Archive for the ‘blogging’ Category

Spoken City asked me about blogging, hiking and Winston Salem

Thursday, September 22nd, 2011

Spoken City featured bloggerNever heard of Spoken City? Neither had I till a couple weeks back, but that didn’t stop me from soaking up a bit of free publicity. Spoken City wants to stick it to the W (you know, Walmart) and other big chains by encouraging folks to buy local.

The main website consists of a Google map with a bunch of icons for local restaurants, coffee shops, bars, theaters and such. Here’s a screen grab from the route to the western North Carolina Mountains from my neck of the woods. You can see how it could be a nice way to plan a post-hike chow-down.

Spoke City screen grab

They asked me what I loved the most about Winston Salem. Part of my reply:

The city has a fascinating history — its founders were Moravian Christians who were Protestants for centuries before Martin Luther ushered in the Reformation. The man credited with inspiring the Moravian religion ran afoul of the Vatican in Rome and was burned at the stake for heresy in the 1400s. How many other U.S. cities have roots stretching to the 15th century?

I’ve written about the Moravians after strolls at Old Salem and Historic Bethabara.

Another snip:

5) What does “being local,” mean to you?

It means accepting that everything you do has consequences for your neighbors. Not just what you buy — though that is a big deal — but how you use resources. You don’t have to be a tree-hugger to think our great-great-great grandkids deserve to have a world as great as the one we have now.

Here’s another interviewee who says she likes to hike.

Links:


Why the iPad matters to hikers (and especially to hiking bloggers)

Tuesday, September 20th, 2011

The iPad -- why does it matter to hiking bloggers?

Do hikers need iPads?

(Please don’t throw anything at your screen; it won’t solve anything).

I’m sure some’ll think the End of Times has arrived when they see the first gaggle of Boy Scouts gathered around an iPad on the trail, but I suspect that’ll be at least a year or two off.

For now, you won’t want to take an iPad hiking — they’re slippery, bulky and fragile. Anything tough enough to protect them will be heavy enough to make boring old paper maps look like works of ultralight genius.

So why worry about adding one more device to your quiver of gadgets? Simple: the future of everything is mobile. Many hikers are already taking their iPhones on the trail and living to tell. Even if the iPad isn’t trail-ready today, the technology it represents is coming to the outdoors. It’s inevitable.

I go my first hint last week: I posted a list of links here, and within minutes I had a tweet from Hendrik Morkel informing me my post had a big white space over all the text when viewed on the iPad.

I fired mine up and sure enough, there was the offending blank square. It turned out my custom theme had a bug that conflicted with my Disqus commenting plugin. The Disqus knowledge base posted an easy fix and I was on my way.

At Outdoor Retailer last month, an expert trend-watcher told us that all the young people who adore their smartphones fully expect to take them along on their outdoor adventures. Like it or not (and I suspect the “nots” are in the majority around here), those who cater to the mobile generation will have a decided leg up on their competitors.

People who dwell on the iPad’s shortcomings are overlooking what it’s really good for: consuming media. It’s an excellent platform for kicking back and reading your favorite blogs. You hold it in your hand like a book or magazine; all the images show up in full color and as long you have a Wi-Fi connection, the Web-surfing experience is excellent.

Getting words into the iPad is no picnic: the keyboard is far preferable to the iPhone’s, but it’s not a great platform for touch typing. Still, there’s much it can do well.

Steve Jobs envisioned the iPad to bridge the gap between phones, where the screen is too small, and laptops, which are too bulky for a vast range of tasks.

Say you’re a DIY gear maker — you can load a bunch of instructions on your favorite gear-maker blog on your iPad and take it along to your basement or garage and have tons of data at your fingertips.

You know you don’t want a laptop in the middle of your workspace, but an iPad can be like a virtual library.

For bloggers, the main takeaway is that more people than you suspect are already viewing your blog on iPads and similar devices. If you don’t know what your blog looks like on those devices, you’re probably turning readers away.

Google analytics chart of iPad users at Two-Heel Drive

Here’s a screen grab of my Google Analytics data for Apple’s IOS for 2011. It was barely a speck at the first of the year; now it’s nearing 6 percent of my overall traffic.

