Maps Archives - Matthew Gove Blog https://blog.matthewgove.com/category/matthew-gove-web-development/maps/ Travel the World through Maps, Data, and Photography Sat, 02 Jul 2022 15:23:31 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.6 https://blog.matthewgove.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/cropped-android-chrome-512x512-1-32x32.png Maps Archives - Matthew Gove Blog https://blog.matthewgove.com/category/matthew-gove-web-development/maps/ 32 32 How to Create a Custom Map in Adobe Illustrator https://blog.matthewgove.com/2022/06/10/how-to-create-a-custom-map-in-adobe-illustrator/ Fri, 10 Jun 2022 15:00:00 +0000 https://blog.matthewgove.com/?p=4781 Custom, branded maps are one of the best ways you can stand out from your competition, especially in the world of travel and content creation. With so many people, groups, and organizations still relying on products like Google Maps, you’ll not only stand out from the crowd, but also come […]

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Custom, branded maps are one of the best ways you can stand out from your competition, especially in the world of travel and content creation. With so many people, groups, and organizations still relying on products like Google Maps, you’ll not only stand out from the crowd, but also come across as way more professional. And Adobe Illustrator makes it incredibly easy to create a custom map for your next video, presentation, or any other type of content.

Last time, you learned how to import GIS shapefiles into Adobe Illustrator. Today, you’re going to use those imported shapefiles to create a custom map in Adobe Illustrator.

Where We Left Off Last Time: Importing GIS Shapefiles into Adobe Illustrator

In the previous tutorial, we began the process of creating custom maps in Adobe Illustrator. That tutorial focused on importing GIS shapefiles into Adobe Illustrator, which consisted of several steps.

  1. Load several shapefiles into QGIS to create vector outlines
  2. Export those vector outlines from QGIS into SVG Format
  3. Import the SVG Map into Adobe Illustrator
  4. Scale and Position the Map to Fill our Illustrator workspace

What We’re Going to Learn Today: Finishing Your Custom Map in Adobe Illustrator

Today, we’re going to finish the process of creating a custom map in Adobe Illustrator. In this tutorial, you’ll learn how to do the following:

  • Extract parts of the vector and sort them into layers
  • Add titles, labels, and the background imagery
  • Set up your map for animation

At the end of the day, you’ll wind up with a beautiful final map product that looks like this:

1. Extract Your Custom Map Features from the SVG File in Adobe Illustrator

To make it easier to manage your custom map assets in Adobe Illustrator, put each feature (or group of features) into their own layers. We covered this briefly in the previous tutorial, but I want to go over it in much more detail. First, let’s recall where we left off. We had just imported the SVG (vector image) file into Adobe Illustrator using File > Place.

Shapefile Features Loaded into Adobe Illustrator from an SVG Vector Image File

Before we do anything in Illustrator, make a list of the features you will be extracting from the SVG file. For the Utah National Parks, we want to extract the following:

  • The Utah State Boundary
  • Zion National Park Outline
  • Bryce Canyon National Park Outline
  • Capitol Reef National Park Outline
  • Canyonlands National Park Outline
  • Arches National Park Outline

If it helps, you can also make a list of everything you want to exclude from the final map. For our map of the Utah National Parks, we only need to exclude the rectangle that bounds the SVG image, which is outlined in blue in the above screenshot. Don’t worry about colors at this point. We’ll address them shortly.

Scale and Position Your Custom Map in Adobe Illustrator Before Extracting Any Features

Before you extract any features from the imported SVG file, I highly recommend that you scale your custom map and move it into its final position on the Adobe Illustrator artboard. You can always make minor to its position and scale as you go. However, it’s much easier to do any major moving and scaling while it’s still just a single entity.

To scale the SVG file in Illustrator, simply grab any of the anchor points on the corner or side of the SVG file and drag it to its desired size. To prevent image distortion, hold the Shift key down as you scale it, which maintains the original aspect ratio.

The green rectangles in Illustrator mark the boundaries of your artboard, so scale it to fill as much of the artboard as possible. If you need to scale the SVG beyond the boundaries of the Adobe Illustrator, that’s perfectly fine. Illustrator will crop everything to fit the artboard when you go to export it.

