Garmin International Dakota 10

Easy to read touch screen with a tough hard-shell

Brand: Garmin International

Model: Dakota 10


My daily to-do list typically entails hiking off-trail from lake to lake in the Sierra, so a reliable GPS is my most important piece of technology. The Dakota 20, an entry-level version of the Oregon (Editors’ Choice winner, 2009), helped me navigate through miles of tricky terrain and the learning curve was next to nil.

The touch screen is easy to read: With 24k topo maps ($130 extra, it doesn’t come preloaded), I was able to see the tiniest creeks when searching for water. In the deepest valleys, the Hot Fix satellite reception gave me a lock in less than a minute. I loved the “where to” feature, which let me see all the nearby major landmarks (like Half Dome) and then navigate there with a few clicks.

The hard-shelled Dakota is tough, too: It withstood many drops on hard granite and several immersion tests. The only bummer: It sucks batteries. Using my USBCells (below), I averaged about 6.5 hours of run time between charges. $350; 5.2 oz.; buy.garmin.com.
It’s easy to explore the outdoors when you’re not worried about getting lost. This palm-sized GPS navigator keeps track of where you are on its rugged 2.6 in. bright, sunlight-readable touchscreen. Compact and waterproof, it features a high-sensitivity GPS receiver with Hotfix™ that acquires your position quickly and maintains its precise GPS location even in heavy cover and deep canyons. Dakota comes preloaded with a worldwide basemap and is compatible with Garmin City Navigator NT for turn-by-turn directions on city streets, Blue Chart g2 for marine charting, and TOPO U.S. 24K and 100K map software for incredible terrain detail (each sold separately).

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