In years past, mobile usage has been negligible because it’s no fun reading a blog on that teeny-tiny screen. The reader-friendly screen of the iPad is like a virtual welcome mat for mobile users.

Not so many today, but many more in days to come, I suspect.


Best writing in the hiking blogosphere

Wednesday, September 14th, 2011

image: who are the best writers among hiking bloggers?

One thing I noticed while building my Top 10 list: Great writing is hardly a requirement of great blogging (though it certainly helps to be pretty good).

Here’s an example of great hiking writing, from the BigOutside blog.

I’m slogging up a long ramp of beach-like sand toward Cox Col, an off-trail pass sitting a few ticks over 13,000 feet in California’s John Muir Wilderness.

What makes it great?

  • Strong, precise verbs: We all know what “slogging” is like: suffering your way up a slope.
  • Vivid adjectives: “beach-like” sand — you know, unlike the sand of the Sahara.
  • Careful word choice: it’s not “just over” 13,000 feet, it’s “a few ticks.”

OK, so this writer’s not the next Hemingway, but he’s got a firm grasp of how the best get it done.

So, who are the best writers among your favorite hiking and camping bloggers? I’m not talking about the ability to accurately instruct how to pitch a tarp in a thunderstorm — you have to be good to do that accurately, and being great would probably get in your way (you’d want to describe the 17 frustrations of getting it wrong when your reader wants one simple, declarative sentence about getting it right).

There’s more to great writing than savvy word choice. Sometimes it’s a matter of being able to find a great story and put it into words. The Cold Splinters blog does that all the time.

A lot of excellent hiking writing is happening on the Trish, Alex and Sage blog. The story’s compelling: a hiking mom whose 5-year-old daughter has climbed all 48 of the highest peaks in New Hampshire. Talk about no child left indoors. The videos are worth a look, too.

Who else is doing great writing out there? Leave a link in the comments.


10 best hiking and camping blogs

Tuesday, September 13th, 2011

Steven over at My Life Outdoors asked his readers to nominate the top outdoor blogs, which was a tidy coincidence: Today I wrapped up a quick-and-dirty analysis of more than 300 sites on my Twitter list of hiking and camping blogs.

top 10 logoMy Top 10 were excellent, but it’s never a surprise to find 10 great examples of anything. I was more amazed at how many great blogs I had to choose from. Back when I started Two-Heel Drive there might’ve been a half-dozen really good hiking/camping blogs. Today there are well over 100. I pared that list down to about 50, then slashed one more time to get the Top 10:

  1. Hiking in Finland – Hendrik Morkel is the best hiking blogger we’ve got at the moment. He’s smart, opinionated, occasionally infuriating and straight-up crazy about sharing tips for lightweight backpacking.
  2. Florida Hikes — I guess when you’ve got no mountains and alligators instead of bears, you have to try harder.
  3. Trail Cooking & the Outdoors — Every backpacker who’s had to scrape the encrusted oatmeal out of their titanium pots is thankful for the advent of Freezerbag Cooking.
  4. Dirty Gourmet — I checked this site out in depth for the first time. Clean design, great writing and authoritative coverage make Dirty Gourmet a winner.
  5. Daily Hiker — Still a great mix of news, commentary and gear here.
  6. Gear Talk with Jason Klass — We should all just travel to Colorado and have Jason teach us how he makes such cool videos.
  7. Section Hiker — Always a solid performer with a strong mix of tips, gear and trip reports.
  8. Smoky Mountain Hiking Blog — Evidence that it’s possible to have a site devoted to hiking news.
  9. The Gearcaster — Another site proving that video brings a whole new dimension to gear blogging.
  10. Cold Splinters — Cold Splinters’ capacity to tap into totally cool stuff is unmatched.

Methodology: To be great, a blog needs to answer four questions:

  • Does it have great content — writing, multimedia, editorial decisions?
  • Is it a resource of something greater than the blogger’s opinions?
  • Does it have a well-defined niche and stay on topic?
  • Is it easy to use with clean design and intuitive navigation?

Once I had my top 100, I rated each from one to three on each of those four questions. But that only got me down to the final 50, so I simply forced myself to choose 10 that I liked better than the rest, then I ranked those accordingly.

