Bushwalking gear and paraphernalia. Electronic gadget topics (inc. GPS, PLB, chargers) belong in the 'Techno Babble' sub-forum.

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TIP: The online Bushwalk Inventory System can help bushwalkers with a variety of bushwalk planning tasks, including: Manage which items they take bushwalking so that they do not forget anything they might need, plan meals for their walks, and automatically compile food/fuel shopping lists (lists of consumables) required to make and cook the meals for each walk. It is particularly useful for planning for groups who share food or other items, but is also useful for individual walkers.
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What apps are essential?

Fri 25 Sep, 2015 9:32 am

Following on from the what gear is essential thread, what apps are essential?

Okay, none are essential, so I'll rephrase that. What apps do people recommend to make hikes more interesting or safer(!)?

I have:
Weatherzone - for weather obviously
Fire Ready - bushfires (in Victoria)
Museum Victoria's field guide to fauna - critters in Victoria, the Museum's website has links to guides for other States
Beanhunter - locate the best place for a post-hike coffee
Find iPhone - my wife can use her iPad to track my phone's location (and therefore knows exactly where I am at all times).
Emergency+ - provides links to 000 and SES etc and provides location details (grid reference and address) that you can read to the 000 operator in an emergency
Avenza PDF maps - for reading maps. A lot of Victoria's national parks parknote maps are available for free as geo-referenced PDFs, other maps can be purchased. When hiking though I prefer paper maps and compass as they don't require batteries and I reckon it's a good skill to maintain. (Maps and paper v electronic could be another discussion thread before anyone gets too carried away).

Re: What apps are essential?

Fri 25 Sep, 2015 9:37 am

any GPS app whereby you can use your phone to get a 6 figure grid reference. replaces the need for a GPS.

Re: What apps are essential?

Fri 25 Sep, 2015 9:47 am

slparker wrote:any GPS app whereby you can use your phone to get a 6 figure grid reference. replaces the need for a GPS.

I haven't found one yet that does AMG, only lat longs in either Decimal Degrees or Degrees, Minutes and Seconds. I want AMG!

Re: What apps are essential?

Fri 25 Sep, 2015 10:58 am

I left my phone at home but the app on my android phone gives a grid reference, i can't remember which format but it correlates with the grid on the TASMAP. I think it was MGRS.

Re: What apps are essential?

Fri 25 Sep, 2015 11:16 am

Earwig wrote: I want AMG!


AMG66 or MGA94?
Ive found most will give you E and N instead of Lats and Longs, GPS kit will, I also had a free GPS data app on iphone that did it too ( I know longer have my iphone to double check). Remember that UTM is close enough to be MGA94.

Re: What apps are essential?

Fri 25 Sep, 2015 1:42 pm

The Michael Morcombe eGuide to Australian Birds is an awesome app if you are interested in birds. Fantastic that it is available for windows as well as ios and android, too. The "calls" feature is brilliant - it allows you to replay a variety of calls from a particular species. The majority of species on the app have recorded calls included. Definitely worth the $30 I spent on it!

What apps are essential?

Fri 25 Sep, 2015 3:27 pm

I fine that apart from mapping apps, I have little time to play apps when I'm out there. In the camp maybe but have to have restraint to save battery juice. Of course, assuming there's even wireless signal.

Re: What apps are essential?

Fri 25 Sep, 2015 4:13 pm

frenchy_84 wrote:
Earwig wrote: I want AMG!


AMG66 or MGA94?
Ive found most will give you E and N instead of Lats and Longs, GPS kit will, I also had a free GPS data app on iphone that did it too ( I know longer have my iphone to double check). Remember that UTM is close enough to be MGA94.


Maps n Trax does AMG, MGA and thousands of other spatial reference systems. It can display location in lat/lon, east/north or even MGRS. (I used to be the developer until about a year ago.)

WGS84 (what most GPS and smartphones use) is virtually identical to MGA94 (the current Australian UTM standard).

Re: What apps are essential?

Fri 25 Sep, 2015 5:23 pm

Motion X GPS does MGRS. I don't own a real GPS and find that Motion X is good enough for my purposes.

Re: What apps are essential?

Fri 25 Sep, 2015 6:40 pm

Somewhat essential:
- Endomondo to record my hikes / walks. It records distance, speed, altitude, duration etc. I also add notes about weather and clothing / gear / water used. It makes it easy to locate previous walks and print / save the maps.
- Pocket Weather
- OziExplorer with Hema and Natmap raster maps (has GPS as well)
- Avenza PDF maps
- Drop Box or Evernote for the National Park PDF files, check-lists, (trip) notes, etc.
- WikiCamps to find campsites and to know which to avoid

Fun / entertainment:
- Flightradar 24 (check the planes that fly over)
- Moon Reader to read books (off-line)
- Zino to read magazines (off-line)
- Music player (off-line)
- Google Sky Map so I can pretend I know a bit about astronomy
- Smart AudioBooks

Re: What apps are essential?

