SUBSCRIBE | NEWSLETTERS | MAPS | VIDEOS | BLOGS | MARKETPLACE | CONTESTS
TRY BACKPACKER FREE!
SUBSCRIBE NOW and get
2 Free Issues and 3 Free Gifts!
Full Name:
Address 1:
Address 2:
City:
State:
Zip Code:
Email: (required)
If I like it and decide to continue, I'll pay just $12.00, and receive a full one-year subscription (9 issues in all), a 73% savings off the newsstand price! If for any reason I decide not to continue, I'll write "cancel" on the invoice and owe nothing.
Your subscription includes 3 FREE downloadable booklets.
Or click here to pay now and get 2 extra issues
Offer valid in US only.

Also on Backpacker.com


Enter Zip Code

Backpacker Magazine – January 2012

Backpacker Bible: Find Your Way

Join a long line of enlightened travelers who have navigated the wilderness–and discover a whole new world that lies beyond well-marked trails and guided trips.

by: The Backpacker Editors

PAGE 1 2

Backpacker Bible
See all 10 skills every backpacker should know
{ Revelation }
Don’t Go Astray


You know the borders on a USGS 7.5-minute topographic map—those wide bands of white with the lat/long hieroglyphics down the sides and the provenance and survey dates at the bottom? If you cut those margins off so only the green part remains, you can drop approximately 21 percent of the map’s weight.
You can also get profoundly lost.

On my first visit to Denali, I belonged to the hiking cohort known to rangers as most likely to die. A proud participant in about three actual backpacking trips, I was ambitious, young, and hell-bent to go far, go big, and go really light.

In my ignorance, I planned a two-week traverse of more or less the entire park. After hacking my toothbrush so short it wouldn’t reach my molars, I took scissors to the 20 or so maps I’d bought, trimming off the borders of some and carving out discrete portions of others that showed a pass or river crossing joining one quad to its diagonal mate. Since my waterproof map case would duplicate the rain-sheltering effect of my pack cover, I also scrapped that weight.

In the first three hours of bushwhacking through ultra-dense alder, my wife and I covered one mile. Not a crow-fly mile, mind you, but the zigzagging, off-course mile that the topography and vegetation permitted. Meanwhile, a steady rain drenched my topos—originally folded together in a feat of origami minimalism (the better to fit in my ultralight rucksack!).

So much for the two-week traverse. The trip turned out great, with plenty of grizzly sightings, spectacular tundra camping, and the conception of our first child. But we were effectively lost for two days, until we vectored into open, easy-navigating terrain. And throughout the hike, we often guessed at our exact location, lacking the full map data (and skills) we needed to plot landmarks. Here’s how you can avoid my mistakes:

» Get copies of Björn Kjellström’s Be Expert with Map and Compass and BACKPACKER’s Trailside Navigation. The first is the detailed bible of backcountry navigation; ours is your pocket-size field manual.
» Practice orienteering in a local forest until the skills come naturally. Learn to plot coordinates, set declination, and follow a bearing with a compass. Then add a GPS, or download our GPS Trails app for iPhone and Android (it navigates, tracks and uploads your treks, and lets you download trips from editors and other readers).
» Keep your topo’s borders. You can’t bombsite POIs or set declination without the hieroglyphics, and the margins are a good place to jot notes after you’ve studied your intended route; note challenges like thick brush and cliffs.
» Take more map, not less. It’s annoying to carry a topo that shows only a corner of your route, but what if high water forces a detour? And what if you need to triangulate your position by sighting off a distant landmark? Weight saver: Print a custom-centered map at backpacker.com/postatrip.
» Protect your topos. Limit rain exposure with a waterproof case and by folding maps so the day’s mileage faces out.
— Jonathan Dorn

PAGE 1 2

Subscribe to Backpacker magazine
Sign up for our free weekly e-newsletter
Name:
Address 1:
Address 2:
City:
State:
Zip:
Email (req):
Reader Rating: -

READERS COMMENTS

Star Star Star Star Star
AZ Hiker
Mar 01, 2013

"Felix! the Sugar Glider Be Safe Hike Smart" (Amazon) makes using a compass easy! Before you go, be sure to calibrate your compass for the declination at the location where you will be hiking. Go to: http://magnetic-declination.com A compass doesn't need a signal or batteries and works in all types of weather but you need to know how to use it and this book makes learning how to use a compass easy. Felix! explains how to orient yourself using a compass, a compass and a map, a map and no compass, no compass and no map. Look for it on Amazon, "Felix! the Sugar Glider Be Safe Hike Smart." Anyone wanting to know direction and especially for those who want teach these skills to children might enjoy learning from this book. To feel more confident about orienting ourselves outdoors, we read thru this book before every hike - it's only about 34 pages and illustrated. The ability to know your way and know where you are is something we all need in any survival situation not just while hiking. Learn to stay found by using a compass and paying attention to your surroundings. Felix! teaches the reader what to pack, trail ethics, what to do if you get lost or scared, how to get rescued, and survival packing (for the car and for the trail) just incase you end up unexpectedly spending the night outdoors.

AZ Hiker
Feb 03, 2012

Sometimes, getting lost can be easier than staying found. We brush up on our hiking skills before every hike by reading Felix! the Sugar Glider Be Safe Hike Smart available on Amazon. This book has some very easy reliable tips for hikers of all ages and it's enjoyable;-)

ADD A COMMENT

Your rating:
Your Name:

Comment:

My Profile Join Now

Most recent threads

Trailhead Register
Why such simple questions?
Posted On: Mar 22, 2013
Submitted By: Echo
Trailhead Register
420,000 computers hacked
Posted On: Mar 22, 2013
Submitted By: Ben2World

Go
View all Gear
Find a retailer

Special sections - Expert handbooks for key trails, techniques and gear

Fall/Winter Gear Guide
261 reviews and camping tips

Boost Your Apps
Add powerful tools and exclusive maps to your BACKPACKER apps through our partnership with Trimble Outdoors.

Carry the Best Maps
With BACKPACKER PRO Maps, get life-list destinations and local trips on adventure-ready waterproof myTopo paper.

FREE Rocky Mountain Trip Planner
Sign up for a free Rocky Mountain National Park trip planning kit from our sister site MyRockyMountainPark.com.

Follow BackpackerMag on Twitter Follow Backpacker on Facebook
Get 2 FREE Trial Issues and 3 FREE GIFTS
Survival Skills 101 • Eat Better
The Best Trails in America
YES! Please send me my FREE trial issues of Backpacker
and my 3 FREE downloadable booklets.
Full Name:
City:
Address 1:
Zip Code:
State:
Address 2:
Email (required):
Free trial offer valid for US subscribers only. Canadian subscriptions | International subscriptions