Last weekend, I had a great trip to scenic Lofoten and Vesterålen in Northern Norway. I brought my tracking gear to test
my new real time travel map. How did it go?
Our first trip was to
Trollfjord, a 2 km long fjord with a narrow entrance and steep-sided mountains. It's a famous tourist spot in
the Lofoten archipelago, but not many leave the boat at the fjord's end to hike up to the
Trollfjord hut.
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The small Trollfjord hut. |
Trollfjord goes in an east-west direction, and I expected to be in the "satellite shadow" being far north and having steep mountains blocking the sky towards the south. My good old Garmin GPSmap 60CSx did well in the rugged landscape, while
my satellite SPOT messenger had some difficulties finding and sending positions.
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GPS track from my Garmin GPS. |
Tip! The default basemaps in CartoDB are not very detailed for Norwegian mountains, but you can easily add a basemap (Topo2) from the Norwegian Mapping Authority ("Kartverket") with this URL:
http://opencache.statkart.no/gatekeeper/gk/gk.open_gmaps?layers=topo2&zoom={z}&x={x}&y={y}
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Changing the basemap of CartoDB. |
It's then easy to edit or delete the wrong positions:
Be aware! I was struggling editing my CartoDB-tables from my smartphone, but it was not possible to edit the content of table cells. Hopefully, the CartoDB team will make their editor more mobile friendly in the future.
Another issue was to get the correct time and position of
Instagram photos on the map. Trollfjord is an area with poor mobile coverage. When I took photos with the Instagram app it was struggling placing the photos on the map. It worked better if I took the photos the the built-in camera app of my phone (with geotagging activated) and then posting the photo with the Instagram app.
If I didn't have mobile coverage, I would just retry posting the photo when back to civilisation. The time associated with the image is when it was sent and not taken. I'm going to check if I can extract the shooting time from the
Exif headers of the image.
Our second trip went through
Møysalen national park, one of very few national parks in Norway that goes all the way down to sea level.
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Møysalen national park |
Here we went in a south-north direction, and my SPOT messenger did better as there was less mountains blocking the satellites.
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Map and elevation profile of a 2-day hike through Møysalen national park (interactive map). |
I also took a lot of photos with my compact camera while trekking, and I would like to show these on the map as well. My camera don't have a GPS receiver, but I should be able to
geotag my photos by using my GPS track. It will be the topic of my next blog post. In the meanwhile, here are some of the photos:
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Hurtigruta in Trollfjord |
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Trollfjord by night |
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Cloudberries |
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Trollfjordtindan. |
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Seagull |
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Seagulls |
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Sea eagle in Raftsundet. |
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Durmålstindan |
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Tverrelvtindan |
That's really cool Bjorn, I like the responsive interface. Are these awesome bits and pieces being released on github? Have a few hikes I've done with my new gps camera I'd like to post somewhere.
ReplyDeleteGreat work on the 3D stuff too