> As has been > mentioned before, the process of hunting down an elusive > postbox often has > the benefit of some other missing feature getting mapped as > well, just > because you happen to be in the neighbourhood.
I'd agree with that (and can also think of two adjacent postboxes with different references, which I hadn't considered earlier). This morning I was out verifying bus stops before work (more accurately I was trying to get to Colchester for 06:30 when Wickes opened, so I could be home again before work, but stopped at many of the stops en route except for a few where they loomed out of the mist too late for me to stop safely with a vehicle close behind me) and found a whole new lane I'd missed every other time I'd driven past it, which is often. I think I also spotted some recently constructed residential cul-de-sacs that I don't remember being there last time I passed, so will check and perhaps map those when I go to Wickes next (when their forklift driver gets to work they'll move the stock from out back into store so I can actually buy it). So probably this evening, though might not as I may take a different route to Colchester and try and get the route of the 74 verified to the same level as the 76 route I followed this morning. But if I weren't trying to spot bus stops I wouldn't have spotted the lane I think I had previously dismissed as a driveway (which as it only goes to a farm is perhaps what it effectively is). Although perhaps bus stops is a bad example as that is a case where the data has been imported. Ed _______________________________________________ Talk-GB mailing list [email protected] http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk-gb

