True North & Magnetic Declination - A Trick to Make it Stick

Written by Will Robertson


Magnetic declination is an essential principle to understand when navigating your way throughrepparttar wilds with map and compass.

Yet it’s a tricky thing to remember, at leastrepparttar 138290 way it has traditionally been taught, using an addition / subtraction method. Just when you think you’ve grasped it,repparttar 138291 concept floats away, like fog inrepparttar 138292 morning light.

Well there is a simple, practical approach to adjusting for magnetic declination when finding your bearings. The whole explanation begins with a definition of ‘north.”

There are 2 Norths

A lot of people know that there are 2 norths in terms of maps and compasses. A map shows true north, orrepparttar 138293 Geographic North Pole where all lines of longitude meet. The earth rotates around an imaginary axis that runs throughrepparttar 138294 North and South Poles.

A compass needle points to magnetic north, which is determined byrepparttar 138295 earth’s magnetic field. The location of magnetic north moves over time, at about 5 miles per hour. Right now it is slowly creeping around somewhere NW of Hudson’s Bay in Canada, about 450 miles away from true north.

Magnetic Declination

The angular difference between true north and magnetic north is known as “declination,” or “variation” inrepparttar 138296 aviation world. Declination is different for different parts ofrepparttar 138297 globe. In Washington State,repparttar 138298 angle of declination is 20°east. This means that magnetic north is 20° east of true north. In Tennesseerepparttar 138299 angle of declination is 0°, and in Maine, it’s 20° west.

Declination values can be found inrepparttar 138300 margins or legend on topographic maps. Becauserepparttar 138301 point of magnetic north is constantly moving, it is important to have a recent topo map for finding your way inrepparttar 138302 woods.

A similar point to remember is that compasses are calibrated for different parts ofrepparttar 138303 world. So when you purchase a compass, be sure that it is intended to be used inrepparttar 138304 area of your big hiking vacations.

How to Find Your Bearing

Follow these steps to find your bearing:

1. Placerepparttar 138305 compass onrepparttar 138306 map withrepparttar 138307 arrow onrepparttar 138308 base plate pointing inrepparttar 138309 direction you want to go.

Are you a Traveler?

Written by Ryan Fyfe


I’m making an assumption that at want point in your life you’ve been a tourist. You’ve carried a map, a camera, maybe even had a tour guide. You’ve traveled to different destinations, relaxed on remote beaches, climbed stairs in buildings you see on television. You’ve done all of these things but some how when you get arrive home, all your left with is a short memory, and a few photographs.

Vacations are nice every once in a while, but it doesn’t make sense to me why we will travel thousands of miles to sit in hotel rooms and watch movies, or lie on a pool deck and catch some rays. These are all things that we can do where we are from, I want you to think about being a traveler not a tourist. You want to soak in as much ofrepparttar new country and culture that you can rather than bring as much of your culture to them. It’s really quite simple. In one step you need to forget about your way of live, and adopt theirs.

It’s simple things likerepparttar 138289 mindset that we have when we go abroad, and what we bring. Don’t bring all ofrepparttar 138290 things that we depend on in America. Bring what it is that you are going to need to survive and stay healthy during your visit. The more comforts you have,repparttar 138291 more you will depend on them, andrepparttar 138292 less you will step out to becomerepparttar 138293 traveler you ought to be!

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