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Since we're on the topic on the GPS thread, I thought it might be
interesting to share some navigation tricks people have picked up in their travels. My favorite one is for finding a good approximation of direction using the moon: If the moon is visible (and is not full), then if you draw a line through the 'points', that line will run very close to North-South. You should mentally continue that line across the sky as if you were drawing inside a bowl, and where it hits the horizon is North and South. Similarly, if you draw the line bisecting the moon across the 'waist', THAT line runs east-west. Any extremely bright stars you see on that E-W line will be planets. --riverman |
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On Mon, 23 Feb 2009 18:49:33 -0800 (PST), riverman
wrote: Since we're on the topic on the GPS thread, I thought it might be interesting to share some navigation tricks people have picked up in their travels. My favorite one is for finding a good approximation of direction using the moon: If the moon is visible (and is not full), then if you draw a line through the 'points', that line will run very close to North-South. You should mentally continue that line across the sky as if you were drawing inside a bowl, and where it hits the horizon is North and South. Similarly, if you draw the line bisecting the moon across the 'waist', THAT line runs east-west. Any extremely bright stars you see on that E-W line will be planets. --riverman d;o) Yeah, and another is that the sun rises in the east and sets in the west. A friend and I went into the jungle in Panama without our topos and a compass. No sweat. All we needed to do was find the sun about 6 or 7 pm, keep it on our right, and we would find our way back to the dirt road where my truck was parked. Riiiiight! We had forgotten about the triple canopy of the Panamanian jungle. There was light, but you could not find the sun. We estimated where it was, but if we missed the road, we would have at least a ten mile hike to the canal, or about a five mile hike to the Chagres River. We estimated we were three miles from the road when it was time to leave. We finally found our way out by the sound of an occasional truck on the dirt road. What should have taken an hour took more than two. You don't wanna be in the jungle at night without a flashlight. We never went again without one *and* a good topo map. Dave |
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On Feb 24, 8:38*pm, Dave LaCourse wrote:
On Mon, 23 Feb 2009 18:49:33 -0800 (PST), riverman wrote: Since we're on the topic on the GPS thread, I thought it might be interesting to share some navigation tricks people have picked up in their travels. My favorite one is for finding a good approximation of direction using the moon: If the moon is visible (and is not full), then if you draw a line through the 'points', that line will run very close to North-South. You should mentally continue that line across the sky as if you were drawing inside a bowl, and where it hits the horizon is North and South. Similarly, if you draw the line bisecting the moon across the 'waist', THAT line runs east-west. Any extremely bright stars you see on that E-W line will be planets. --riverman d;o) Yeah, and another is that the sun rises in the east and sets in the west. * A friend and I went into the jungle in Panama without our topos and a compass. *No sweat. *All we needed to do was find the sun about 6 or 7 pm, keep it on our right, and we would find our way back to the dirt road where my truck was parked. *Riiiiight! *We had forgotten about the triple canopy of the Panamanian jungle. *There was light, but you could not find the sun. *We estimated where it was, but if we missed the road, we would have at least a ten mile hike to the canal, or about a five mile hike to the Chagres River. *We estimated we were three miles from the road when it was time to leave. *We finally found our way out by the sound of an occasional truck on the dirt road. What should have taken an hour took more than two. *You don't wanna be in the jungle at night without a flashlight. *We never went again without one *and* a good topo map. Dave- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yeah, then there's those 'real life' factors. :-) You mention a good point, and another one of my favorite navigation tricks. The sun is due west EVERYWHERE in the world at 6pm (give or take a little for daylight savings time, and where you are in the time zone). In the summer, that means the sun is above the horizon at 6, and for many places it has already set by 6, but nonetheless...at 6pm its due west and at 6am its due east. That makes it very easy to tell direction if you know the time. If its due west at 6pm, and due south at noon, then if its 3pm, the sun will be in the SW, etc. There is a handy trick for finding direction using the hands of an analog watch, but many people have digital watches, so this method is useful. But of course, you gotta be able to see the sun... --riverman |
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On Tue, 24 Feb 2009 18:45:27 -0800 (PST), riverman
wrote: But of course, you gotta be able to see the sun... Welll.......duh! Never go in the jungle without one. d;o) The jungles in Panama really are remarkable. Leaf cutter ants all over the place, coatamundis, sloths, jaguarundis (and jaguars, tho I never saw one), all the snakes you could ever want from boa constrictors, to fer de lance and bushmasters, wasps that hide on the underside of the leaves of one plant (found them the hard way), fire ants that live in the hollow trunk and branches of a bush and attack anything that touches the bush (also discovered the hard way), and even caiman in Gatun Lake near National Geographic"s Boro Colorado Island and howler monkeys that scare the hell out of me. Frank should never go into the jungles of Panama (or any jungle, ftm). Dave |
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On Feb 24, 9:05 pm, Dave LaCourse wrote:
coatamundis Saw one of those here in NM last spring...cool. Jon. |
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On Tue, 24 Feb 2009 21:27:12 -0800 (PST), wrote:
On Feb 24, 9:05 pm, Dave LaCourse wrote: coatamundis Saw one of those here in NM last spring...cool. Jon. Very cool. I believe that jaguars were once found as far north as NM. I saw a dead one, killed by farmers and hanging like we would hang a deer. Big cat! Dave |
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On Feb 25, 6:06 am, Dave LaCourse wrote:
Very cool. I believe that jaguars were once found as far north as NM. Actually, that would be "they are again". Over the last ten years multiple cats have been sighted in the bootheel area. Easy to find on google. Warner Glen snapped the first picture back in the late 90s. Jon. |
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On Wed, 25 Feb 2009 06:38:47 -0800, jcook wrote:
Actually, that would be "they are again". Over the last ten years multiple cats have been sighted in the bootheel area. Easy to find on google. Warner Glen snapped the first picture back in the late 90s. Yeah, but interestingly, the US-Mexican border barrier is expected to bring about their demise. Not only will it keep out illegals, it will restrict a healthy gene pool in the Jaguars. |
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In article , Dave LaCourse
writes On Tue, 24 Feb 2009 18:45:27 -0800 (PST), riverman wrote: But of course, you gotta be able to see the sun... Welll.......duh! Never go in the jungle without one. d;o) The jungles in Panama really are remarkable. Leaf cutter ants all over the place, coatamundis, sloths, jaguarundis (and jaguars, tho I never saw one), all the snakes you could ever want from boa constrictors, to fer de lance and bushmasters, wasps that hide on the underside of the leaves of one plant (found them the hard way), fire ants that live in the hollow trunk and branches of a bush and attack anything that touches the bush (also discovered the hard way), and even caiman in Gatun Lake near National Geographic"s Boro Colorado Island and howler monkeys that scare the hell out of me. Frank should never go into the jungles of Panama (or any jungle, ftm). Dave Ah well! I don't think I'll bother. -- Bill Grey |
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