Fri 25 Sep, 2015 7:46 pm

^wow awesome list there JW.

my fave app has to be MapOut. that was $6.50 well spent.

Re: What apps are essential?

Fri 25 Sep, 2015 11:54 pm

Earwig wrote:
slparker wrote:any GPS app whereby you can use your phone to get a 6 figure grid reference. replaces the need for a GPS.

I haven't found one yet that does AMG, only lat longs in either Decimal Degrees or Degrees, Minutes and Seconds. I want AMG!


I use HandyGPS - free, and gives you AGD66, AGD84(AMG), GDA94(MGA) or WGS84.

Re: What apps are essential?

Mon 28 Sep, 2015 8:45 pm

None.

'Essential' means you can't manage without them. I've never been on a walk when I needed to do anything with my phone.

Re: What apps are essential?

Tue 29 Sep, 2015 7:33 am

My favorites ate Wikiloc and BackCountry Navigator. Wikiloc is more user friendly but the Navigator has more detailed maps/trails

Sent from my SM-N910G using Tapatalk

Re: What apps are essential?

Tue 29 Sep, 2015 8:20 pm

north-north-west wrote:None.

'Essential' means you can't manage without them. I've never been on a walk when I needed to do anything with my phone.

But it depends on one's setup and objective.

Re: What apps are essential?

Thu 01 Oct, 2015 6:53 am

GPSGuided wrote:
north-north-west wrote:None.

'Essential' means you can't manage without them. I've never been on a walk when I needed to do anything with my phone.

But it depends on one's setup and objective.

Of course it does, but you can apply that proviso to any piece of gear.

Bottom line: my phone can't provide food, drink or shelter. It is therefore not essential.

Re: What apps are essential?

Thu 01 Oct, 2015 7:41 am

north-north-west wrote:
GPSGuided wrote:[Bottom line: my phone can't provide food, drink or shelter. It is therefore not essential.

Can't you use it to order a pizza or something?

Beer is essential. Beer has food value after all, whereas food has no beer value.

Re: What apps are essential?

Thu 01 Oct, 2015 8:37 am

Orion wrote:
north-north-west wrote:
GPSGuided wrote:[Bottom line: my phone can't provide food, drink or shelter. It is therefore not essential.

Can't you use it to order a pizza or something?

To the Eldon Peak campsite? If only . . .

Re: What apps are essential?

Thu 01 Oct, 2015 9:38 am

north-north-west wrote:To the Eldon Peak campsite? If only . . .

You never know until you've tried.

Re: What apps are essential?

Thu 01 Oct, 2015 9:53 am

GPSGuided wrote:
north-north-west wrote:To the Eldon Peak campsite? If only . . .

You never know until you've tried.

If the pizza isn't there within 15 minutes it's free

Re: What apps are essential?

Thu 01 Oct, 2015 10:31 am

With Domino pushing out GPS tracking of their pizza deliveries, I can see how they can turn a delivery to NNW at Eldon Peak into a publicity stunt. NNW, call their Director of Marketing and discuss. LOL

Re: What apps are essential?

Thu 01 Oct, 2015 10:55 am

Someone should try it as an alternative to food drops on the AAWT.

Re: What apps are essential?

Thu 01 Oct, 2015 11:54 am

Drivers prefer to see the customer, for a tip. Food drops are no fun.

Re: What apps are essential?

Thu 01 Oct, 2015 1:34 pm

I said alternative to: just call for the pizza when you reach camp. Tip would be commensurate with speed of service.

Re: What apps are essential?

Thu 01 Oct, 2015 2:33 pm

I don't know about ordering pizza but I did manage to watch some of the Rugby World Cup while in D'Aguilar over the weekend. Got to the top of a a big ridge and had 4G service so we figured we had to give it a go.

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Re: What apps are essential?

Thu 01 Oct, 2015 2:35 pm

Should also add that we were pleasantly surprised but felt guilty at the same time

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Re: What apps are essential?

Thu 01 Oct, 2015 4:21 pm

Buggar, I am missing out on so much when I am walking because I have not got Apps thingy :( ......Just had a thought :idea: ,maybe I could get Uber Apps & do my walks in style,sit in the back play with Apps all the way :wink: ....

Re: What apps are essential?

Thu 01 Oct, 2015 9:28 pm

I quite like WikiLoc. I was using MapMyHike for awhile but it's GPS strength wasn't nearly as good as what I've been able to get from WikiLoc.

Re: What apps are essential?

Sat 03 Oct, 2015 12:09 am

Earwig wrote:Museum Victoria's field guide to fauna - critters in Victoria, the Museum's website has links to guides for other States


I don't use apps when I'm in the bush but I thought the Museum's Field Guide to Fauna sounded interesting. I downloaded it last night and was very impressed with it. Thanks for the tip Earwig.

Does anyone know a good app for Flora of Victoria? I have one called Flora Explorer which has details for flora in the eastern suburbs but it continually closes on me. It also has a few mistakes with the info :roll:
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