9 Best Pokéwalks

Enjoy nature and Pokémon GO at the same time.

Here are some nice bushwalks with public transport access, where you will find towers, gyms and Pokémons.
Remember to stay safe, tell someone where you are going and when you are expected back. Keep you phone in your pocket whilst you walk, and keep to the track.
Enjoy the PokéWalk.

Leave no PokéTrace
1) Plan Ahead and Prepare
2) Travel and Camp on Durable Surfaces
3) Dispose of Waste Properly
4) Leave What You Find
5) Minimise Campfire Impacts
6) Respect Wildlife
7) Be Considerate of Your Hosts and Other Visitors

Think before you PokéTREK
T – Take adequate supplies of food, water, navigation and first aid equipment.
R – Register your planned route and tell friends and family when you expect to return.
E – Emergency beacon (PLB’s) are available free of charge from NSW Police Force and NPWS.
K – Keep to your planned route and follow the map and walking trails.

About Pokemon


9 Best walks with a Kindy kids

Kindy aged kids love getting out into the bush, it is the perfect age to encourage them to enjoy bushwalking. Start small and fun, leave them wanting more so they come back – it is not a boot camp. Most of these walks have playgrounds or great rocks to explore. Your kids will quickly out walk these short walks and you can discover many more
Happy Walking 🙂



9 Best day walks in the Royal NP

The Royal is the first national park declared in Australia, the second in the world. It sits on the coast and southern edge of Sydney. It is a wonderful place to explore. There are stunning ocean views, water holes, waterfalls and amazing wildflower displays. A great place to spend a few hours or a lifetime exploring. I have added the Coast Track because if you are fit enough it can be done in a day.
Happy Walking 🙂



9 Best day walks Ku-ring-gai Chase NP

Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park covers a large area on the northern edge of Sydney. There is truly something here for everyone from smooth flat wheelchair accessible walks, to more rugged, steep (heart pumping) adventures. Bobbin Head area has some lovely shortwalks, a cafe and a great playground. You can even explore some remote water front communities, secluded beaches or wander down and camp at the Basin. Happy Walking 🙂



9 Best day walks on the South side of Sydney

The walks on Sydney’s southern side are dominated by stunning panoramic water views. Many of the national parks are on the coast and have views forever. Many walks in the area have convenient public transport. Explore an ancient landscape on the door step of a modern city. Happy Walking 🙂



9 Best day walks on the North side of Sydney

Sydney’s north side has some very large and surprisingly wild national parks. A few minutes after getting off the train you will assume you are a million miles away for anywhere. The hilly area provides stunning views along larger rivers and deep valleys. The train line follows the ridges making access easy and the return trip a joy for many walks in the area. Happy Walking 🙂



Naturally Accessible

These walks have extra information about barriers and facilities to help improve access for people with mobility based disabilities.

Under current national bushwalking grading standards, access for people with disability is only promoted for very short and very easy paved paths. ‘Naturally Accessible‘ is a new framework that sits on top of grading systems providing more information about walking track features enabling people to make decisions for themselves about access. By providing detailed information about toilets, seats, steps, surface, steepness, barries and so on, we hope that visitors can choose for themselves if they can undertake these walks.

For people with arthritis, the number of steps and type of seats might be of most interest. For people with continence issues, the location and access to toilets may be key. For people who use a wheelchair, interest may turn to the surface, pinch points and steepness. Some of these walks are challenging and long – over time I hope we can add even more challenging and longer walks.

Naturally Accessible was proudly developed by National Parks Association of NSW, funded by NSW Family and Community Services and National Parks and Wildlife Service.


 

Map Attribution

Maps used on wildwalks are used with permission and come from different sources.

Water Colour Maps

  The beautiful maps used on the home page and general overview pages where designed and developed by the clever map architects at Stamen. The provide a range of mapping services worth checking them out.  These maps are rendered using OSM.org data.


Online Topographic base maps

  The detailed maps used on the walk and park pages are created by NSW LPI. The tiles have been kindly released under a creative commons licence and we are hosting a CDN mirror of the tiles to off set the load on on the tile server.


Wildwalks Printable Walk Maps
These maps have been created by wildwalks using a variety of data. Our own data has been collected for track and poi of interest information. Roads and many other tracks, trails and other data from the amazing OSM.org project. The terrain data is derived from best data from Nasa, Japan space agencies as well as other publicly available DEMS. Contours, hill shading and Most creeks are derived from this same DEM. The vegetation layer has been created by analyzing NASA data using Google Earth Engine. These map images are copyright wildwalks, but if you want to use them in a project give me a yell, happy to see if I can render something useful for you.
Maps are generated using the opensource Mapserver engine. The online dynamic GUI maps are created using our own hosted Cartodb server. Both amazing tools.

About Us

Wildwalks is an online Bushwalking Guide Book with the aim of helping more people get out and safely enjoy the many great bushwalks and camping opportunities in NSW.  It does not matter if you are new to bushwalking or experienced, there is something here for everyone.

 

Wildwalks is developed by small group of people who are passionate about the outdoors.  We want to encourage people to “get out there” and enjoy the great places on offer.

 

Our goal is build a massive database of bushwalking tracks from around Australia.  I am conscious we are a long way from there now, but over the next few years I hope to grow this site.

 

Learn more about our Vision and Values.

 

We are committed to supporting businesses and organisation with similar goals. Wildwalks just provides information, there are many other hard working people out there who build, maintain and support these tracks and campsites.

 

We currently get about 1300 unique people a day using this service, thanks for your encouragement.

 

I get many e-mails from people asking how to help out (thanks); here are a few idea.

