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I decided that Friday's jaunt to Nuthurst and Soutwater hadn't been enough exercise, so I went off on another hike yesterday [I had the day off because it was my birthday] and also do some caches in the Bewbush/Ifield area of Crawley; taking in the old mill ruins and pond at Bewbush, Ifield mill and pond and the 13th century church at Ifield were also visited.

From there I went on to Lambs Green; no I didn't get chance to stop at the pub there [or on any of the routes], before making my way back to Horsham via yet more unmapped paths; 15 miles in all.

Many people I said hello to durimg the day mentioned that it was unusually warm for May; more like July, they said. Certainly, it was very warm. Even at 08:00 yesterday it was warmer than I normally prefer for walking.

I saw loads of wildlife; rabbits, deer, herons, geese, ducks, yet more swallows had arrived and were wheeling and swooping in the sky whilst feeding on flying insects. I also picked up an unwanted hitch-hiker on this walk; a tick!

In all the years I have been walking/rambling and even as a child in the countryside of the Isle of Wight I had never been bitten by one before. Luckily I spotted it quite quickly and managed to remove it before it had gorged itself on my blood!

Location: Ifield, Crawley, West Sussex, England, RH11 0DJ, United Kingdom

I decided to go out on Friday evening for a hike and geocache, so I headed out from north Horsham towards Nuthurst [as there is a cache there] via several footpaths and bridleways that weren't yet mapped.

Nice walk, although it was rather warm. I then proceeded towards Southwater to map yet more paths as well as find several caches once I finally got to Southwater, and walked past the reservoir there and the church which was very busy; some function was happening at the time.

Then back home to Horsham via yet more paths not yet mapped, I even managed to map the end of Compton's Lane in Horsham which had been incomplete for a very long time. I covered 16 miles on foot in all.

I saw loads of wildlife; rabbits, geese, ducks as well as the more common local bird-life which abounds in Sussex.

Location: Nutwood Farm, Nuthurst, Maplehurst, Horsham, West Sussex, England, RH13 6LJ, United Kingdom
Posted by blackadder on 13 May 2008 in English.

I've had my trusty Garmin eTrex Legend for nearly 6 years now but its really only in the last year that I have seen its true benefits in terms of displaying maps and the benefits to me of having maps on it. I did have some official Garmin maps on the unit for a while but each time I travelled to a new location it was too expensive to get coverage, so for a lot of the time it was displaying only traces over the useless Garmin basmap. With Steve Ratcliff's mkgmap I can create maps easily for anywhere in the world based on the OSM data. I find that even though coverage in many places is patchy its still worth having, partly because it shows what is not mapped yet (so that you can divert to new routes to pick them up) but also because in reality I can still get from A to B, just that the route might not be the one I would take if I had a more complete version of the map.
Downloading the current OSM map data for the wider West Midlands I find I'm now downloading a 200+MB file from Osmxapi which takes quite some time (hours), perhaps I'll need to consider using the planet file soon. For now, the end result is a 6MB image file for the Garmin which is close to the limit for the 8MB of storage that the old Legend has available for maps. Upload to the Legend is also very slow over the Serial connection, which means that the total process from starting the OSM data download to heading out with current mapping is up to 4 hours. A bit long really. I can improve the process by upgrading to the latest eTrex Legend Hcx, which I guess I'm going to have to do sooner rather than later.

Posted by TomH on 13 May 2008 in English.

GPSBabel 1.3.5 was released a few days ago, and for those of you using the popular NaviGPS units I am pleased to be able to say that the new release of GPSBabel includes native support for the NaviGPS.

This includes both direct access to stored tracks, routes and waypoints via the USB cable as well as the ability to decode waypoints and tracks copied to the SD card if you are using a recent release of the NaviGPS firmware that supports that.

The code has been tested with my GT-11 unit but should work with the BGT-11 as well, and will hopefully work with the new GT-31 and BGT-31 units when they arrive - please let me know if you manage to test with one of those.

The name for the new driver is "navilink", so to recover waypoints over the USB cable on linux you would do something like:

gpsbabel -w -f navilink -i /dev/ttyUSB0 -F gpx -o waypoints.gpx

Any problems, give me a shout...

Such a fine afternoon I thought I'd continue with some cycle training in preparation for the London to Brighton Bike Ride next month. 43km later and I have Handsworth Wood (B20) mapped. Nice area and some interest when I cam across a young couple blatantly having sex in one of the parks.

Location: Handsworth Wood, Birchfield, Birmingham, West Midlands, England, B20 2AU, United Kingdom

Barton Mills - did village green area and footpaths around Grange Farm.

Fordham - added last missing through road. No cul-de-sacs, estate roads or footpaths have been done in this village. This brings Fordham to a consistent level of detail in which to leave it.

Added missing road SW of Tuddenham. The inter-village road network is now complete to the west of Tuddenham and Herringswell as far as Fordham, Isleham and West Row. That brings the area to a consistent level of detail in which to leave it.

I may grow the area at that level of information if I am going in that direction but I will be concentrating on finishing Barton Mills and then moving into Mildenhall. Barton Mills will take 3 more walks so that will probably be finished this week.

Posted by RichardB on 12 May 2008 in English.

I also went to Shrewsbury. I've just finished tagging up all of my route.

I went North, and did the roads bounded by the new A5124 link road in the North, the A5112/A5191 in the east, and the A528 in the west.

I started from the outside and worked my way in. I didn't quite get into the centre of Shrewsbury, but what I've done is, I believe, complete in terms of the road network.

I had lunch by the river in lovely weather whilst watching some racing at the Shrewsbury Regatta, before it was back on the road again to get a few more roads before time caught up with me, and I had to be on my way to Congleton.

It was nice to meet a couple of other OSMers. Thanks to Higgy for organising the event.

Location: Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England, United Kingdom
Posted by HaraldK on 12 May 2008 in English.

Found two more tracks and connecting footways between Knittkuhl and Ratingen. As usual I keep being amazed what you find going out mappging.

Arriving in Ratingen, I could not help as to map a few residential streets there, although this is not really my area. But the center of Ratingen is a nice place, and it is about time it gets mapped.

Location: Dreeschhof, Zentrum, Mitte, Ratingen, Kreis Mettmann, North Rhine-Westphalia, 40882, Germany
Posted by blackadder on 12 May 2008 in English.

Spent a good part of the weekend in Shrewsbury, but not principally as a mapping event (albeit that Tom Higgy was running one there on Saturday anyway). Introduced someone new to the process so I hope we will see another user doing some edits as he finds the time. The weather really was excellent for mapping on the bike, especially being able to drop into the pub afterwards - although I found that SteveC had got there and mapped that sometime before! or sitting by the River Severn watching a rowing regatta. Mixing mapping with socialising and regular activity has a lot going for it :-)

Location: Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England, United Kingdom

I have finished correcting the "braided" streets listed on the Tiger fixup page.

I've been looking for more to fix, and I haven't found many. I found a handful more in the greater Bay Area, mosly in Oakland. None in Portland. A few duplicated streets in Tacoma, but no actual braided ones anywhere around Tacoma and Seattle.

I'm going to broaden my search across the US, but I'm wondering if the underlying issue was peculiar to the San Francisco area. Since the TIGER data is an amalgam of other sources, it could be that the topology leading to the braiding phenomenon only occurred in some source data from that area. Interesting.