This document summarizes a presentation about integrating technology into water trail management practices. It discusses using technology to understand the resource by compiling spatial data and conducting field surveys. It also discusses using technology to communicate with land managers, understand usage through sign-in boxes and surveys, and manage the trail through mapping software and standards. The presentation provides examples from the Northern Forest Canoe Trail of implementing these practices.
Integrating Technology into Water Trail Managemetnt Practices - Walter Opuszynski,, Northern Forest Canoe Trail
1. Integrating Technology into Water Trail
Management Practices
Presentation by:
Walter Opuszynski
Northern Forest Canoe Trail
Trail Director
walter@northernforestcanoetrail.org
(802)496-2285 ext.2
2. Major Themes
• Using technology to understand your
resource
• Using technology to communicate
to land managers/landowners and
permit specialists
• Using technology to understand
usage
• Using technology to manage your
trail
3. Topics to Cover:
• NFCT Overview
• Compiling and Managing Trail Data
• Defining Trail Standards and Staging
Development: Implementing a Water
Recreation Opportunity Spectrum that fits
your trail
• Using technology to communicate with
various target audiences
6. Brief NFCT Description
• Incorporated in 2000 after a company called Native Trails
mapped traditional Native American Travel corridors and realized
you could use these routes to connect Old Forge, NY to Fort Kent,
ME.
• Current Staff and Support:
o Kate Williams, Executive Director
o Sandy Tarburton, Membership Outreach
o Kevin Mack, Director of Partnerships and Marketing
o Roger Poor, Director of the Youth Program
o Walter Opuszynski, Trail Director
o Seasonal Regional Field Coordinators
o World Renowned Stewardship and Youth Program Interns
o Dedicated volunteer Trail Maintainers
o Dedicated Board of Directors
• Headquarters located in Waitsfield, VT
• Major Program Areas:
o Stewardship
o Youth Program
o Rural Economic Development
7. Our Mission
• The Northern Forest Canoe Trail is a 740
mile inland paddling trail tracing historic
travel routes across New York, Vermont,
Quebec, New Hampshire, and Maine.
• NFCT connects people to the Trail’s natural
environment, human heritage, and
contemporary communities by stewarding,
promoting, and providing access to canoe
and kayak experiences along this route.
8. Trail Facts
740-miles: longest inland water trail in
Northeastern United States
454 campsites
182 access points
26 sign-in boxes
25 interpretive panels
22 rivers and streams, 56 lakes and ponds
3 National Wildlife Refuges
13 sectional maps
63 portages, totaling 55 miles
45 communities, 1.5 million people in region
13. Earn a Candy:
• What data do you have to
manage across a water trail?
• Who are the audiences that you
will have to share this data with?
14. Use Technology and Data Compilation to
Know Your Resource
• Determine the spatial data already available for
your trail and understand the accuracy
• GPS Infrastructure to produce field verified
information
• Identify a mapping software program that will allow
you to manage your collected field data by
associating text data with spatial data
• Develop a field survey that matches the attribute
table you will be using
15. Land Manager Survey
• Determine what information is available from any
land managers across your trail (towns, state
agencies, federal agencies)
• Determine what degree of accuracy the
information is in (has it been lifted from satellite
imagery? Has it been field verified? If it has been
field verified, to what precision of delusion, what
was the collection procedure?)
• What is the most commonly used mapping
program? (NYDEC, VTFPR, USFWS, MDPPL all use
ArcMap but the Maine Warden Service uses
Delorme X-Map)
16. Sample Attribute Data Fields
Campsites Layer – Attribute Table [Draft]
FID – assigned by ArcGIS based on the order the points were entered
Shape – ‘Point’
Id – unique ID #
Name
Town
State
NFCTMap
Type –
campsite
campground
LandType –
public
private
OwnrLstNme – Landowner Last Name
OwnrFstNme – Landowner First Name
Org – Organization represented by landowner
SiteMntnr – Site Maintainer: NFCT, NYDEC, etc
NoOfSites – 1, 2, 3, etc
Lean_to – Y [yes] or N [no]
LeantoCond – Lean-to Condition
Poor[YYYY]
Good[YYYY]
Excellent[YYYY]
New[YYYY]
Toilet –
Wet willy
Moldering
Pit
Beyond the bin
ToiletCond – Toilet Condition
Poor[YYYY]
Good[YYYY]
Excellent[YYYY]
New[YYYY]
PicnicTable – Y or N
PTCond –
Poor[YYYY]
Good[YYYY]
Excellent[YYYY]
New[YYYY]
FireRing – Y or N
AccesNotes – Access Notes
AccessCond – Access Condition
Poor[YYYY]
Word Write Up
Attribute Table
17. GPS Infrastructure
• If you determine that data needs
to be field collected shop around
for a GPS unit that will serve your
needs.
• Develop a standardized process
that will ensure a similar degree of
accuracy for all trail infrastructure.
18. Choosing a Proper
Mapping Program
• We have found ArcMap to be the
standard mapping program amongst a
majority of the landmanagers across the
NFCT. It has many higher degree
functions that can aid in trail
management
• There are a number of other mapping
programs available that are not as
expensive that will allow you to make
maps to communicate with the variety of
audiences you will have.
19. ArcMap Costs and Comparisons
Costs: Non-profits can purchase a license for $185 through
TechSoup (www.techsoup.org) if they meet requirements.
