Hi -

I don't have a direct answer I'm afraid. But please try not to think
about "what gets rendered" - the default style shown on the osm.org
homepage is just one of hundreds of rendering styles that are used. If
there are existing tags in use, great, whether or not they show on the
osm.org rendering. If not, then maybe you and others can think of
tagging that represents things properly - get the semantics right,
leave the rendering to the renderers.

Best
Dan


2014-11-04 3:28 GMT+00:00 johnw <jo...@mac.com>:
> Went hiking on mt Miyogi yesterday in Gunma, and like other steep mountain
> parks, sections of the trail were near vertical or completely vertical
> sections of trail that have to be climbed by chains and occasional
> footholds.  the longest was over 30m. the shortest was about 4m.
>
> http://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=16/36.2861/138.7454
>
> http://www.gunmajet.net/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/photo_02-copy.jpg
> someone posted up the route they took, and the hiking maps show the easier
> trail in blue (his yellow route, it goes over a section of chain.) and the
> dangerous ones in red.
> Chains area also used to show access to features near the trail via chain
> assisted climbing
>
> The current tail map needs to be expanded, and I want to work on that. but
> I’m wondering how to visually show that chains are necessary. I know other
> trails in other countries have similar permanent guide fixtures (cables,
> ropes, ladders in the rock,) where normal hikers are expected to use them.
>
> now, you might think that this is considered climbing, and you’d have a
> helmet, but people were scampering up the rocks, old guys and 10 year olds
> alike.  These “blue” sections were considered passable by regular hikers,
> and the upper level sections of the mountain were all marked for
> professional climbers (“red” routes with the red 危 splat) because a slip off
> the trail or the chain would mean death (200m drops).
>
> is there some method to tagging these that is rendered (that’s not steps) to
> visually show that chains or other assist devices are used?
>
> _______________________________________________
> Tagging mailing list
> Tagging@openstreetmap.org
> https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/tagging
>

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