I just logged into Topozone, where I would take advantage of browsing all the maps I needed to plan trips, maps that were easily printed at home for free... until tonight, it seems that Topozone has been assimilated by Trails, the pay-for-membership info site. No more free maps? Is there another way to get maps free without buying NG topo or cd-roms and the like?
I feel like an old friend just died. Somebody burn me a disc, quick!
According to Chumley TOPO! has something coming but I guess you need to own the product or pay.
I know it may seem far fetched but topo maps are free on HAZ. Granted the topo layer is slow. You can't print with IE, but you can with Firefox. Safari prints layers too but the topo layer doesn't poll on my version. IE 8.0 may work, I haven't tried.
Personally I think $100 for TOPO! is among the best investments I've made in my life. I use it daily.
joe bartels wrote:I know it may seem far fetched but topo maps are free on HAZ. Granted the topo layer is slow.
This is what I use. For the more remote and risky hikes, if available on the hike description, I load the GPS Routes on both "terrain & topo' format and then print copies of each and make notes on them from our HAZ Hike Descriptions... yes it is slow, but IT ROCKS FREE!!
The liberated maps Kurt mentioned can be edited in photo programs.
available by googling "libremap arizona"
In response to Grasshopper: Wow and you use IE 6.0, I can't do it on my versions of 6 or 7. Must have something to do with your Dell version of IE. Good to hear!
joe bartels wrote:In response to Grasshopper: Wow and you use IE 6.0, I can't do it on my versions of 6 or 7. Must have something to do with your Dell version of IE. Good to hear!
Actually, I didn't tell the whole story: IE6 does not print for me either, I have a software program called TechSmith-"SnagIt" that allows me to select the screen, then print it..
Last edited by Grasshopper on Apr 15 2008 9:30 am, edited 1 time in total.
That's bad news ... I used to use TopoZone quite a bit because I had the extra-double-old version of Topo! which only covered certain parts of the state and I occasionally needed to fill in the blanks.
The Libremaps are a great resource for here in AZ as an option, but you do have to download them and then view them in a separate application ... it's not a web-based map that lets you zoom in and out like TopoZone did.
As for the new version of Topo! (Topo! Explorer), it seems like it will have a free web-based interface that anybody can use. However, you will have to purchase an application to install on your computer that will interface with the online data if you wish to print maps or enter routes and waypoints. (Though I hope the old standby screen-grab option still works) I'm looking forward to the release to see how it all works. I just visited their website, and there's a new landing page for Topo!Explorer beta. None of the links are active though. You can sign up for beta testing however if you want.
I'm not sure what my spirit animal is, but I'm confident it has rabies.
I got suckered into that Phoenix/Flagstaff ?? edition too. What a waste. As was the National Parks edition. Definitely ante up for the State version!
Found the old static map works fine on Safari and somewhat faster than the dynamic maps topographic pull. http://hikearizona.com/location.php
The "red dot" level is actual 7.5 minute.
I noticed that this weekend. I liked the versatility and the search feature, primarily. I have been using the HAZ topos as well, but without the search function for map features, I can't use it for as much as I used topozone. Guess it is time to ante up for the TOPO! software...
"The only thing we did was wrong was staying in the wilderness to long...the only thing we did was right was the day we started to fight..."
-Old Spiritual
My book, The Marauders on Lulu and Amazon
There is a rather time-consuming way to create custom maps from USGS data repositories for upload to a GPS that I've used on Linux for a while now (Would work on Windows, too) but that might be a topic to post on its own, elsewhere...
how do you get the maps from the lib-map site? when i click on the TIFF download it just loads quiketime and the map is like a thumbnail. thanks for any help
Unfortunately Quicktime is required for iTunes and other programs. When it installs it takes over your computer changing preferences without your consent. The big unfortunate is that it pretends to let you change the preferences but they don't save on many setups.
Instead of clicking the link
Right click and select "Save Target as..."
then open it in Photoshop or whatever photo program you use
which (on Windows) is generally "File -> Open..."
joe bartels wrote:Unfortunately Quicktime is required for iTunes and other programs. When it installs it takes over your computer changing preferences without your consent. The big unfortunate is that it pretends to let you change the preferences but they don't save on many setups.
Instead of clicking the link
Right click and select "Save Target as..."
then open it in Photoshop or whatever photo program you use
which (on Windows) is generally "File -> Open..."
joe bartels wrote:Unfortunately Quicktime is required for iTunes and other programs. When it installs it takes over your computer changing preferences without your consent. The big unfortunate is that it pretends to let you change the preferences but they don't save on many setups.
Instead of clicking the link
Right click and select "Save Target as..."
then open it in Photoshop or whatever photo program you use
which (on Windows) is generally "File -> Open..."
Speaking of that - wasn't there some kind of "freebie" DRG map explorer program that the USGS put out a while back?
Are those maps from the lib-map project stuff the most recent cause i downloaded the iron mountin quad and it says the date produced 1942 if i order a paper one will it be more recent?