Many years ago I was near Salida, CO. Was intrigued that, what I would only
describe as a bad 4x4 road actually had a County road number. (Too long ago to
remember the number though.)
Cheers!
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I find DeLorme Gazeteers problematic in that the road numbers often (very
often, for entire areas) do not match the physical designations on the road
in actuality. They also do not distinguish between 4x4 road and dirt road,
at least in their Colorado Gazetter. Their road lines for smaller
Thanks Garth, my go to maps are the DeLorme Gazeteers, I have quite a pile.
On those maps, the smallest roads often become trails, shown by a broken
rather than continuous line. Many of these are rideable, but also many are
washed out and not much fun with a bike. Thanks for the reply. Steve
On
SureSteven, "here" as in Jefferson County Ohio, even in my own
neighborhhod. There are lots of township and other local roads that may or
may not always be where the maps show, it depends on the paper or online
maps. I still trust a paper map more than digital ones though, and find
driving
Garth, without prying where is "all over the place Here" for a bit of
context. Steve
Plymouth, NH
On Wed, Jul 12, 2017 at 7:23 PM Garth wrote:
> There's nothing like actually being there !
>
> We have roads all over the place here that are shown on various local
> paper maps
Patrick,
That sounds fun. Even modern data can be a bit off. We once took a drive
in our low slung 2004 Audi S4 to our farm in the Missouri Ozarks. I set
the nearly new Garmin GPS to keep us off of the interstates and it surely
did that. It routed us on one road that dwindled to gravel and