunchy, salty genius hit. But he’s made Frito-filled Rice and Beans on every single one of his 75 guided backpacking trips over the past decade, plus dozens of personal trips.

“I’ve had this meal well over one-hundred times, probably closer to two-hundred,” Skurka says. “And it’s still one of my favorites. I always wish that I’d packed a slightly bigger portion.”

Recipe (feeds one)

  • 2oz instant beans (whole or refried)
  • 2.5oz instant rice
  • 1oz extra sharp cheddar cheese
  • 1oz Fritos
  • .2oz Taco seasoning
  • salt, pepper, and red pepper flakes to taste

Instructions

  • Add at least 12oz of water to stove pot.
  • Pour in beans, rice, taco seasoning, and any other spices at any time.
  • Cook, ideally to a simmer, for about 60 seconds. Stir to avoid boiling over.
  • Cut cheese into dice-sized pieces and add to meal.
  • Add Fritos just before consumption.

Skurka deliberately crafted this recipe to be soupy for easy clean-up. If you have access to running water and want to make a more at-home style version, only add 10 oz of water.

July 24, 2020
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image of groups of amenity icons on Gaia Topo
Gaia GPSHikesNew Features

Discover Recreation Amenities with New Symbol Groups on Gaia Topo

by Julien Friedland April 15, 2020
written by Julien Friedland

Get a snapshot of the amenities in any recreation area with new symbol groups on Gaia Topo. Now you can view hotspots, including campsites, viewpoints, trailheads, and more in symbol groups, without zooming deeper on the map. Styled after popular outdoor recreation maps, Gaia Topo is the first global topo map to display point of interest symbol groups.

Before and after view of new symbol groups on Gaia Topo

As you scour the map on a broader scale, notice groups of icons displaying essential amenities. For example, campsites, lodging, restrooms, food, and gas symbols appear in clusters, indicating developed recreation areas. This makes it easy to identify the best places to set up camp or stop for a resupply. Alternatively, if you’d rather avoid crowds, plan to steer clear of the developed areas, as indicated by the map.

The point of interest groups provide a clear picture of what amenities exist while zoomed out on the map. Once you identify an area of interest, zoom in closer to see smaller groupings of amenities, or individual amenities by zooming more.

On gaiagps.com, you can click on any symbol group to automatically zoom closer and reveal other subgroups of amenities. Continue to click subgroups to fully expand all points of interest. The same function, ‘tap’ to zoom, is coming soon for iOS and Android.

Zoom in closer to explore different amenities in recreation areas.

To view symbol groups while you plan, set Gaia Topo as your base map on your Gaia GPS iOS or Android app or on gaiagps.com. Available to all users, Gaia Topo continues to provide the best tools for planning trips of every nature.

April 15, 2020
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Gaia GPSNew Features

Avoid Bug Bites with All-New Bloodsucker Security

by Abby Levene March 30, 2020
written by Abby Levene

Buds, blossoms, baby animals—spring means rebirth. But rebirth also means the rebirth of the most physically and psychologically tormenting time of the year: bug season.

Whether it’s black flies swarming around your head, mosquitoes stabbing your elbows, or horse flies chasing you down the trail, biting flies come in all forms, they are vicious, and they can ruin your adventure. 

If you’ve been itching for a solution, we’ve got you covered.

Introducing our brand new, proprietary Bloodsucker Security™. Complete with a Mosquito Forecast map layer, live bug conditions tracking, auto-escape route technology, and a bite prevention alert system, Bloodsucker Security™ is your one-stop shop for making bug season suck a lot less.

Stay Out of Bug Bite Territory with the Mosquito Forecast Map

The easiest way to avoid getting bitten is simply to avoid regions with biting insects. That’s why we created the Mosquito Forecast map overlay. This map taps into data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control to provide projected mosquito densities across the world.

Just add the Mosquito Forecast overlay to your favorite basemap such as Gaia Topo or Gaia Overland to get a sense of where mosquitos lie in wait of your juicy flesh. Darker pink shows where mosquito density is highest, while purple shows where mosquitoes are less prevalent. No color on the map means you’re quite literally in the clear.

Whether you’re planning a backpacking trip, an overlanding expedition, or a family trip to a national park, refer to the Mosquito Forecast map to save you, your family, and your friends from the psychological and physical trauma associated with sitting at your campsite getting eaten alive through your sweatpants. 

