RfC: Have pathless hiking routes (no trail_visibility) be some manner of related nodes instead of paths

Another question on terminology: Nodes do not make a network, when there are no edges connecting them. In the hiking domain, highway=path is the most used tag for such edges. Drawing an OSM way turns a mere collection of nodes into an ordered set. Bonus: Makes a software routable graph. All fine, where there is a path on the ground too.

Looking at the picture how to route around the gully, while getting sweaty palms from the dark shadows lurking in the lower end, I observe, that the nodes have clear succession mostly imposed by terrain only. Do you suggest to mirror that in data? The method then should be as easy to maintain as a highway=*, if it wants to be successful, needn’t it?

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Was reading a little while ago about node networks in the Netherlands and Belgium

https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Node_Networks

Maybe some idea can be pinched from this.

A clarification question. Are you familiar with node networks in Belgium and the Netherlands? They’re a very specific thing: they consist of numbered signposts at junctions like this that tell you which way to go for which neighbouring node.

They solve a particular problem: in a country full of criss crossing paths and roads, they answer the question of “which way do I go at a junction” much more flexibly than the traditional approach of signposting linear long-distance footpaths. You can now describe a route as 54-43-05-21-54 and follow it without even needing a map.

Are you suggesting to re-use the node network tagging scheme (that is, relations with network:type=node_network) for the purposes you have in mind? What you’re describing has some superficial similarities (navigating from node to node) but the existing node networks are not for hiking in pathless terrain. The Belgian and Dutch nodes are connected by ordinary paths and roads. Using it for off-trail hiking could really confuse data consumers.

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I have the same understanding as you, but I’ve often seen the word ‘trail’ used (improperly?) to designate routes. In French we also see the same pattern: “sentier” and “chemin” mean “path” but they are often used to casually designate routes.

As for your definition of “route”, once again I have the same understanding but the original message of this thread has me wondering. What lies between two cairns in a rocky area? a path, a non-path, a particular kind of route that fills the void where a path should have been if the ground was different?

This seems to be trying to address an issue I’ve alluded too a few times, but I did write it up for back-country ski routes (not marked, visible only in certain circumstances, often described in guidebooks).

I was pondering this last night and was thinking that a pathless route would almost work better as an area - it could be wide at the base, then narrowing at chokepoints and then widening back up again. I’m not sure how much value it has that point, but another approach to pathless routes is for people to draw very wide lines over a map.

We already have people adding non-paths as paths, which to me is less than ideal.

I’d also honestly be fine with just not allowing pathless routes - we already have some passes and cols which are not natural saddles, so are essentially the top node of a route that get away with being an arbitrary “feature”. I think for some of them having a bottom node would be good (Little Joe Pass can be hard to locate without GPS). My drawn up notes for a community elsewhere as an example (though I’d cut the vast majority of waypoints here, I’ve done two variations from the bottom and would consider getting to the base of the chute from Lake Reflection up to the person attempting the route with no nodes to guide them - I kept them in this photo for the context of how to find the proper avalanche chute to go up). Pardon the language at the top, it was quite a slog getting up there and I was tired lol. I marked in blue where I would have networked nodes for this route - four nodes, top, bottom, and the two main forks in the chute.

I’d say that in OSM terms a path can be a trail, and a trail can be a mix of imprint of human traffic on the earth and markers (where such imprints aren’t possible). A route can contain a path or trail, but may not. There’s also the distinction of routing or route relations, which is how to decide which path(s) to take to get to your desired destination.

So a route can have a path or be pathless (orienteering / routefinding), if there is a path it can take the form of trail or road or whatever.

Having a sequence would also be necessary to avoid ambiguity, sometimes one has to ascend or descend a certain area and traverse then go up again and it’d be hard to tell which horizontal marker to aim for. My screenshot here has a lot of extraneous points in it (things I found interesting, extra notes to myself, etc), I think in general there’d be 3-5 markers per side of a feature to minimally define a route, which shouldn’t be too hard of a burden to create.

We were about 80-90% sure it’d work out and definitely scouted it out visually and talked it over before trying it out and were willing to turn back and just head back via trail instead of creating a loop. No direct exposure despite the steep shadows.

I’m not familiar with them, it just came up as a suggestion that seems more sense to me than drawing a set path between nodes. I don’t think it should have the exact same rendering - I think having it follow more in the climbing route example where you have a top, bottom, and bolts in the middle makes more sense though I can’t think of any big wall climbs where they’d be easily visible on a map.

I do think that taking that idea to work off of makes more sense than modeling it after a road or trail as a distinct path. Having numbered nodes of a route (Cirque Pass Top, Cirque Pass 3, Cirque Pass 2, Cirque Pass 1, Cirque Pass bottom) etc with some descriptions on them or a short sentence if zoom the map in would make sense.

