Showing posts with label Global Positioning System. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Global Positioning System. Show all posts

Thursday, February 5, 2015

Ontario Trails News - where Torontonians Bike and Run, find your favorite Toronto Trail!

Find your favorite Toronto Trail!


CITYSCAPE

Where Torontonians Bike and Run


Developers map out the world's most popular spots for walking, jogging, and cycling—and reveal where in this city Torontonians like, and don't like, to get outside and get active.


Explore where people walk and run in Toronto with the pink routes, and where they cycle with the orange routes. Data is from RunKeeper. Map by Mapbox’s Garrett Miller and Eric Fischer.
If you made a New Year’s resolution to get outside and be active, you might wonder which are the most popular spots in Toronto for running or biking.
Mapbox’s Garrett Miller and Eric Fischer have your answer. The developers collaborated on a snazzy-looking map that shows where the world’s cyclists and runners—including those in Toronto—like to go.
Using data from RunKeeper, an app that allows runners and cyclists to track their trips and upload results, Miller and Fischer mapped more than 1.5 million trips from around the world. They cut off the first and last 200 metres of each one to anonymize individual routes, and the result is a resource featuring trails marked by various intensities of pink and orange. The pink routes are more likely to be walks or runs, while the orange routes are longer trips, more likely to have been taken by cyclists.
As CityLab points out, the maps highlight commonalities among cities. For instance, people love to run by water—whether along Lake Shore and Queen’s Quay in Toronto, or along the borders of Manhattan.
Toronto’s map reveals that, in addition to being drawn to water, people—no surprise here—love to be active in green spaces. The data shows that the city’s extensive ravine system and its trails are very popular: Don Valley and Humber routes are coloured brightly on the map, showing they’re well travelled. Large downtown parks such as High Park, Queen’s Park, and Trinity-Bellwoods are also well used.
The map also shows a correlation between an area’s built form and the likelihood that people will walk, run, or cycle. East York, North York east of the Allen, and the old city of Toronto are fairly well represented—the walkable downtown core is coloured bright pink. But Scarborough, York, and, to a lesser extent, Etobicoke show a relative lack of use. This could be because of RunKeeper’s data set, which might be produced largely by self-selected users from a younger demographic—but these areas of the city are certainly also more car-dependent and have lower Walk Scores.
These kinds of data don’t just make for shiny maps—they can also support very real policy discussions about how to plan for and encourage more active transportation.
A growing body of research suggests a link between walkability and positive health outcomes. City staff discussed how to build a healthier city by promoting walking and biking [PDF] in a series of 2012 reports [PDF].
In fact, areas highlighted on Miller and Fischer’s walking, running, and cycling map of Toronto appear to be inversely correlated with those known to feature higher rates of diabetes.
Taken from the 2012 City report Towards Healthier Neighbourhoods, this map shows the prevalence of diabetes across the city, with higher-intensity areas highlighted in red
Taken from the 2012 City report Towards Healthier Neighbourhoods, this map shows the prevalence of diabetes across the city, with higher-intensity areas highlighted in red.
The data are also suggestive in light of the conclusions of a 2012 University of Toronto study, which found that some neighbourhoods—including south and central Scarborough, North York west of Allen Road, north Etobicoke, and York—had up to five times more cardiac arrests than others. In a 2012 interview with the Globe and Mail, the lead author of the study noted that the rate of cardiac arrests increases as soon as you go east of Victoria Park Avenue: on Miller and Fischer’s map, we see a big drop-off in walking, running, and cycling east of Victoria Park.
Map of cardiac arrest incidents across the city from a 2012 study by the University of Toronto's Katherine Allan
Map of cardiac arrest incidents across the city from a 2012 study by the University of Toronto’s Katherine Allan.
Of course, there are many factors—income levels and the availability of transit, for example—that influence an area’s walkability and the health of its residents. Studies such as the 2011 Vertical Poverty Report by the United Way [PDF] and David Hulchanski’s famous Three Cities [PDF] examine data to produce a more nuanced look at the complex underlying issues.
Miller and Fischer’s maps show pieces of a larger story. The most popular trails might seem simply like fun places for a run or merely the result of individual choices, but they’re part of a larger context that governs how the city works—how the built and natural environment, a community’s land-use mix, housing affordability, community health options, and other factors affect the way we relate to and use different parts of the city.

Sunday, December 29, 2013

Ontario Trails News - snowmobile maps improve with TrakMaps!

