HI Maxingout,
I can't tell you how much I enjoyed and appreciated your article. I travel the southwest USA deserts a lot and consider myself pretty good at navigating. But we don't have anything on the scale that you are describing. I have never seen such a good description of the Arabian deserts as you have given (except maybe the film Lawrence Of Arabia
). And your purpose was not to show pretty pictures but to give a method for survival. Then to top it off, it is well written. I'm very impressed.
BTW, I always carry a compass in my Jeep. It's a Brunton handheld. I could never find a permanent spot on the vehicle for mounting that did not affect compass readings too much. You have inspired me to brush up on my compass skills. Almost always I use my permanently mounted Panasonic Toughbook laptop computer with Terrain Navigator software and a Garmin GPS to give real-time vehicle location on the maps as displayed on the computer. This stuff is wired to the vehicle electrical system. That way I won't run out of battery power. Somehow I suspect this scheme would not work in Arabia due to the lack of suitable maps. But it works very well if the proper maps are available for the software and they are for anywhere in the US. But, it does have tendency to make my compass skills lazy.
Thanks for the terrific read, Sparky
The Plastimo IRIS 100 is actually a handheld compass. You can use it inside the vehicle if you want to know a general direction, but if you really want to get an exact bearing, you remove it from the mount, and use it far enough from the vehicle that the car doesn't affect the compass reading.
On the Defender, I experimented with location on the compass, and I centered it on the windshield and found it gave pretty good readings as long as I wasn't running the heater or AC. I will shortly be mounting another IRIS 100 on my latest truck.
Maps were not a problem in Arabia. The US Geologic survey created 1:500,000 maps of the country, and we used photocopies of those maps for navigational purposes. The Saudis actually came out with a book of maps for the entire Kingdom that was also 1:500,000, and these were actual satellite maps with superimposed roads, cities, wadis, and they were very useful and accurate. We also used aeronautical charts.
In the real world of Arabian navigation, the maps helped define the navigation problem, and the bedouin tracks were the best solution whatever navigational challenge you faced. Bedouins don't wander aimlessly in the desert. Their tracks all go somewhere, and if you use your compass to make sure that you are traveling in the same direction, you will get where you want to go. Those bedouin tracks define what is possible in a wily desert terrain.
The Empty Quarter was different, because you travelled cross country in areas where there might not be any tracks. And if you do that, you need to be sure that you have plenty of fuel, because the direction that you are travelling may have geographical barriers or impassible sand mountains that force big detours on your intended track.