| Digital Maps |
Friday, August 24, 2012
Android GPS Apps for Overlanding
Labels:
android,
apps,
backcountry,
ios,
ipad,
mapmyhike,
smartphone
Thursday, August 16, 2012
eBook: Overlanding Central America & Mexico by LifeRemotely
| Life Remotely website |
Mexico & Central America".
The team have published an eBook specifically for overlanding Mexico and Central America with half of the book dedicated to planning and trip preparation and the 2nd half on country specific information. There are enough nuggets of good advice for all overlanders to fill a Land Rover Defender roofrack! Topics include budgets, travel time, paperwork and staying connected (plus heaps others).
I will leave you to download and read the eBook (available as a PDF and Kindle version) yourself but will quote one essential piece of advice:
Stretch the TimelineSource: LifeRemotely.com - pg15
There is never enough time. Never. Even if you give yourself a year to travel,
you will want more. The key is to stretch your schedule as much as possible.
Add extra time that you can use up when you find a perfect place to hang out
for a week.
Consider that you may reach a point where you need to stay in one place for
a while. You can’t hold a steady pace forever. Eventually your car will break
down, you will get sick, have family visit, or just plain get tired of the road. You
don’t want to have to skip a country or go home early because you caught
Guatemalan bird flu or your car needs a new transmission.
Enjoy the read and a big thanks to the team from LifeRemotely.com for the hardwork in writing the book.
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Route Planning Tool
How do you plan your itinerary for your upcoming trip? Do you use Google Maps to calculate the distance and then add it manually into a spreadsheet?
I generally create a spreadsheet which includes date, departure town, arrival town, distance and a notes section. I have also been using a spreadsheet created by Francois Visagie which allows for multi-currency itinerary planning and budget planning.
My biggest frustration is calculating the distance between two towns... it's easy enough to do with Google Maps but just time consuming when working out an itinerary.
I began to ponder... what if there was a spreadsheet which could do that automatically for me? A quick search on Google revealed the answer...
A Google Map distance calculator has been created by Winfred van Kuijk.
The spreadsheet uses Google Docs (Google username required) to link to Google maps and will calculate the distance between two cities. It allows you to add to a trip log, which you could copy to your favourite tip planning tool.
It has a few limitations which is primarily around the route planning. It presumes, via Google Maps, that you always want to do the quickest and shortest route, rather than an alternative route. The work-a-round is to create more 'hops' between the smaller towns.
My tips on using the spreadsheet:
Create a copy of the template to your Google Docs account.
First change the settings for your region i.e. country code and units.
Be very specific of your address i.e. Nata, Botswana
Let me know if you think its useful...
I generally create a spreadsheet which includes date, departure town, arrival town, distance and a notes section. I have also been using a spreadsheet created by Francois Visagie which allows for multi-currency itinerary planning and budget planning.
My biggest frustration is calculating the distance between two towns... it's easy enough to do with Google Maps but just time consuming when working out an itinerary.
I began to ponder... what if there was a spreadsheet which could do that automatically for me? A quick search on Google revealed the answer...
A Google Map distance calculator has been created by Winfred van Kuijk.
The spreadsheet uses Google Docs (Google username required) to link to Google maps and will calculate the distance between two cities. It allows you to add to a trip log, which you could copy to your favourite tip planning tool.
It has a few limitations which is primarily around the route planning. It presumes, via Google Maps, that you always want to do the quickest and shortest route, rather than an alternative route. The work-a-round is to create more 'hops' between the smaller towns.
My tips on using the spreadsheet:
Create a copy of the template to your Google Docs account.
| Distance Calculator - Settings |
Be very specific of your address i.e. Nata, Botswana
Let me know if you think its useful...
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
To Africa & Beyond...
She was my first Land Rover. A well equipped 1968 Land Rover Series II 109 with an awfully noisy 2.286l diesel and gritty Fairey overdrive. Her brakes needed pumping, her gear box double-clutching and her radiator topping up with fresh water, but she looked the place in Southern Africa and for me, she was just perfect.
Her downhill speed was 80km/h and her comfortable cruise control was a ample 60km/h (hand throttle engaged). Time was not an issue for me... I had four months to cover Southern Africa before heading North to Europe.
Her homemade rooftop tent was unique and offered a panoramic view of ones surroundings as you lay under the stars.