TrakMaps Launches Snowmobile Ontario with Official OFSC Trail Maps

OFSC snowmobile trail maps now available for Garmin & Lowrance* GPS units.
DORVAL, QC, December 22, 2013 /24-7PressRelease/ -- TrakMaps is excited to offer Ontario snowmobile enthusiasts all 31,000+ km of province-wide interactive OFSC trail maps. Users can easily and without worry plan, venture and enjoy the ride, secure in knowing where they are and where they are going at all times.
Included are pylons and power lines, railroad tracks, cellular towers, national and provincial parks, Wildlife Management Units (WMU) and other landmarks on a base map of 1:50,000.
Snowmobile Ontario 1 also features over 19,000 points of interest including OFSC clubhouses, hotels/motels/outfitters, restaurants, gas stations, ATM's and more.
TrakMaps President, Faraj Nakhleh stated, "We are very pleased to be working with the OFSC's excellent team to offer Ontario snowmobilers reliable digital trails maps of Ontario's beautiful and well-groomed sled trails".
Garmin users insert the preprogrammed card directly into their compatible GPS or computer. Using Garmin's free BaseCamp software, the map, snowmobile trails, landmarks and POIs can be viewed on the screen before downloading into a compatible Garmin GPS. CD and download versions are also available. Compatible Garmin models:www.TrakMaps.com/Compatible_Garmin.aspx.
Lowrance Elite and HDS users insert the preprogrammed card directly into their compatible GPS and off they go. Compatible Lowrance models:www.TrakMaps.com/Compatible_Lowrance.aspx.
Full information on Snowmobile Ontario 1: www.TrakMaps.com.
Snowmobile Ontario 1 and all other TrakMaps products are available at many fine retailers in Ontario: www.trakmaps.com/Retailers.aspx.
Since 1997, TrakMaps has provided outdoor enthusiasts with a multitude of innovative and quality mapping products. As a result, TrakMaps digital (for GPS) and printed maps and charts are the first choice for outdoor enthusiasts of all ages.
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Press release service and press release distribution provided by http://www.24-7pressrelease.com


Read more: http://www.digitaljournal.com/pr/1654077#ixzz2qDwpIk6b

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Saturday, August 4, 2012

Ontario Trails - Yours to Explore!


We are pleased to announce all ourtrailheads are now live on our website inGPS format. 
Over 1900 trailhead references you can input to track your favorite trail.

On each of our over 1900 individual trail pages you'll find a right hand column. 
Our trail pages can be found listed - here


The right hand column of each page looks like this:

The top contains the logo of the managing trail organization.

A click through map that shows you a recognizable reference location. Click for the trailhead.

Trail Stats

Length of the trail - each trail from A to B

Difficulty - 1-5 ***** with 5 most difficult

Uses or activities allowed on that trail

Unique characteristics

Amenities - parking, dog walking etc.

Location - nearest town, the region, sub-region

GPS - Lat and Long - useable in your navigation system. The best published trailhead, or location we could find!

Seasons - Open Close information

Contact information: the OTC doesn't own or manage any trails - we are a referring site - so we send you to the folks that can answer your questions best! Includes E-mail

Website - usually for maps - with over 2600 trails housing all the maps is well, impossible but we send you to the source

Ontario Trails
We have a facebook page for every type of activity - winter or summer.
In facebook search Ontario "Activity Name" Trails. 
For canoe or kayak search Ontario Water Trails.



  
 ONTARIO TRAILS COUNCIL E-NEWS - Every Friday

    • Local Trail News 
 
    • Trail Education Program

 
    • Trail Heros

 
    • Trailhead Ontario

 
    • Activity and User Updates

     View it Here




Trails Education Courses 2012
Trail Education Courses -  23 Sessions and Counting We have it all - 14 modules - and soon On-Line! Book Today.
Course Calendar  - click the link on the course name to download the flyer for that course!
Course Descriptions 
Register - click on your choice, register on-line 
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We appreciate the support of the Ontario Trillium Foundation
Courses are for information and knowledge exchange purposes only. All courses are offered on a first come first serve basis. Instructors reserve the right to limit class sizes. Courses may be offered more than once in the calendar year. Some minimum student levels are necessary to run certain courses, so offered courses may change without notice



Info about the Rouge National Park. Parks Canadaare looking for public input on the creation of the new Rouge Park: http://www.pc.gc.ca/eng/progs/np-pn/cnpn-cnnp/rouge/rouge1.aspx
Parks Canada has an online survey: http://pc.sondages-surveys.ca/s/rouge/?l=en 


Tour de Greenbelt in Rouge Park! - September 15, 2012 | Ontario ...
Hello! I hope you are enjoying the summer in spite of the extreme heat. We are in the process of planning another Tour de Greenbelt in Rouge Park and would ...ontario.sierraclub.ca/node/5348
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