Using multiple GPS tracklogs to create artistic views in Google Earth

Since June 2005, I’ve been collecting tracklog data using my Garmin GPS 60 (CSx). This means that every time I go cycle racing, walking, sailing, ice skating or even flying, I bring my Garmin, turn it on and (automatically) log the track.

After the track is completed for that activity, I archive it at home, as a GPX file, using Garmin’s MapSource.
I initially bought the GPS for tracklogging and navigational purposes for my bike trip from Arnhem (Netherlands) to Paris, but keeping all tracklogs did give me some other cool opportunity that I didn’t think of back then.
One example of that is gathering statistics about my cycleracing and mountainbiking trips, thereby motivating me to break new records and discover new terrain. Another cool purpose for all my tracklogs, and what this blog is about, is that I can visualize them (all at once) on Google Earth!

With Google Earth and converting tools like GPSBabel at our disposal, it’s possible to create a (big) Google Earth file of all tracklogs combined. When I try to combine, for example, the activities for which I have the most tracklogs available (cycle racing, mountainbiking, walking, cycling on my hybrid bike and sailing), I assign them a color so I can differentiate between different types of activities and create really cool and insightful maps, like this:

Combined tracklog view of the southern Veluwezoom area

In this picture, the red colored line stands for mountainbiking, purple stands for cycling with my hybrid bike, blue is used for cycle racing and green is for walking. If you look carefully, you can also guess where I must live somewhere :-)

This map might look not very organized or useful to other people, but for me, there are many, many stories and new ideas hidden in it.

There are a lot of interesting views possible, seen my pretty large collection of tracklogs. This one for example is from my holiday last September in and around Cassis (south France):

Combined tracklog from holiday in Cassis, France; viewed in Google Earth

The pink line show a sailing trip we’ve taken. The green line shows the walk we took to Calanque d’En-vau and the blue line shows a cycle racing trip over the Route du Crête. If you ever want to visit this area, it’s a good thing idea to take my tracklogs, put them on your GPS and do the activities while you are in the area, so you don’t miss the ‘must-have-done’s’.

This whole thing looks somewhat like everytrail.com, where one can create some sort of “trackblog”, including photo’s that can be linked to the track. But an overview, loadable in Google Earth is not one of the options they offer (yet). But maybe they add it in the future, so, if you start uploading your tracks at everytrail.com now, an easy total view in Google Earth might not be so far away at all :)

Luckily you can create such a combined track yourself as well, however it requires some scripting knowledge. To combine the (GPX) files you can use gpsbabel, remove all but the track-information from the tracklog, for each of the tracklogs from a certain category, and output them to a kml or kmz file, a command that looks like this on unix:

/usr/local/bin/gpsbabel -i gpx -f "Tracklogs Varen/20080611_Drangey_Sauðárkrókur.gpx" -x nuketypes,waypoints,routes -i gpx -f "Tracklogs Varen/20080611_Sauðárkrókur_Drangey.gpx" -x nuketypes,waypoints,routes -i gpx -f "Tracklogs Varen/20080824_RoelofarendsveenLeiden.gpx" -x nuketypes,waypoints,routes -i gpx -f "Tracklogs Varen/20080908_CalanqueDePortMiou.gpx" -x nuketypes,waypoints,routes -o kml,floating=0,labels=1,trackdata=1,line_color=FF00FF00,points=0,line_width=2 -F "combined_varen.kml"

After that I load each kml file in Google Earth separately and assign it a unique color. By moving the track to the same folder in Google Earth, I can combine them to one track, with multiple colors per category. That’s all it takes.

The most actual version of all my tracks in the categories cycleracing, ‘Cycleracing with hybrid bike’, sailing, mountainbiking, walking, ice skating and flying can be found in this automatically updated Kml file.

Some more screenshots that I’ve taken are available here: http://public.hendricksen.eu/GpsArt/

combined tracklog view of 'de Liemers'

I hope I can inspire people to do the same, or at least motivate them to start collecting and archiving their own tracklogs, so at some point, they can create some cool maps just like I did with my tracklogs, and who knows, maybe start comparing those tracks.

Update 2009-12-03:
The latest combined tracks file (automatically updated) with all my cycling, walking, sailing and skating tracklogs are available here.

The world from a bird’s eye view

Did you ever wanted to be able to have a bird’s eye view of an area? Now you can!, when simply using Microsoft’s bird eye view available from Live Maps. The quality of the images is pretty detailed and you (currently) have a four-angle view at your disposal. Isn’t that just cool?

Kasteel Rozendaal, VELP GLD, Netherlands

The technique behind this is from a company called Pictometry International. The images are taken at a 40 degree angle from low-flying airplanes and each spot in the picture is overlapped in as many as 12 to 30 images of the same location. Luckily, storage space gets cheaper every day, but still.

So, it’s not that Microsoft gets the credits for this, but at least they are making it publicly available to the common people, and not only limiting this data to the IRS’es and CTU’s, for which i am grateful.

However, as an inhabitant of the Netherlands and a frequent visitor of the Veluwe, i wonder how far the Dutch (and European governments in general) are with technique’s like these, because, for example i believe they cannot yet handle emergency calls in which you give your location by a GPS coordinate, or am i wrong about that?

So while Google is busy mapping streets with their StreetView project, the team behind Microsoft Live Maps did something cool as well. Though they still have a lot of area’s to cover, it will sooner or later be the future of our maps, available anyplace, anywhere and anytime.
I wonder how long will it take before we have near-live “pictometry-images”. It will happen, but the question is when. 2020? 2030? or maybe as fast as 2015? The least i hope is that I’ll still be here to be excited about it.

Parachute jump

Today i did one of the most craziest things I’ve done so far in my life: I jumped out of a plane from 9000 feet (3 Km), making a 30 seconds free fall (at 200 Km/h) after which the parachute opened (as expected) and me and my Tandem Master landed safely on the dropzone at airport Teuge.

I jumped together with two friends and an uncle. Because the big plain was broken, we had to get up in two smaller plains, with only space for 4 ppl and a pilot per plain. So, we jumped in pairs of to, with one tandem master per jumper.

I can’t really express to you in words how amazing it really was. To give you an idea, i had a continuous smile on my face for at least half an hour since jumping from the plane. It is really that cool. My tandem master also let me steer the parachute for a while which is also pretty cool. I found the few seconds before leaving the plane to be the ones where i was most nervous, but after you leave the plane, the real rush starts :-)


Some more photo’s can be found here: Picasa webalbum

Though it is quite expensive (€210 Euro), this is definitely one of those things you have to ‘try before you die’. If you are not afraid of flying and you feel healthy, you should do it, it makes you realize you are alive.

I’m definitely jumping again, definitely :-)

And thank you Martin for telling me about this wonderful ‘jumping from a plane’-thing, i find the ‘solo jumping lesson’s’ you are talking about something i want to consider :-)

p.s: there is a little video as well. It is in Dutch, but you should understand the excitement from the atmosphere