



Identify local flora and fauna, map your location, and survey the night sky using the power of your smart phone
By Elena Malykhina | August 11, 2011 | 11
SAS Survival Guide, created by Trellisys.net and HarperCollins Publishers, is a good companion for anyone who wants to be prepared for any eventuality....[More]
SAS Survival Guide, created by Trellisys.net and HarperCollins Publishers, is a good companion for anyone who wants to be prepared for any eventuality. "The app has often been described as an 'insurance app' against unforeseen situations," says Rohit Regonayak, director of technology at Trellisys.net.
Price: $5.99
Release date: April 2010
How it works: The guide is divided into nine categories: essentials, camp, polar, seacoast, desert tropics, wild food, hunting, first aid and urban. Although the app is not meant strictly for campers, it can be used to learn how to make fire, catch fish and signal for help, among other things. It is very easy to navigate within the categories, which mimic the iPhone's home screen. Other icons appear at the bottom, including interactive features like a survival checklist, compass and Morse code tool. (Type your message and the phone translates it into Morse code.)
Access: SAS Survival Guide is self-sufficient. All content is downloaded within the app, including the "how-to" videos. Some online features, such as connecting to Facebook, require Internet access.
Upcoming version: An update with minor fixes, improvements and new features is scheduled for August.
Platforms supported: iPhone, iPad, Windows 7. An Android version is due in August.
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Whether fishing, hiking or walking on a snowy mountain, the app could be a lifesaver when it comes to identifying nature's inhabitants. MyNature Animal Tracks can alert campers to the presence of dangerous animals like a grizzly bear....[More]
Whether fishing, hiking or walking on a snowy mountain, the app could be a lifesaver when it comes to identifying nature's inhabitants. MyNature Animal Tracks can alert campers to the presence of dangerous animals like a grizzly bear.
Price: $6.99
Release date: Winter 2009
How it works: First, select how you would like to identify an animal—by tracks or scat. The app presents a series of questions and images to help find the right description of the animal. Each description is accompanied by an illustration, a digital image and the animal's gait. Another way to identify creatures is by sound. Overall, it is a comprehensive app and achieves its purpose, although the user interface could use some improvement. Much of the effort has been invested into the app's content, as opposed to its look and feel.
Access: The app can operate offline, but as is the case with other apps, using the social features (Facebook, Twitter) or posting to the database requires wireless access.
Upcoming version: An update will be ready next spring. It will include additional animals and tweaks to the user interface.
Platforms supported: iPhone, iPad, Android.
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Gaia GPS lets users pre-download topographical maps of any area on their phones. The maps display campsites, trails and other points of interest—a feature rather useful for camping....[More]
Gaia GPS lets users pre-download topographical maps of any area on their phones. The maps display campsites, trails and other points of interest—a feature rather useful for camping.
Price: $24.99
Release date: September 2009
How it works: At $25, this app is the most expensive on the list, but it is a small price to pay if you are lost in the woods without cell reception. Gaia GPS is meant to be used offline. You can download and save maps by typing in an address and dragging your finger to select an area. As long as the map has been downloaded, Gaia will be able to locate you via GPS. While hiking through an area, you can also track a trip (speed, altitude, distance) and take pictures along the way. Gaia GPS Lite is a free version of the app, but be warned: It Is missing some improvements and bug fixes, and serves up ads, which can slow things down.
Access: You can get GPS in the woods, but usually no Internet, so the app caches the maps and point of interest data for offline use.
Upcoming version: A new version is in beta now.
Platforms supported: iPhone, iPad, Android.
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Go SkyWatch Planetarium helps users learn about what they see in the night sky while camping or hiking far from the light pollution emitted by urban areas....[More]
GoSkyWatch Planetarium helps users learn about what they see in the night sky while camping or hiking far from the light pollution emitted by urban areas. "The app is specifically made for campers and is designed to be used outdoors for naked eye observing," says Richard Hein, owner of app developer GoSoftWorks.
Price: $3.99
Release date: July 2008
How it works: One of the app's coolest features is the touchless navigation mode, which lets you point the phone to the sky to identify what you are looking at. Using the finder, select a planet, star or deep space object and an arrow will guide the way. The app shows planets with relative brightness to surrounding stars for easy identification. GoSkyWatch also has a moon phase calendar and a recently added Star Light finder, which describes a star light's journey to Earth based on your birthday.
Access: The app is fully functional offline. All star data and images are contained within the app. A network connection is optionally used to help with finding the user's location or to view Wikipedia information.
Upcoming version: Updates every few months.
Platform supported: iPhone, iPad. No plans for other platforms yet.
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Campers can use Leafsnap to identify various plant species. Developed by Columbia University, the University of Maryland and the Smithsonian Institution, this app utilizes visual recognition software to name plants based on photos taken by users....[More]
Campers can use Leafsnap to identify various plant species. Developed by Columbia University, the University of Maryland and the Smithsonian Institution, this app utilizes visual recognition software to name plants based on photos taken by users.
Price: Free
Release date: May 2011
How it works: Use the "Snap It!" button take a picture of a plant. Photos of leaves must be taken against a fully white background for Leafsnap's automatic algorithms to find them. To label a potential match as the correct species, mark it by "swiping" across the result. Note that Leafsnap is the first in a series of visual recognition-based electronic field guides—many of its features are still under development.
