Recovery and Diet
On 8/16/2019 6:01 PM, John B. wrote:
On Fri, 16 Aug 2019 13:03:09 -0400, Frank Krygowski
wrote:
On 8/16/2019 10:42 AM, Radey Shouman wrote:
Frank Krygowski writes:
The compass on the dash of my car has been quite handy at times, and
the ones on each bike have been even more useful.
Agreed. I have no sense of direction and often find myself moving
opposite the direction intended. I made sure to get a compass in the
car, and carry one on the bike whenever going anywhere unfamiliar.
Both have been useful many times.
I don't enjoy looking at the map on my cellphone -- when zoomed out
enough to plan a route all the street names disappear. But being able
to find my location once totally lost is quite handy.
One former cycling friend of mine (now gone, killed on a badly designed
bike facility) told me about a ride in a small plane to a city maybe an
hour or two away, owned by a friend of his.
His friend navigated by following the property lines and road grid,
which are mostly N-S-E-W west of here. But when they took off to return,
he mistook west for east on the cloudy day. They flew out of their way
for quite a while!
Years ago I worked at a facility that trained U.S.A.F. pilots and
certainly the instructors all told the students about following
railroad tracks and highways :-)
--
cheers,
John B.
Friend of mine used to say he used IFR navigation in his
small plane. "I Follow Roads"
--
Andrew Muzi
www.yellowjersey.org/
Open every day since 1 April, 1971
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