Her downhill speed was 80km/h and her comfortable cruise control was a ample 60km/h (hand throttle engaged). Time was not an issue for me... I had four months to cover Southern Africa before heading North to Europe.
Her homemade rooftop tent was unique and offered a panoramic view of ones surroundings as you lay under the stars.
The open roads took time, especially when a head wind blew. Her tubed 7.50x16 tyres hummed along the gravel and tar roads. New cars whizzed past, a few hooting a hello. Conversation between the passengers was limited due to the grinding overdrive and tractor-like engine. Contemplation of the journey occupied each passenger.
In 1999, my attempt to keep an internet diary was limited due to internet access and a decent photo scanner but the memories are still vivid including the smell of EP90 oil dripping constantly from the gearbox (that smell still makes me shiver!). Thankfully a few memories were recorded on video camera (which had a dead microphone) so all that remains is me talking about my trip...
You can read more via my very first overland website - excuse the lack of high resolution photos: To Africa and Beyond
Saturday, July 21, 2012
World Trip in a 1928 Graham-Paige car
The Zapp family, from Argentina, have been travelling the world in a vintage 1928 Graham-Paige car.
You can follow the Zapp family adventures via: http://www.argentinaalaska.com
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| The Zapp Family with their Graham-Paige car |
The family have just arrived in South Africa and will be heading North to Cairo. A news report via: IOL
Read the book:
Saturday, July 14, 2012
Expedition Portal Video Contest
The Expedition Portal website has been hosting an overland video contest for amateur and professional film makers. The entries were open to anyone who felt they had a good video story to tell... I thoroughly enjoyed most of the videos and loved the enthusiasm people have for the overland travel.
Watch and vote via the Expedition Portal forum. My two choices are listed below...
Watch and vote via the Expedition Portal forum. My two choices are listed below...
Tuesday, July 10, 2012
Jungle Junction, Nairobi
| Jungle Junction Photos (Google Search) |
| Jungle Junction Campsite |
Labels:
campsite,
gps,
jungle junction,
kenya,
nairobi
Wednesday, June 27, 2012
Africa Overland in a 1950's Kombi
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| Through the Sahara - in a 1950s Kombi |
More than fifty years ago, two brothers living in what was Southern Rhodesia planned a trip to London. They bought a Kombi, fitted a roof rack, bed and a Primus to it and drove straight across Africa. In the Sahara, they got stuck more times than they could count, Drive Out reader Ivor Wiid writes: Through the Sahara (originally published on Drive Out)At the Victoria Falls, they met up with two gentlemen driving a Mercedes Benz 180D North from South Africa. They agree to meet up in Kano, Nigeria to transit North Africa.
Labels:
180d,
1960,
mercedes benz,
vw kombi
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
Rooftop Tent accidents...
The rooftop tent has many benefits for overland travel and one major detractor: The Ladder.
The Overland ZA forum has an interesting topic on accidents relating to rooftop tents... All the accidents on the topic related to the ladder... Read more via Overland Forum
My wife, whose left hand is pictured, slipped off the rooftop tent ladder whilst refitting the mattress the day before we headed to Cameroon. The Nigerian doctor did a good job of stitching her wound but it was a nervous hour as I patiently waited in his office. Adding to the tension were before and after photos of all the doctors patients and his awesome surgery he performed.... gives me the shivers just thinking about it.
A posting by a South African called Johan van Heerden on his recent trip to Mozambique had an interesting story on another rooftop tent fall... One paragraph stands out:
The Overland ZA forum has an interesting topic on accidents relating to rooftop tents... All the accidents on the topic related to the ladder... Read more via Overland Forum
My wife, whose left hand is pictured, slipped off the rooftop tent ladder whilst refitting the mattress the day before we headed to Cameroon. The Nigerian doctor did a good job of stitching her wound but it was a nervous hour as I patiently waited in his office. Adding to the tension were before and after photos of all the doctors patients and his awesome surgery he performed.... gives me the shivers just thinking about it.
A posting by a South African called Johan van Heerden on his recent trip to Mozambique had an interesting story on another rooftop tent fall... One paragraph stands out:
Monday, June 18, 2012
Accidental Damage
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| Jasululu Overland Adventure |
The Royal Geographic Society (RGS UK) recognises that vehicle based expeditions often have the highest accident rate of any expedition undertaken and as a result insists that expedition leaders are trained.
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