Enthusiast III
So I finally found a free (or almost free) alternative to Gaia for route planning at home and navigation on the trail.
Thought it might be of interest to someone, so here it is.
What do I use? Garmin Basecamp with free OSM maps and Google earth integration and on the route, a tablet (android) with Locus maps PRO (but the free version will do just fine)
At home I can create a route in Basecamp on my laptop tweak it, double check in Google earth, set waypoints for possible camp spots and POI's. All from the comfort of offline working on a big screen.
Once finished, safe the route as a track and export as a GPX file, place the GPX in the cloud (google drive or Microsoft OneDrive, ...) . Import it in Locus and just follow the track.
Simple and free.
I bought the Locus Pro version (€10) just because it is only €10 and a one time fee and to get rid of the adds.
Once on the road, while following the track prepared at home, I also record my actual track and add waypoints along the way. Waypoints of nice potential camp spots (for next time), blocked roads, attention points, picnic spots,...
Back home import the actual track back to Basecamp and if necessary adjust the original track to the changes in the driven one.
Simple as that. It works like a charm.
Enjoy your trips.
Thought it might be of interest to someone, so here it is.
What do I use? Garmin Basecamp with free OSM maps and Google earth integration and on the route, a tablet (android) with Locus maps PRO (but the free version will do just fine)
At home I can create a route in Basecamp on my laptop tweak it, double check in Google earth, set waypoints for possible camp spots and POI's. All from the comfort of offline working on a big screen.
Once finished, safe the route as a track and export as a GPX file, place the GPX in the cloud (google drive or Microsoft OneDrive, ...) . Import it in Locus and just follow the track.
Simple and free.
I bought the Locus Pro version (€10) just because it is only €10 and a one time fee and to get rid of the adds.
Once on the road, while following the track prepared at home, I also record my actual track and add waypoints along the way. Waypoints of nice potential camp spots (for next time), blocked roads, attention points, picnic spots,...
Back home import the actual track back to Basecamp and if necessary adjust the original track to the changes in the driven one.
Simple as that. It works like a charm.
Enjoy your trips.