What lies between two cairns in a rocky area, according to OSM norms, would be a path unless the cairns are so far apart that it’s hard to see them. I’d personally view that more as a route (there is the ability to routefind your own way to the next cairn, vs following on top of bootprints on a surface) but since there are many formally maintained and recognized trails that consist of regular markers over terrain that won’t hold imprints/wear on a surface I think just saying that there is a path there is fine. If there’s a marker every 10m or 30ft in open areas I think that’s “pathy” enough, vs say a cairn every quarter kilometer or cairns that random people put up on their own versions of a route in terrain that has no formalized path on it.

The “Lost Canyon” trail in the Needles district of Canyonlands National Park is a nice single track dirt trail when it is in valley floors, then switches to being markers only (cairns) for going over a ridge, then switches back to single track again. If the conservative (in terms of not wanting tourists to die and have to medivac them out) national park service calls it a trail who am I to argue?

And looking down at the same “trail” earlier that day where it is clearly visible single track.

If there’s just a cairn here or there it’d be trail_visibility=horrible and/or trailblazed:visbiilty=horrible trailblazed=cairn. At the point where we have a trail_visibility=no which is entirely or mostly pathless (or IMO a route which is bad or horrible visibility with only markers and no path) I feel like it should just be rendered as a route, or as fragments of a path where there is a use trail with blank spots in between for people to figure out for themselves. There’s a lot of broken “fragments” of paths in the Sierra Nevada mountains which seems appropriate to me in terms of ground truth.

That link isn’t working for me. :frowning:

Works for me both in the quote & original post. Wonder what the issue is.

Ah, it blocks my VPN. Loaded it now.

Routes. To a certain extent showing routes spoils some of the key aspects of being away from the piste. Picking ones own line, both in the light of one’s ability and safety of surroundings is part and parcel of developing the skills and awareness necessary. In many places (Albona at Stuben, most of Les Grands Montets below 2800m, Pavi in A-basin) all that is needed is to show that the area is free-ride territory. In others entry lines and exit routes may not be immediately obvious and are worth showing (it is not uncommon for these to be the least pleasant part of a route), particularly if there are cliffs or other hazards lower down (e.g., above Le Fornet, Val d’Isere).

Very similar thoughts here. Hazards seem to be more snow orientated - trying to map every area with loose talus or exposure doesn’t seem feasible, and there’s less surprise due to going at a slower pace and not (generally) having terrain buried under a potentially thin layer of snow.

For your purpose, having a general area with optional entry/exit lines seems to make sense, and that’s something I considered in my comment above (though more a node for top/bottom than lines/ways). It’d be a bit noisy for a general map, but could work if rendered as a separate map layer by clients that would be opt-in.

“Trail” has a distinct meaning in American English (and to some extent Australian/NZ English) which is closer to “Route”. It is not often used that way in British English. I would therefore generally advise against using it in OSM to avoid confusion. I realise this is a bit of a horse-bolted[1] scenario in a thread about trail_visibility but there you go.

[1] es ist ein roß entsprungen, as the hymnodist wrote.

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To a certain extent, though that’s regional. I always thought of trails as the compacted/scarred surface over terrain growing up in California, after spending more time in the southwest where trails can consist just of cairns for periods of time I’ve had that narrow definition expanded but still think of a trail as a nice single track in my head vs a route. The NE has a lot of tree blazes, Acadia has cairns, etc.

There have been some calls for the new trail_visibility to have an alias path_visibility that would be used going forward with trail_visibility being deprecated and eventually ported over, but it hasn’t caught on. IMO that’s a bit clearer if it encompasses both surface and markers. You can chime in at Tag trail_visibility: Proposed Improvements for this Descriptive Tag where this thread/issue was forked from to help keep it on topic.

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I like the diplomatic answer, in OSM a trail can be a path or it can be a route :wink: (Thereby ignoring the where clause. But who is going to honour that?)

In my area, trails where on the ground there is not much bootprints, but where there is a steel cable running all along (not of the via_ferrata kind, but the assisted_**trail** kind), get tagged trail_visibility=horrible. If trail_visibility is to start meaning any clues, we have to change some mappings, some dating back ten years.

The name of the song, the Christmas carol, is “Es ist ein Ros’ entsprungen” - a rose, not a horse :wink: It is a very nice song, I never managed to sing it correctly.

I’d just appreciate if debate here kept to one meaning, so I do not have to guess every mention of the term. At least path seems unambiguous?

A bit of digging found this, birth of the idea for the sac_scale tag - Re: [Talk-de] Wanderwege, Klettersteige, Kletterfelsen

Here Re: [Talk-de] Wanderwege, Klettersteige, Kletterfelsen it was voiced, that a new base tag highway = trail might make sense, and one highway = via_ferrata just as well. But this immediately got voted down, to not create more highway-inflation, and use highway=footway instead. Discussion then turned on to cycleways.

So, that should explain, why its called trail_visibility and not path visibility, because the brand new path only came little later, but just in time to make it the preferred base.