Outrun Blood Suckers with Live Conditions Tracking

Sometimes entering bloodsucker territory is unavoidable. But don’t despair. Use our live conditions tracking to see real-time mosquito density. Based on your speed, wind, time of day, and bug density, our smart algorithm will tell you exactly how fast you have to move to avoid getting eaten alive.

Hiking with a heavy pack and/or small children and can’t move fast enough? Don’t ditch them on the trail. Just hit “Find an Escape Route” and we will re-route you to safer ground.

Flee Flies with Auto-Escape Route Technology

If that swarm of mosquitos proves too dense and too hungry to outrun, find an escape route with our patented Auto-Escape Route Technology (AERT). Our live conditions tracking system automatically senses when you’re moving too slowly to avoid getting bitten. Then our smart planning tools systematically scour nearby trails to reroute you to safer ground, as fast as possible.

Adventure Smarter and Safer with the Bite Prevention System

Sick of climbing out of your tent in the morning for breakfast only to realize that you are the breakfast? We’ve got a solution that lets you say goodbye to sacrificing one for the team.

If you’re camping in bug territory or overlanding through a particularly bug-infested swap, never fear. Our Bite Prevention System will send you alerts telling you when to pull out the bug nets and bug spray and when it’s safe to come outside.

It’s BS!

Say goodbye to itchy nights with our brand-new BS technology, available with your Gaia GPS Premium membership. Premium also gives you access to the perfect map for every adventure. And stay found with offline access around the globe.

March 30, 2020
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Gaia GPS

Better Food to Enhance Your Next Backpacking Trip

by Ashli Baldwin October 19, 2015
written by Ashli Baldwin

photo-1414016642750-7fdd78dc33d9

Frequent hikers and backpackers know how to cook dehydrated meals, but they can get boring pretty quickly. These 5 delicious treats can launch your backcountry cooking game into the next dimension.

Cheese

Surprisingly, cheese doesn’t always have to stay at home when you hit the trail. It lasts up to 5 days in your pack in moderate climates. The harder the cheese, the longer it keeps, and the less oily it gets. While a block of cheese will do the trick, some grocery stores carry individually wrapped bite size pieces. Wax-wrapped soft cheeses such as gouda can stay bacteria free for long periods of time. High fat foods like cheese give you an energy-dense pick-me-up that keeps you going on long days when the nearest juicy cheeseburger sizzles miles away.

 Zamorano Cheese By No machine-readable author provided. P. B. Obregón assumed (based on copyright claims). [GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft...), CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses...) or CC BY-SA 2.5-2.0-1.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses....5-2.0-1.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

via PB Obregon

Avocado

Another delicious and high fat food for lasting energy–a perfectly ripe avocado. Added to your mac and cheese and the end of a 20-mile day, it can brighten your spirits and recharge your batteries. Just remember that by Leave No Trace standards, you still will want to pack out the heavy pit.

Peppers

Green peppers, yellow peppers, jalapeño peppers, any peppers! A fresh pepper won’t bruise or puncture easily in your pack and can last for days. One feels rebellious when adding a crunchy green pepper to your pepperoni and peanut butter tortilla.

MxJDaPQQAGf9MgAJNiLA_Peppers_Albuquerque_2013

via unslpash.com

Hot Sauce

Mmmmm, hot sauce. The perfect addition to spice up any gourmet backcountry creation. Pick up some individual packets at your local fast food joint, or fill a small reusable bottle to the brim with Frank’s Red Hot Sauce. Tuna Mac and Cheese will take on new meaning.

Eggs

Sound like a recipe for disaster? Not necessarily. Eggs can go quite a while without seeing a refrigerator, but don’t take my word for it. Boil them for a quick and easy snack, but leave the shells on until chow time for maximum preservation. Cut an egg crate in half to protect your precious nourishment and enjoy.

There you have it

Five delicious foods you can bring on the trail that will turn you from professional water boiler to gourmet chef.

Once you start thinking outside the box, you can create amazing meals that guarantee an entirely new hiking experience.

Good luck fending off your hungry hiker buddies.

IMG_20140820_192658

Photo Courtesy of: Kyle Flood

 

October 19, 2015
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