  1. Use our website, maps and notes, get out there and enjoy it.
  2. Let us know how things go, use out feedback section at the end of each article.
  3. Tell people about the site and what we are doing.
  4. Support our sponsors   – they allow all this to happen
  5. Sign up to our newsletter and stay upto date with life at Wildwalks
  6. Link to us (or ask your web friends to link to us) see the FAQ on linking to Wildwalks.

 

A few FAQ’s

1) Should I still carry a traditional topographical Map?

YES. I recommend that you still have at least one set of maps that cover an area, the maps provided by Wildwalks cover just the walk, and are limited help in case of emergency change in plans.  Also some printers and paper do not handle the rugged outdoors as well as the maps you can buy.

 

2) Can I print the notes and maps?

YES. Use the PDF button or link to generate a nice printable version with a much better map what what is the webpage.

 

3) Can I print copies for my fellow walkers?

YES. I think that everyone in the walking group should have a copy, please print as many as you want.

 

4) Can I use the notes and maps for my School, Club or Commercial group.

YES. Again I think that every one should have a copy of the map at the very least, Please to not change or trim the notes to hide logo or any other information though.

 

5) What if I think something is wrong?

Please use the user feedback in each article to let us know how we can improve things, we really love feedback. We know the notes are not perfect, we try hard so please let us know how we can do better.

 

6) Can I suggest a walk to be included?

YES.  Our goal is to grow and build lots more walks.  I plan to add a “suggest / vote for a walk page” but until then e-mail me your thoughts.  If you want variations on existing walks, please also let me know, we can usually turn those around quickly.  I hope by the end of the year we will also have a very cool “reverse” this walk feature, so that if you want to do the walk the other way round, it will be easy (the map and the tracknotes will be changed as if it was meant to be like that).

 

7)  Can I download the walk to my GPS?

Not Yet.  We are working on this, We have the data and the technology, but there are a few issues with it at this stage. Firstly we have a problem with people stealing info from our website and putting it up on there own, and this just makes that to easy for them (this data costs us a lot of money to produce, I am happy for people to use it for free, but not to claim it as there own and have no plans to maintain it.) Secondly there are some social/safety issues on using GPS for bushwalks.  I am keen to address these issues and get this GPS data to you sooner then later.

 

8) Can I view the walks in Google Earth?

Not Yet.  For similar reasons to FAQ 7, but I hope to resolve this one sooner.  We are playing with this and just to tease you, it is pretty cool.  Once we release this you will be able to do virtual fly overs or all the walks, view the sat image and Topomaps, see the photos in the place they were taken and a few other cool things.

 

9) How can I search for walks on Wildwalks?

We have got a  Bushwalk search page for finding walks on the website.  It has an advanced search options as well.

 

10) Can I link to Wildwalks?

Yes, Please do.  Links to Wildwalks help more people find a useful bushwalking site, and it help us by bringing more people to our service.  When linking to wildwalks it would help us further if you also link descriptive keywords, such as bushwalking or hiking.  So if linking to the home page try something like Wildwalks an online  bushwalking guidebook  or if link to a specific walk or list of walks you may want to try something like Bushwalking tracks in Royal National Park .  Our URL’s are pretty stable so you should rarely have issues with broken links.

 

Thanks for your interest

 

Matt  🙂

Privacy

Your Privacy

Wildwalks aims to comply with the Privacy and Personal Information Protection Act 1998 (NSW), which regulates the collection, storage, quality, use and disclosure of personal information.

Wildwalks App subscriptions
To help us continue making this app awesome and to allow us to continue to add more wonderful walks we charge users to access longer walks in this app. 
 
There are two subscriptions length options Monthly or Annual. Once subscribed you get unlimited access to all the information on the walks displayed in the app. You can then download the maps, photos and tracknotes so that the app will work offline.  
The current price of each subscription is available on the updates page and is displayed in Australian dollars. Payment will be charged to iTunes Account at confirmation of purchase.  Subscription automatically renews unless auto-renew is turned off at least 24-hours before the end of the current period.  Your Itunes account will be charged for renewal within 24-hours prior to the end of the current period at the same price. Your subscriptions may be managed and auto-renewal may be turned off by going to your Itunes Account Settings after purchase.
http://www.wildwalks.com/privacy
Use and disclosure of personal information.

Information that in some way identifies you may be gathered when you use our website or send us an email.

Collection of information

Information collected from browsing When you view the Wildwalks website and app, we may collect the following information: • your IP (Internet protocol) address or host name eg. 123.123.123.12 or xxx.yyy.com.au • the date and time you visited the website • the pages or documents you download • the web browser, operating system, screen resolution, Internet settings you are using • the previous site you visited, if you reached our website by clicking on a link • whether you have previously visited our website (only if you accept Cookies).   Information collected from online forms When you submit a form on the Wildwalks website we collect information from it. This information may include personal and organisational details such as your full name, phone number, business name and ACN details, email address and street address. Clicking on the ‘submit’ button on any form acts as your consent for Wildwalks to collect the information you have provided. Before you submit this information we will take reasonable steps to inform you of: • where applicable, any law that requires the particular information to be collected • which fields are mandatory and which are optional. Information collected from email If you send us an email, we will record your email and email address for the purpose of responding to you.

Use and disclosure of information collected

Information collected from web browsing is used to identify patterns of usage of the Wildwalks website and app. This will help us improve the website and the services offered we offer. Information collected from forms and email will only be used for the purpose for which you have provided it. We will not use it for any other purpose, nor will we disclose it, unless with your consent or in other circumstances where such use or disclosure is permitted under the Privacy and Personal Information Protection Act 1998. Your personal information (including your email address) will not be automatically added to a mailing list, or sold or otherwise transferred to a third party. We take reasonable steps to protect information during transfer and storage. Physical measures, such as building and equipment security, are used in conjunction with digital technology, such as data encryption and firewalls, to minimise unauthorised access to information.

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