Comentários de David Reik
Conjunto de alterações | Quando | Comentário |
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127745116 | há mais de 2 anos | I don't understand why a long section of the Mattatuck Trail is tagged bridge=yes. The section is not on a boardwalk. |
124991405 | há quase 3 anos | Actually, I'm criticizing my own mapping as much as your mapping. I have not come up with a practical way to fix the uniting of a legal boundary (Talbot WMA) with a natural=wood boundary. You're not the only mapper to conflate legal boundaries with natural=wood boundaries. |
123672472 | há quase 3 anos | Sorry about any typos I make. I try to get it right. I make corrections where I find them. There have been major blaze changes, and some new trail sections, made there in the last year or so. You mention a blue-black trail. I don't recall a blue-black trail in Nepaug State Forest. Within the State Forest, there are no road signs. I give precedence to what people will actually see when they are on the ground, such as blazes, over labels that appear on a map. David Reik |
124795152 | há quase 3 anos | Actually, I'm interested putting in forest cover on OSM. The trouble is putting in forest cover is a lot more complicated than people would like to assume. There was an unfortunate tradition that seems to have started with a bunch of imports of very appoximate preserve boundaries in which it was assumed that the legal boundaries of the preserves were the same as the boundaries of wooded areas, which is rarely the case. Just focusing on George F. Cloutier Memorial Forest can illuminate some of the complications. First, although the area is called "Forest," the area contains several non-forested areas. There are two bodies of water, and a large area (visible on the Bing aerial imagery) where, in 2019, there was an extensive timber harvest to salvage dead trees. Most trees were, cut but many were left, leaving an area that is more meadow than forest. Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection is interested in forest cover. Maybe they have a data set that could be imported. Maybe there is some way of putting in forest cover in the form of dots instead of area boundaries. |
113701744 | há cerca de 3 anos | highway=track with tracktype=grade1 renders as a solid brown line on www.openstreetmap.org, which I think pretty clearly indicates to viewers that the road is unpaved. I use that combination of tags when the road is unpaved but sufficiently improved that a standard car could drive on it. |
118931939 | há mais de 3 anos | I just attempted to put in the Williams-Gurski Open Space boundaries more accurately than they were previously shown. I retained the Williams Park, School Park and Gurski Farm sub-sets of Williams-Gurski Open Space. |
117853638 | há mais de 3 anos | This section of Hamden has several north-south corridors that have road names on the town website, but have no roads, or even traces of past roads, in the corridors. I only wanted to show the corridor labeled "High Rock Road" to show that a particular tract was not public land. The eastern border of the private tract is formed by the High Rock Road corridor. Now, a track goes through the private land, and the private land is not posted "No Trespassing." |
93384914 | há quase 5 anos | From http://goshen.mapxpress.net/ags_map/ , the Town of Goshen property map, it looks like the falls is on private property, but probably viewable from Goshen Land Trust property, which I put onto OSM. |
84477940 | há mais de 5 anos | People are welcome to put those tags in, if they want to. My focus was putting in tags so that people looking at www.openstreetmap.org would be able to see what the situation was with the trails in the vicinity of Humaston Brook Falls. I think it's unreasonable to expect that people will click on each element to see what tags may have been entered for each element. The names will appear, not only on www.openstreetmap.org, but on AllTrails which is how most people see my stuff. The "correct" tags would not be apparent, I don't think. Maybe a trip to Humaston Brook Falls would make everything more clear. It's a beautiful set of cascades on state land. |
84497817 | há mais de 5 anos | I struggled with what the best approach would be to present the pertinent information in this case for people who want to visit the very-hard-to-to-get-to Humaston Brook Falls. I wanted to show a doable bushwhack route. Many routes through the woods with no trails look doable on a map, but, on the ground, one finds that there are cliffs, swamps, thickets, or other obstacles. I chose my route back from the falls as the best, although it was longer than my route out. My route out had too much wetland, and mountain laurel thickets. I thought the name, "2020-4-30 bushwhack route (no path)" was sufficiently unambiguous so that people would know not to expect a trail. |