ESRI offers an annual maintenance grants to variety of
qualifying organizations for $100 instead of the typical $400.
More information can be found at:
http://www.esri.com/grants/index.html
Alternatives: Delorme XMap,, Google Earth open source
applications. For more info and examples:
• For an overview of mapping software options:
http://www.techsoup.org/learningcenter/software/page866
4.cfm
• Delorme Xmap:
http://shop.delorme.com/OA_HTML/DELibeCCtpSctDspRte.j
sp?section=10700
• For an example of Google Earth applied to trail
management:
http://www.connecticutriverpaddlerstrail.org/campsites_ma
p
21. Know Your
Usage
• Identify short trips and gateways
• Create ways to capture usage
numbers
• Choose a data management system
to process collected information
(Excel, Survey Monkey)
25. Have a plan to manage
your resource in
response to usage
• How can you monitor use data?
• Once you have an understanding of the
infrastructure and an understanding of
current use a plan can be shaped based on
the Water Recreation Opportunity Spectrum
or similar management plan structures that
links degree of infrastructure to use and
environmental conditions.
26. NFCT WROS Scale
• Primitive Use:
o Primarily used by Through Paddlers (Less than 50 people per year)
o Limited infrastructure
• Fire ring
• Tent Site
• Cat Holes or Wet Willie Privy
• Moderate Use:
o Varied Use: Between 50 and 200 visitors per season
o Increased infrastructure
• Fire Ring
• Picnic Table
• Hardened surface access
• Tent site
• Moldering Privy (removable or stationary) or Pit Privy
• High Use:
o 200 visitors plus per season
o Maximum infrastructure
• Fire Ring
• Picnic Table
• Hardened Surface Access
• Double Chamber Moldering Privy, pit privy, or port-a-potty
• Tent Site
• Hardened Treadways
• Physical perimeters establishing use area
http://www.usbr.gov/recreation/publications/WALROS_Handbook_2011.pdf
30. Trail Maintenance
Support Structure
NFCT Trail
Director
Regional Field
Coordinator
NY/VT/QC
NY Maintainers
(13 Trail
Segments)
VT Maintainers
(13 Trail
Segments)
Regional Field
Coordinator
Maine
Maine
Maintainers (16
Trail Segments)
NH Maintainers (5
Trail Segments
31. Using Technology to
Manage Your Trail
Create the most user-
friendly platform possible.
If it is not easy to use,
people will not use it, and
your efforts will be futile.
32. The NFCT Trail Maintainer
Interactive Map Tool can be
used to:
• Communicate-with the
integration of the NFCT
Forum we are able to
have communications
between the NFCT Trail
Director, NFCT Trail
Maintainers, and
paddlers all in one
location preserved for
future use by all.
• Recruit Maintainers-
People who are
interested in the being a
part of the program can
use this tool to
determine which
segment they would like
to volunteer with or
which segments have
not been adopted yet
33. Abilities of the Forum
• The NFCT Trail
Director gets an email
whenever a post or
thread is added to the
forum. This allows for
a quick response to
any Trail related
matters.
• Paddlers can
communicate with
each other about a
wide variety of topics.
• There is a place on the
forum for each
adoptable Trail
Segment allowing for
direct communication
with the NFCT
primary Trail
Maintainers for each
segment.
34. Safety First-Safety Always
• There are many stretches of the Northern Forest
Canoe Trail that do not have cell service. We have
groups working in these areas every season. We
have been looking for ways to communicate about
project needs and to have open communications
in case of emergency.
• There are technologies that are coming out based
on satellite communications that solve the
communication issue we used to experience: the
SPOT devise and the Delorme InReach.
36. Interactive Map Tool
Overview
To transfer the data stored in ArcMap (Shapefile) to a format
that can be used in Google Maps (KML) it is necessary to go
through a few steps:
1. Open a layout with the shapefile you would like to convert
2. Hide all attribute layers you would not like to export and name
field alias as you would like them to appear in Google Maps
3. Open the ArcMap Toolbox and click on “Conversion Tools”
choose “To KML”
4. Enter the appropriate data and click “OK”. A compressed zip file
(KMZ) will be produced and exported to the desired location.
5. Open this zipped file with WinZip or 7-Zip or other compressed file
management software. You will know have a KML.
6. Certain script will need to be changed to allow recognition by
Google Maps. We currently open the KML in Notepad and find
and replace all of the “<” with “<“ and all of the “>” with “>”
7. The KML is now ready for use with Google Maps or Google Earth
platforms and will contain the desired attribute information for
display.
37. Google Earth Resources
• For Google Earth beginner tutorials:
o http://www.google.com/earth/outreach/tutorials/index.html#tab=annotate-
google-earth
• Using Google Sites to host your KML:
o https://developers.google.com/kml/articles/pagesforkml
o This link will explain how to take KML files and turn them into hyperlinks allowing
easier sharing
• Google Earth Network Links
o http://www.gelib.com/google-earth-network-links.htm
o Creating Network Links will help you share information on your website
• Google Earth Support and Outreach:
o http://support.google.com/earth/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=1241796&topi
c=2376759&ctx=topic
o Google offers various types of support for non-profits and other organizations
• Google Embed Gadget
o http://www.google.com/earth/outreach/tutorials/kmlembed.html
o An easy way to embed your Google Earth project on your website