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An Urban Explorer Needs a Great Map Book

You may think the whole idea of being an explorer is to be the first to see something never before discovered. This isn't really what we do as urban explorers. Even the rural explorers are following past human settlement, construction and demolition. We explore in old footprints.

It helps to have a guide to where you might start. Then, when you have explored enough and the adventure of being lost is less fun than the idea of a fresh, hot coffee... the map book or guide book will show you which way to go.

My favourite is the Back Roads of Ontario, by MapArt Publishing.

Would you Doodle on Your Map?

A new map (in book form) is published each year. I don't buy a fresh book every year. Mine has notes, doodles, and marks where I found great treasure (a really unique, weathered and detailed old house). Also, the maps don't change so often that you need updated too often. But, it is nice to start again with a fresh map when my old one is getting dog-earred.

The MapArt book is an actual map, roads, rivers and all. But, I love to find a book like the one by Ron Brown pictured here. This is more than just a road map, it's reading someone else's findings, experiences and some forewarning about what you may or may not find when you look for the same places yourself. You also get to see photos someone else took. It's nice to see if you can find a better angle, maybe different light or see more than the than the author of the book noticed.

Ron Brown is one of a few people who write great books for anyone exploring Ontario history. Whether you are on the road with your camera or just want to read the history and see the photographs, the books have a lot to offer. They aren't all available on Amazon however. Some are out of print, some were published by small press and some are just plain old and forgotten.

If you want to explore take a great map book. One which shows you the roads and the back roads. But, take a look for other guide books for local history and backroad traveling.

I live in Ontario so I've shown the books I know (and have on my bookshelves) as a guide to letting you see what is out there when you start having your own adventures on the road with your trusty backpack, camera, boots and a map book!

What Does your Road Trip Map Look Like?

How do you treat your map?

  • It's in pristine condition, like new.
  • I took a course about map folding in school, my map is almost perfect.
  • It's a bit dog-eared with the odd rip or tear.
  • I've made a few notes on it and it shows some wear and tear.
  • I doodle on it, make notes, circle places I want to see again.
  • It's pretty marked up - but I just think of it as personalized.
  • My new map or the old one I couldn't really use any more?
  • It think it had enough of me and walked away on it's own one day.
  • I can't find my map.
  • Map..? We were supposed to bring a map?
  • It's at that stage where the paper is kind of fluffy now, almost like fabric.
  • I was attacked by aliens, they took a few chunks out of my map... they really did!
  • I don't own a map. They are too much responsibility and map folding scares me.
  • I just don't own a map. A map should be free, unowned.