However, like Ray said, creating GPX routes can take hours. It is detailed, sometimes finicky, but it is worth it, and in a way it is fun. I am still fairly new to it. I do not know a good way to make route sheets though, especially the pretty PDF style, so if anyone wants to help me with that I'm all for it.
Quote from: carlson_mn on March 28, 2012, 10:54:24 PMHowever, like Ray said, creating GPX routes can take hours. It is detailed, sometimes finicky, but it is worth it, and in a way it is fun. I am still fairly new to it. I do not know a good way to make route sheets though, especially the pretty PDF style, so if anyone wants to help me with that I'm all for it. The Garmin MapSource program is what I'm most familiar with, well, that and google maps... I haven't used MapSource yet to generate route sheets, but as you can see from the attached screenshots I bet it would / could work well. I think copying and pasting into Excel (assuming it picks up the columns correctly) would be ideal, then you can delete some steps maybe if they aren't needed and rename stuff or use decent fonts / spacing, etc.Andy
It's good practice to get used to reading a route sheet for your own protection. I agree that it's not the easiest thing to look at route sheets taped to the tank. It's a skill that only 'comes by doing' though.
Of course a group leader could stop at every fork in a route to make sure that everyone takes the correct fork, but frankly when you're riding off a route sheet or a GPS unit, you typically don't even notice the forks in the road and there is typically no safe place for a group to stop and wait for other riders.