Influencer II
When out overlanding (or any remote activity) having the ability to either be tracked (for some fun, logging history or if the worse happens) or be able to send out a beacon should the need arise where you need help is always something people need to factor in when planning,
Using Sat phones (some iridium ones have GEOS ability) or using some other Sat tracker such as SPoT G3, is a valuable asset to have in your kit,
Like with most things, you can happily have the ability to share your tracks with people when out hiking when you've setup camp, on the other side of the coin you have that emergency assistance ability as well (some trackers have this as an additional service) - Key if you are in a country where there are huge distances involved and lack of communications via mobile phone ect
Think of it this way with a couple of examples, middle of Africa can record your track while doing a nature trail, you get a issue where your hired vehicle breaks down, you can send a pre-determined message to your "home point of contact" to raise assistance
It's not just limited to these kinds of places where it "appears" to be lacking in resource, even more established companies could potentially pose issues, think of the wild outbacks of Australia where it does take hours to reach anyone
Something worth while to consider :)
Kev
Using Sat phones (some iridium ones have GEOS ability) or using some other Sat tracker such as SPoT G3, is a valuable asset to have in your kit,
Like with most things, you can happily have the ability to share your tracks with people when out hiking when you've setup camp, on the other side of the coin you have that emergency assistance ability as well (some trackers have this as an additional service) - Key if you are in a country where there are huge distances involved and lack of communications via mobile phone ect
Think of it this way with a couple of examples, middle of Africa can record your track while doing a nature trail, you get a issue where your hired vehicle breaks down, you can send a pre-determined message to your "home point of contact" to raise assistance
It's not just limited to these kinds of places where it "appears" to be lacking in resource, even more established companies could potentially pose issues, think of the wild outbacks of Australia where it does take hours to reach anyone
Something worth while to consider :)
Kev