Using different standards would produce an entirely different list, no doubt. And forcing myself to choose 10 willfully omits at least a couple dozen that might be on somebody else’s 10 Best list. More of my favorites from the top 50:

  • LA Hiker — A video site illustrating the embarrassment of riches in southern California hiking coverage.
  • Brian’s Backpacking Blog — It pained me to leave Brian’s site out of the Top 10. He posts a wealth of tips that makes his site a must-read.
  • Hiking Lady — This site seems much improved of late; my first impression was that it was mainly an affiliate site but over time I’ve come to respect it a lot more.

Here’s a look at the top 100-plus blogs I was working from:

4AlllOutdoors
A Wandering Knight
Adventures of Scatman
Adventure Blog
Al Humphreys
Appalachia & Beyond
Backpacking North
Backpacking Worldwide
Bald Hiker
Best Hike Blog
Big Outside
Brian’s Backpacking Blog
Calipidder.com
Camp the Summit
Camping Blogger
Camping Gear TV
Chris Townsend Outdoors.com
Cold Splinters
Compass Points
Daily Hiker
Dawn’s bloggy blog
Delirious Ramblings
Dirtbag Diaries
Dirty Gourmet
Distance Backpacker
Dog explorer
Dressed in Dirt
Easy Hiker
Eric Larsen Explorer
Eric the Black’s Backpacking Blog
Family Camp Man
Fat Man of the Mountains
Florida Hikes
Francis Tapon
Free Outdoors
G. Dan Mitchell
Gambolin’ Man
Gear Gals
Gear Guide
Gear Talk with Jason Klass
Geoff Mallinson
Get Going NC
Get Out More
Good Hiker
Greene Adventures
Hass Backwards
Hike Bike Travel
Husky Hiker
Hike for Heroes
Hikes Peak
Hiking Boots News
Hiking in Finland
Hiking in Honolulu
Hiking Lady
Hiking Northern Michigan
Hiking with Impunity
Jill Outside
Kevin’s Hiking Page
LA Hiker
Light of the Wild
Lightweight Outdoors
Lightweight and Ultralightweight Backpacking
Little Po Adventures
Live Free and Hike NH
Meanderthals
Modern Hiker
Must Be This Way
My Life Outdoors
Nature for kids
Northern California Hiking Trails
Oceanic Wilderness
One Year in Yellowstone
Our Hiking Blog
Outdoor Afro
Outdoor Blogger
Outdoor Gear TV
Outdoor Informer
Outdoor Vancouver
Pmags
Pure Outside
Real Family Camping
Roger’s Outdoor Blog
Scoutmaster CG
Section Hiker
Seven Dog Winter
Sierra Journal
Smoky Mountain Hiking Blog
SoCal Hiker
Social Hiking
Southern Nevada Outside
Secret Yellowstone
Take a Hike GPS
The Active Dad
The Gearcaster
The Hike Guy
The Mountain Diva
The New Nomads
The Outdoor Type
Tony and Mike Taking a Hike
Trail Cooking & the Outdoors
Trail Mix
Trail Savvy
Trails Edge Blog
Trailspotting
Travelers Zone
Trek Tek Blog
Trish Alex & Sage
uberpest
Uncooped
UpaDowna
UpNorthica
UtahHikes
Visit Florida Nature & Outdoors
Walk Simply
Wicked Lost
Wild Girl Writing
Wood Trekker



I’m the content editor at Trail Sherpa

Sunday, September 4th, 2011

Last week Tim Miner, the creator of Trail Sherpa, invited me to get in on the action on his site. He’s putting together a team of contributors to the site; it’ll be up to me to make sure everybody plays nice and all their contributions make sense.

Trail Sherpa logoWe’ll be blogging about gear, great trails and other hike-centric matters.

Why not just do this here on Two-Heel Drive? Mainly because Tim has already gone to the trouble of building a social-networking site designed specifically for hikers, backpackers and others who are into human-powered recreation. Other outdoor sites have social functions tacked on; Trail Sherpa has them baked in.

The advantage to a social-centric site is that it becomes a much better place to hang around and gab with people who speak the same language. Pretty much all the hiking blogs have a Facebook page, but the content is just as dispersed there as it is on the overall Web. It’d sure be nice to have it all in the same place.

Trail Sherpa has a long way to go to make that happen. I’m writing this mainly to say I believe that it can, and to encourage the rest of you to give it a try.