The civilized man has built a coach, but has lost the use of his feet. He is supported on crutches, but lacks so much support of the muscle. He has got a fine Geneva watch, but he has lost the skill to tell the hour by the sun. A Greenwich nautical almanac he has, and so being sure of the information when he wants it, the man in the street does not know a star in the sky. The solstice he does not observe; the equinox he knows as little; and the whole bright calendar of the year is without a dial in his mind.
– Ralph Waldo Emerson, Self-Reliance
It’s ironic, isn’t it? We like stuff — or “gear”, if only because “Stuff Patrol” wouldn’t sound as good — and we like the notion of endurance-testing outdoor living. Yet history’s biggest proponent of outdoor living argues that stuff is what pulls us away from our natural form, the likes of which are meant for hardy nature-dwelling. Emerson’s passage is just a couple sentences away from civilized man’s logical conclusion: “He has bought an iPhone, but has sold his navigational skills; has lost his focus; can no longer remember who William H. Macy is without Googling it.”
Darran Wells, author of Wilderness Navigation and associate professor of outdoor education at Central Wyoming College, takes a less pessimistic stance, at least as far as technology and camping is concerned. “I’m pretty fascinated with new navigation apps — maps, GPS”, he says. When it comes to wilderness navigation and smartphones, he maintains he’s “not one of these Luddites that says ‘don’t carry a smartphone, don’t carry GPS.’” People just have to be smart about how they use that stuff, he says, which amounts to using GPS technology to double-check existing navigational skills rather than relying on it entirely, which is indeed a problem. “I think augmented reality, heads-up displays and apps that tap into that GPS potential are only gonna become more and more common”, Wells says. “And we’re gonna have more and more instances where people rely a bit too much on that and don’t bring along analog maps and equipment.” If they’re taken along at all, analog topographic maps and compasses are viewed as a failsafe for technological failure rather than the other way around.
Which is a little bit like deciding you don’t need to learn to drive because Cruise Control exists. According to Wells, being able to navigate with a United States Geological Survey standard topographic map and a compass is a basic skill that anyone planning to get serious about camping should have in his or her arsenal. That, and topographic maps are simply more intuitive than smartphones at this point; on a size basis alone, surveying the entirety of the national park or reserve you’re traversing on a topo map makes more sense than zooming in and out and calibrating and recalibrating your map and location on your tiny smartphone screen. Any time you rely on an electronic source, you’re putting your fate in the hands of something that could either die on you or give you a misreading. And perhaps most importantly, you’re using a method that disengages you from your surroundings; if the mind is a muscle, orienting yourself with a map and compass is a warmup that makes navigating your immediate surroundings come more naturally. If you make a wrong turn while following a GPS, you won’t have as much of a grasp on what you did wrong as you would if you had figured out the directions on your own with a map and compass.
Ultimately, your topo map should be your first resort; smartphones and GPS should be your second; the North Star-and-breadcrumbs route should be your last (we’ll get to that). For all of the above, Wells highly recommends taking a formal wilderness navigation course — but he did offer some tips to get you started practicing.