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Tag:

topo map

FeaturedGaia GPSHow-ToNew Features

Why You Should Always Print Maps Online with Gaia GPS

by Ashli Baldwin November 8, 2017
written by Ashli Baldwin

Mobile apps like Gaia GPS make it possible for everyone to have a high-end navigation tool in their pocket for a fraction of the price. Avid hikers and backpackers download maps to access them offline and use GPS to show their location anywhere in the world. Printed maps offer a super lightweight backup mechanism for mobile maps, essential for safe navigation.

Gaia GPS lets you print unlimited maps for over 250* map sources and overlays for one yearly fee. A Premium Membership lets you stack up to 5 map sources enabling a mathematically endless amount of combinations to customize your print.

Read on to learn the 6 reasons you should always print maps online with Gaia GPS.

1. Print More than 50 Different Map Sources (250+ with Premium!)

Gaia GPS offers the largest collection of digital map sources in the world. With a Membership, you can print over 57 different maps including topographic, satellite, and roadmaps.

A large majority of the available maps use openstreetmap.org trail data. This means that they have some of the most up to date trails and points of interest available.

At the Premium level, you get access to over 250+ maps and overlays. These maps include several Premium base maps from paid providers, like IGN, MapBox, NeoTreks, and others. It also unlocks hundreds of overlays like public lands, private lands, hunting management units, and grid overlays.

At both levels, you get exclusive access to the best topo map for backpackers, Gaia Topo.

Yosemite Valley with Gaia Topo

Yosemite Valley with Gaia Topo

For more traditional maps, you can print USGS Quads anywhere in the United States.

USGS Maps showing the Grand Canyon

USGS Maps showing the Grand Canyon

2. Plan and Print Custom Trip

When you plan a trip in Gaia GPS, you can view your route on top of any map source. By plotting a route and adding waypoints, you can print a custom map for your entire trip.

The online trip planner lets you highlight your route and use custom waypoint icons to mark starting and ending points, trail intersections, campsite locations, and more.

3. Customize Paper Size and Map Resolution

With the ability to select the zoom level, most maps on gaiagps.com can print well beyond the traditional 1:24k.

You can print an overview map of a large area, or zoom in close to get a highly detailed map.

From the print screen, choose between 5 different paper sizes — then, print it out or save it as a PDF on your computer.

Saving the map as a PDF allows you to share it with others, or stitch multiple maps together. You can also customize your paper size further to create a huge print with a printing service like FedEx and Staples offers.

Huge printed map

We were able to print this enormous map at Staples!

4. Add Gridlines and a Compass Rose

Print of Half Dome with National Geographic Trails Illustrated* with the compass rose added

Print of Half Dome with National Geographic Trails Illustrated* with the compass rose added

For precise navigation, add coordinate gridlines to any map and add or remove a compass rose to display in the bottom left corner of the map.

Print using UTM grids, or choose from several other coordinate formats. Click here to learn how to add gridlines to your map.

5. You Can Layer* up to 5 Maps at Once

Once you’ve tried layering maps, you’ll never go back. Get a super customized view unlike any other. Choose a base map, then start adding overlays like Public or Private Lands Overlays, or elevation shading. Pair that with your custom trip and icons, and you’ve got something truly amazing.

With the Premium Membership, you can choose from hundreds of different maps and transparent overlays, to create combinations like:

  • Your favorite topo map + Public Land shading
  • Custom hunting maps using Private Land + state-specific hunting boundaries + a satellite base map. (Read how to plan a hunting trip with Gaia GPS here.)
  • USGS Topo maps + elevation shading

6. You Get Unlimited Prints

Once you have a Membership, there is no limit to the number of prints or PDF maps you can make. With paper maps costing an average of $12 for a specific park or trail, your Membership will pay for itself with just one or two trips!


* Indicates Premium Membership required

November 8, 2017
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Gaia GPSHow-To

How to Read OpenStreetMap Based Topo Maps

by Kate Dougherty December 19, 2015
written by Kate Dougherty

While we’ve covered how to read a topo map and U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) topographic maps in particular, OpenStreetMap-based topos are increasingly popular resources that merit their own post. In this post you will learn how to read OpenStreetMap-based topo map.

The OpenStreetMap (OSM) project leverages the knowledge of millions of people around the globe to crowdsource detailed world maps. As community involvement increases, OSM grows in detail and continues to improve—learn how you can help update OSM data in our recent blog post. Since OSM data is free to use, many apps and websites use it create custom maps for specific audiences.

OSM-based maps have higher resolutions than traditional USGS topos. They often provide more details than newer USGS topos, including additional feature types like cycle paths, bridleways, cable cars and chair lifts, brownfields, and better trail coverage to boot. Note that while USGS typically labels elevations on the 1:24,000 scale maps in feet, OSM-based maps label in meters.

OpenCycleMap

OpenCycleMap, one example of an OSM-based topo map service, emphasizes existing and proposed bike trails, bike lanes, and other amenities for cyclists. While it adds contours and hill shading to the standard OSM map, OpenCycleMap still generally offers less detail about the terrain, such as land cover types.

OpenCycleMap adopts elements of the OSM style, like purple/blue dashed lines for cycling paths and pink dashed lines for footpaths, though they appear more prominent than in OSM, “bolded” even. Non-cycling features have a lighter appearance, with footpaths left unlabeled.

This map source shows national and regional cycling routes, local cycling networks, and footpaths. It also displays bicycle shops, bike parking locations, restrooms, bars, pubs, and cafés near cycling routes.

how to read openstreetmap

OpenCycleMap display for the Manitou Springs, Colorado area. Credit: ThunderForest and OpenStreetMap contributors.

OpenCycleMap pulls the latest data from OSM every couple of days. A variety of apps and websites pull OpenCycleMap data, including Gaia GPS. Learn more about OpenCycleMap symbols through the key.

OpenLandscapeMap

OpenLandscapeMap by ThunderForest, another OSM-based service also found in Gaia GPS, focuses on terrain. Like OpenCycleMap, OpenLandscapeMap tones down non-naturally occurring features like roads, which all appear as light purple. Some other differences include:

  • less differentiation for trails
  • increased detail for land cover types ( like scrub, grassland, and farmland
  • darker and more prominently displayed water features
  • more labeled natural features like springs and geysers

OpenLandscapeMap also marks mountain peaks with a triangle, and labels their names and elevations, unlike the less specific USGS topos.

OpenHikingMap

OpenHikingMap styles OSM data to create a map geared toward hikers. We wrote about OpenHikingMap when it was first released in 2013. This map labels trail names and peak elevations. It also shows protected areas, restrooms, parking lots, and several different land cover surfaces.

Now that You Know How to Read an OpenStreetMap-Based Topo Map

You may want to try these sources out in Gaia GPS as you brainstorm your next foray into the great outdoors. Follow the iOS and Android links throughout this post to find out how to use them in the app.

If you have any questions about using topos in Gaia, just email us at support@gaiagps.com.

December 19, 2015
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