.

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maybe I’m becoming too conceptual here but could we say that, in the universe of routes (people advising other people where to walk), a path is a special case of route? That is, it has its own way of conveying information whereas other routes rely for that on cairns, on signs, on lists of pre-existing routes, etc.

This would open a way to situations where a route can be made of routes that are either paths, composite routes themselves made of other routes… and other objects (non-paths) made for instance of ordered lists of nodes ?

Obviously @Richard has been entertaining some unusual ideas about this song. :smile: :smile_cat:

I have been looking for some suitable examples and this precisely relates to one I have found.

The Westgrat of the Muttler is mapped as a path on OSM, but is not marked at all on the SwissTopo maps. There are some good pictures in this account on Hikr showing that as the rock band is reached there is a cable anchored to the rock, implying some existence of a route

I’ll add some more to the thread later, for instance Fluela Wisshorn (GR, CH), Piz Minschun (GR, CH) and the Bliistock (GL, CH)

It’s a famous mispronunciation by non-German speaking choristers!

(Though the finest version is of course the one set to the English translation ‘A Spotless Rose’: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QQnApR9PNV8)

I’ve mulled over the idea and come up with a simpler version (and a more elaborate one, but let’s keep it simple)

What if what we need is routes that can be routable even though they contain elements that are not ways? It would be the responsibility of apps to decide how to render series of cairns, areas, etc.

Thinking about the data model, there are nodes, ways (= ordered sequences of nodes), and relations (= ordered sequences of nodes, ways, and relations).

For routefinding in the wilderness, @erutan would like a way to describe a route as a series of way points without having to draw a highway=path between them. I can relate to that. A lot of hillwalking routes in Scotland are variations of the form “park your car at spot X, walk to the saddle, then follow the ridge to the summit and back down again”. To draw a highway=path here, with trail_visibility=no trailblazed=no, would essentially be troll tagging. If people in the US have been doing that, it’s natural that we should look for a solution.

Now, it seems to me that there are two questions here. The first is, how can this be represented in OSM? We would need new tags for the nodes, to say that they are waypoints. @erutan has made some suggestions. For simple routes, an ordered list of nodes can be represented using a way whose elements are the way points. You don’t need a relation at all. In fact, the typical route=hiking relation is a sequence of highway=path objects (or similar), and that is exactly what we don’t want. The question is just, what would be an appropriate tag for such a way? pathless-hiking=route? And when the situation is more complex, because there are alternative way points, what would a suitable relation look like to hold this data? Should this be modelled after how climbing routes are mapped, or after how node networks are mapped, or some combination of both?

The other question is, should this data be in the OSM database at all? Are such routes verifiable? Besides, you can already map summits, saddles, cairns, and (for better or worse) arbitrary named locations, so how much would it add to group them in a relation? I think many of these questions need to be answered by more experienced mappers than me… but it seems to me like these are the questions we need to be thinking about?

If a tagging scheme can be agreed, we would then need to lobby existing data consumers to support it, or new maps and apps would need to be developed.

The ‘alpine routes’ that have been discussed here are a little bit different, aren’t they? When there is an obvious route between two way points, because you follow an arête or a steel cable or way markers (trail blazes) placed every few metres, there is a verifiable geometry that can already be mapped as a way using established tags. So if these should come under the same tagging scheme, then we would need relations that sometimes consist just of nodes and sometimes consist of nodes and the ways between them.

Exactly what I was thinking! I understand that what @erutan calls a node network is like a series of ordered “virtual cairns” that suggests a route where there is no visible path (or markers). I think it is a good idea by itself, but in the spirit of https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:No_original_research, it should be developed outside OSM. Once such a system of virtual cairns is established and made official (by a National Park authority, the American XC Association (if it exists), etc.), we can quote them by adding these virtual cairns to the map. Adding them to the map without some form of official endorsement, they would be like

In my early days as a mapper, I did add paths to the map in mountainous areas based on GPS tracks I found on Internet, not even knowing if they represented visible paths or not. My motivation was to help other hikers and myself by showing that “this is a safe way to cross that pass” and to be able to get an idea of distance and time needed to hike that path (using a routing app). What I should have done it to upload those GPS tracks on my own phone, and upload my own GPS tracks to wikiloc to show people where it’s safe to go.

What we can do, of course, is to add information to the map to show hikers where it’s not safe to go, such as cliffs and screes, as long as they exist on the ground.

(off topic) On the topic of not promoting the creation of more informal paths, the European approach (by National Parks and the likes) is often to provide (marked) paths on purpose while at the same time forbidding hiking outside those paths. In stead of spreading the bootprints as much as possible like the American XC community tries, the Europeans generally try to concentrate them on a limited number of paths so that the rest of the area stays undisturbed.

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are you deliberately leaving areas out? sorry to be trivial, but we already have to deal with pedestrian areas in routes.

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