Access: The visual recognition component requires a network connection, so the images can be sent to Leafsnap's server for identification. Users can browse through the rest of the guide without a connection.
Upcoming version: The current version includes trees of New York City and Washington, D.C. Species in the Northeast will be completed this summer, and the continental U.S. will be added during the next 18 months.
Platform supported: iPhone, iPad. An Android version is in the works.
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NOAA Radar can warn nature enthusiasts about approaching storms and other severe weather in their area. The app includes animated radar data, multiple map styles, GPS locator and many options for viewing the data (zoom in, zoom out, pan and scroll)....[More]
NOAA Radar can warn nature enthusiasts about approaching storms and other severe weather in their area. The app includes animated radar data, multiple map styles, GPS locator and many options for viewing the data (zoom in, zoom out, pan and scroll).
Price: $1.99
Release date: February 2011
How it works: The app allows you to visualize a variety of atmospheric changes, including flash floods, tornados and thunderstorms. The radar data can be viewed as an animated movie thanks to a GPS locator that finds and displays your current location, or set your location by zip code, city name or address. The latest image displayed in the animation is updated every five minutes, and even if you have temporarily lost reception, the app saves and restores your last location and zoom level.
Access: NOAA Radar can be used offline, but it will only show weather radar data from the last time it was started with an active connection. Otherwise, the app requires either 3G or EDGE data access.
Upcoming version: Shuksan Software would not provide the release date.
Platform supported: iPhone, iPad. No plans for other platforms.
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11 Comments
Add CommentUnacceptable. What ever happened to real books. They don't ever run out of battery power.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisReal books to contain the information that can be contained in a smart phone would weigh far more, even when you consider the weight of the solar charger I also pack. Additionally, the phone has GPS, maps, compass, and serves as an emergency communication device in many circumstances
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisI've been camping and hunting for 40+ years and survived quite well without a smartphone. Leave it at the office.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this"why would you venture out into the wild without a useful set of tools right in the palm of your hand". Because you're camping, and bringing a smartphone on a camping trip is lame. Period.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisSo have I. I've also been without a stove quite frequently and for years didn't carry a water filter. There was a time period where I didn't take maps and compass either. I've even gone without tent or sleeping bag. So what? A smartphone is not an essential piece of equipment, but then there is no such thing as a truly essential piece of equipment. A smartphone is a useful piece of equipment, just as most of the other equipment I pack in my bag. If you choose to go without a smartphone or other equipment, bully for you. Going low tech can be a blast, going with nothing but the clothes on your back is also a blast. But there's nothing different about a smartphone that makes it any less legitimate for camping than a stove, water filter or flashlight. You'd have a case if we were talking about spending the camping trip surfing the web, but we're not. A smartphone is just a way of combining several items into a smaller and more capable single item.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisIt is just another tool. I'm sure there were voyagers into the wild after Gutenberg who scoffed at the notion of taking a printed book of useful info. "If it isn't in your head you don't need it!" no doubt they would have said.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisA compass, a needless crutch for the directionally-challenged. Matches or lighters are for wimps. Gore-Tex, fiber-fill, foam-cell, carabiners, boots, sunglasses, sunscreen, first-aid kits, freeze-dried foods, all for the lamoids! A GPS: heresy!
A tool is a tool. Use it, don't use it.
A smartphone is just another device as has been very capably stated. The point is to get outside with whatever tools enhance the experience.
JoeL
As I told my son in law when he laughed at my compass,
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisThe battery never goes dead and I always have a signal.
I can vouch for the Gaia GPS app. I have taken it on numerous hiking trips on my iPad, yes my iPad (Strike me down oh lord!) Like others have said its a tool and it works extremely well. The battery life is long, the big antenna picks up a GPS signal under trees, in my back pack and the USGS topo maps are great. Can even load trails not on the map and record where I have been with all the stats (average speed, altitude profile, distance gone etc..) Sure you can do allot of this on a paper map (I always take one for back up) but you can also walk bearfoot, why would you?
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisOnce you go iPad you wont go back!
If you want to come and see the 'big five' in Africa, I would suggest that you employ a professional guide / hunter.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisHowever even I don't feel completely safe and my iPhone (with a solar charger) in a kit bag is a great comfort.
The Garmap (Garmin) app has the maps of where you are in the bush (no roads !) and a Star tracker is helpful at night sitting around the campfire.
You can use the Sasol eBirds to identify our feathered friends.
If you happen to stand on a snake it is useful to be able to identify it (eSnake) as different snakes have different venom.
When you call for help, you should also be able to identify what tree you have climbed (eTree) to avoid the lions.
I love these apps. They all look useful. The least would be the last one that needs a signal, but even this could be helpful in an area of sporadic connection.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisAs to folks who crow about their own tech-less prowess and look down on others who would bring a phone, well, I'm always amazed that there are folks who call others "lame" or its equivalent, for using any tool, implement, or other item. It's just bullying, a way to say "I'm better than you are." They can stamp around feeling good about themselves not for their accomplishments, but because they think they're somehow superior. Ridiculous. Relax and enjoy the great outdoors, haters.
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