How to use a
compass
Using the compass
in interaction with a map
This is the
important lesson, and you should learn it well.
It's when you use both compass and map the compass is really good,
and you will be able to navigate safely and accurately in terrain
you've never been before without following trails. But it'll take
some training and experience, though.
I am not covering map
reading here, guess you would have to consult other sources for
that, but the lesson will be useful if you have a sense of what a
map says.
Here is our compass
again:

The principles are much the same as in
lesson
1 but this time, you are using the map to tell you which way is
correct instead of your intuition.
Take a map. In our first example, we
look at a map made for orienteering, and it is very detailed.
Well, not really. We look at a fictitious map I drew myself,
but never mind. To the point. You
want to go from the trail-crossing at A, to the rock at
B. Of course, to use this method successfully, you'll have
to know you really are at A.
What you do, is that you put your compass on the map so that the
edge of the compass is at A. The edge you must be using, is the edge
that is parallel to the direction of travel arrow. And then, put B
somewhere along the same edge, like it is on the drawing. Of course,
you could use the direction arrow itself, or one of the parallel
lines, but usually, it's more convenient to use the edge. At this
point, some instructors say that you should use a pencil and draw a
line along your course. I would recommend against it. First, it
takes a lot of time, but offers no enhancement in accuracy of the
method. Second, if you have wet weather, it may destroy your map, or
if it is windy, you may loose it. You should keep your map
(preferably in a sealed) transparent plastic bag, and if it is
windy, tied up, so it can't blow away. But most important is that
any drawings may hide important details on the map.
Time
to be careful again! The edge of the compass, or rather
the direction arrow, must point from A to B! And again,
if you do t his wrong, you'll walk off in the exact opposite
direction of what you want. So take a second look.
Beginners often make this mistake as well.
Keep the compass
steady on the map. What you are going to do next is that you are
going to align the orienting lines and the orienting arrow with the
meridian lines of the map. The lines on the map going north, that
is. While you have the edge of the compass carefully aligned from A
to B, turn the compass housing so that the orienting lines in the
compass housing are aligned with the meridian lines on the map.
During this process, you don't mind what happens to the compass
needle.
There
are a number of serious mistakes that can be made here.
Let's take the problem with going in the opposite direction
first. Be absolutely certain that you know where north is
on the map, and be sure that the orienting arrow is pointing
towards the north on the map. Normally, north will be up
on the map. The possible mistake is to let the orienting
arrow point towards the south on the map.
And then, keep an eye on the edge of the compass. If the edge
isn't going along the line from A to B when you have finished
turning the compass housing, you will have an error in your
direction, and it can take you off your course.
When you are sure you have the
compass housing right, you may take the compass away from the map.
And now, you can in fact read the azimuth off the housing, from
where the housing meets the direction arrow.
Be sure that the housing doesn't turn, before you reach your target
B!
The final step is similar to what you did in
lesson
1.
Hold the compass in your
hand. And now you'll have to hold it quite flat, so that the compass
needle can turn. Then turn yourself, your hand, the entire compass,
just make sure the compass housing doesn't turn, and turn it until
the compass needle is aligned with the lines inside the compass
housing.
The
mistake is again to let the compass needle point towards the south.
The red part of the compass needle must point at north in the
compass housing, or you'll go in the opposite direction.
It's time to walk off. But to do
that with optimal accuracy, you'll have to do that in a special way
as well.
Hold the compass in your hand, with the needle well aligned with the
orienting arrow.
Then
aim, as careful as you can, in the direction the direction of
travel-arrow is pointing. Fix your eye on some special feature in
the terrain as far as you can see in the direction. Then go there.
Be sure as you go that the compass housing doesn't turn.
If you're in a dense forest, you might need to aim several times.
Hopefully, you will reach your target B when you do this.
At this time,
you may want to go out and do some training, so you could check out
some
suggested exercises.
Unfortunately, sometimes, for some
quite often, it is even more complicated. There is something called
magnetic declination. And then, for hiking, you wouldn't use
orienteering maps. And this is the issue for
lesson
3.
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