With some patience you will get there and have the course you want. You can undo when a segment is added (somewhat) and you can click on a point or two you dropped to erase them. The more zoomed in you are, the more points you click, the more you can guide it to creating your route that you want. This is clumsy and will likely take NUMEROUS tries to get exactly what you want. Your now in a map that you can draw your course on. This then brings up all the segments for that area. In the top right hand corner you will find a search box, type the name of the place you want, for me it’s Palgrave and then the conservation area. Logon to Trailforks on your PC/Mac and click Routes, create route. You will need to create an account on trailforks which is again FREE. Trailforks let you do this (for now) for free). Individual part of a trail system are called segments, and putting these together into a flow is what we are going to do here … You can do something similar on Strava, but it’s a premium feature and I to date, have not paid for Strava. No adventure is undertaken without at least one Garmin to lead, track and document our course! Ok, so you want to go on a new Mountain bike trail (or hike or whatever), where do you start? I ride on my own often, so when anew trail is built it’s great to have a way to find it, navigate it and put it together into a flowing course. My regular readers know, I’m a fan boy of Garmin. Using Trailforks to create a route you can follow on your Garmin
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