Finding hiking and biking trails near you: An introduction to Wikiloc

Before submitting this excellent article, the author suggested I investigate Wikiloc myself and try uploading, downloading and following trails from their website. I discovered that Wikiloc has over 800,000 members all over the world who have uploaded a staggering 1,571,000 trails with nearly two and a half million photos to boot. The wonderful thing is that the trails include everything from easy walks around town for the whole family to technical climbs up snowy mountain peaks. This means Wikiloc literally has something for everyone: kids, hikers, cyclists, dune-buggy drivers, whatever. I’ve taken KireMex’s advice and in the following weeks, I hope to report on new and interesting sites in this part of Mexico, discovered thanks to Wikiloc …and “the hiker known as KireMex.” - John Pint

A big challenge for those of us who love the outdoors in Mexico is the utter lack of proper trails, maps or signage. Jalisco has some incredible places, and while a few select books can lead you to a trailhead, it can be a challenge to actually follow the full route.

John Pint’s writings are a great inspiration for where to search. However, even though he provides the exact starting point, I’ve found out it is often too easy to get lost on the way and not get to the desired destination. Also, because he is a single person, it is not possible for him to document every nice trail in Jalisco or even in the Primavera Forest.

If only there were a way where each person who knew of a good hike could share the full details of the exact path, letting everyone know which way to go at intersections! Fortunately now there is. It’s called Wikiloc and is extremely simple, requiring little effort to create trails and even less effort to follow them.

“Crowdsourcing” is the practice of obtaining needed services, ideas, or content by soliciting contributions from a large group of people and especially from an online community. Wikipedia, the best known example of crowdsourcing, does not rely upon any single expert, but upon many knowledgeable users of the resource.

Wikiloc has applied the technique of crowdsourcing to create trail sites and the accompanying smartphone applications on GPS-enabled phones have now made it easy to find and follow trails, and almost as easy to create new ones.

Finding, following trails

Wikiloc is a free service which has generated great interest in our local community, including more than 140 hiking trails and around 500 mountain biking trails in Jalisco.

You can search their trails from their website (Wikiloc.com), their smartphone app, or Google Earth (under Layers -> Gallery -> Wikiloc).  The latter actually lets you display multiple trails on the map allowing you to plan your own route.

Each trail will list the actual route over a map, a chart showing elevation changes, as well as total distance, time, pace, elevation gain/loss, whether the trip is one-way or round trip, and difficulty level as rated by the contributor (who may have a different perspective than your own).   Waypoints may also be displayed, each with a name and optional photos, and categorized to be an intersection, cave, viewpoint, etcetera. When viewed on your smartphone, it will state how far you are from the starting point and in what direction to go, making it easy to find.

Once you start following a trail it will display a map with the original track marked in yellow and your actual route in green.   It will provide an audible reminder (a double chime) should you get too far off trail. Combined with the map and waypoints, this makes following the path very easy. Wikiloc trails can also be downloaded to many kinds of GPS units.

Creating trails

Creating a trail using the Wikiloc app is as easy as following one. When you arrive to the trailhead, you click “Record Trail” and it starts recording. To save your battery life, we recommend turning off non-essential things such as Wifi and Bluetooth. When you get to something interesting, hit the little flag button and you have created a waypoint. You can now categorize this, name it (i.e. Great Picnic Spot), and optionally take some photos.

When the trail is done you stop recording, name the trip and optionally upload the trail to the Wikiloc website (free account needed). You then get an email confirmation of the upload which you can use to edit the names of the waypoints, replace pictures, etcetera. And you get an extra bonus for uploading. You now get notified when others upload trails nearby, expanding your knowledge of where to go.

Wikiloc was created in 2006 as a hobby by  Catalonian information engineer and mountain climber Jordi Ramot. An enthusiastic outdoorsman, Ramot got the inspiration shortly after the birth of Google Maps. “I tried drawing routes from my GPS on a Google Map and the results were spectacular,” he says. “Later I realized I could not only show my routes but allow others to share theirs.”  Ramot’s crowning achievement came in 2008 when Google Earth agreed to show Wikiloc trails as a default layer on Google Earth (under Gallery). Wikiloc uses 100 percent free software. It now gets over one million different users every month.