How Do You Map A Zip-Line Canopy Tour?

Posted by: Rick in ziplineTrailsRickmapsclimbingCanopy Tour on  

Rick

If you’ve never experienced our Zip-Line Canopy Tour before, you really should.  It is one of our most popular and thrilling adventures that the whole family can enjoy.

You won't find another quite like it: Built along the cliff-lines of the New River Gorge National River, this bird's-eye view of one of our nation’s natural treasures is so unique, it was featured on the Travel Channel this past year.

So how do you go about creating a canopy tour map in this kind of terrain?  It’s not easy.  I’ve been creating maps for more than two decades, and this was one of the most physically demanding maps I have ever done.  I already had the basic topography, roads and trails mapped out, but I needed to map the cliff lines, climbing routes and thin wires in the air!

The first day I spent walking what little existing trails there are with my GPS unit, marking points, making notes and sketching out a rough lay of the land on my notepad.  It took me several hours of hard, back-breaking work.  The cliffs are 70-plus feet high with shear drop-offs.  The zip-lines easily float from cliff to cliff — I on the other hand had to climb up and down a 30-degree slope, clinging to roots and rocks, moving from one cliff to another.  

The next day I woke up a little sore and worked on the computer all day transferring the GPS data, notes and sketches into a rough map.  Tedious work for some, but I love it.  Finally, I printed out my rough map and I ran over to ACE to talk to Josh — Josh is our climbing and zip-line canopy tour guru — and I asked him for his input (ouch, total info overload).  I left him a little bewildered — how can I get all that information into a digestible format for us common people?  It was even more complicated than I thought.

The next day, map in hand, I was back on the cliffs again to start the whole process over.  I spent 3 hard days climbing the mountainside, spending long nights on the computer, tweaking the map over and over until I finally got it right.  I realized that I wouldn’t be able to get all the climbing routes on the map, there were just too many, so I focused on the canopy tour — I would have to make a real climbing map later.

The final process: getting everyone’s input before releasing it.  Another week of comments and input, tweaking and re-tweaking, and I’m finally done!  

Or am I?  No, not yet. I was recently informed we will be adding more zip-lines to the canopy tour this year!  (notice on the map where I added the “future” additions).  Oh, well, enjoy this short lived map while I get my hiking boots ready for some more grueling work.  I just wish I could create a 3-D map so you guys could really appreciate how awesome this area is.

Stay tuned for my next rendition, or talk to an Adventure Consultant and come check it out in-person.

Comments (3)Add Comment
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written by Boog, January 18, 2010
You can create a 3-D map using a good GPS compass with elevation and a 3-D mapping program.
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written by Rick1, January 19, 2010
Thanks Boog - I've looked into it also - you're right it can be done - heck I could make a 3-D fly-through video (which I would love to do also). There are programs now that you can take pictures and it will put it into a mosaic rendering that you can fly through and zoom in and out. Money and cross formats is my is my issue for now - I will get there someday soon.
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written by Rick1, January 25, 2010
Local history is a passion for me. Another interesting fact about President McKinley is that he and two other future presidents served here during the Civil War.

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