Additionally, make sure that you leave room for any titles, subtitles, and labels you’ll be adding to the map later. You should also center the map horizontally in the frame. Your scaled and centered custom map of Utah should look something like this in Adobe Illustrator.

Scaled and Centered Shapefile/SVG Features in Adobe Illustrator

Extract Each Feature of Your Custom Map into Its Own Layer in Adobe Illustrator

On the initial extraction, you should put each feature into its own layer in Illustrator. We do this for two reasons.

  1. It best sets the map up for animation
  2. It’s much easier to merge multiple layers into one than it is to separate one layer in several.

To begin your feature extraction, first open the Layers panel. Click on the carat to reveal the components of the SVG layer.

Expanded Layers Circled in Red on the Right Hand Side of the Main Adobe Illustrator Window

Despite there being so many components, the features you want to extract are only going to be in a small subset of those components. The easiest way to find your map features is to click on the eyeball next to each component in the layers panel. If your feature disappears from the map, that’s the component you need to extract.

To extract the component you’ve identified, create a new layer to put it in. Don’t worry about the order of layers for now. The new layer button is in the bottom right corner of the main Adobe Illustrator window. Give it an easily identifiable name, such as “Zion Boundary” or “Canyonlands Outline”.

The New Layer Button in Adobe Illustrator

Click and drag the component from the original SVG file to the layer you just created. You should see the feature now listed under the new layer. Do note that your feature may be divided into several components in the SVG layer. In that case, drag each component of your feature to your new layer.

To confirm everything copied correctly, click the eyeball to show and hide your new layer. Your feature should disappear from and reappear on the map.

Outline of the Utah State Border and Zion National Park Extracted From the SVG File

Finally, repeat the process for each feature you will be putting on your final map. Once everything is extracted into their own layers, you can hide or delete the original SVG layer. We will not be using it anymore.

A Note on Dealing with Complex Features

If you have a complex feature you are trying to extract or if two features you want on your map are combined into a single component of the SVG file, you can still extract them. Use Illustrator’s Eraser tool to delete any unwanted parts of the SVG components. You can separate multiple features from a single SVG component with Illustrator’s Direct Selection Tool. Please consult the Adobe Illustrator documentation for more details.

2. Add a Background Image

Next up, we’ll add the background image. In our Utah National Parks map, the background image is of the hoodoos at Bryce Canyon from my trip in 2017. Your background image should be a high enough resolution to fill the artboard of your Adobe Illustrator project. Remember that while Illustrator is a vector editing program, your images still consist of pixels. If you scale them up beyond their full resolution, they will become pixelated and grainy.

Before you add your background image, though, you will need to do a couple things. These are both optional, but I highly recommend doing them.

  1. Crop your image to match the aspect ratio of your artboard in Adobe Illustrator. For videos, that aspect ratio is 16:9. I do this mainly for my own sanity so I don’t accidentally put features outside of the artboard boundaries that will get clipped off.
  2. If you plan to use a background overlay that’s any color other than black or white, make your image black and white. Colored overlays can do wonky things to the colors of your image, often with undesirable results. If you’re using your own branding, black and white images help ensure that the map stays the recognizable colors of your brand.

Use Illustrator’s File > Place function to embed your background image into Illustrator. The features you imported in the previous step may disappear from view, but don’t worry. They’re just underneath the image. We’ll correct that shortly. Then, drag each corner of the image to the corners of your artboard to fill it.

Don’t panic if other features disappear when you load the background image. They’re just underneath the picture.

3. Add a Background Overlay

A background overlay is a solid color, semi-transparent overlay that goes on top of your background image. Its primary purpose is to make the content of your map easier to read. Not only does it increase the contrast, but it also makes the background image much more subtle. Remember, you want your viewers’ eyes to be drawn to the content, not to the background image.

Use the slider below to see the difference between having a background overlay vs having nothing. The difference in readability is night and day.

Background Overlay Setup in Adobe Illustrator

You should put the background overlay either in the same layer as your background image or in its own layer. The easiest way to add the background overlay is with Illustrator’s Rectangle Tool.

Location of Illustrator’s Rectangle Tool in the Toolbar

After creating the rectangle in Illustrator, drag the corners so the rectangle fills the artboard.

The Background Overlay will not look terribly exciting when you first load it.

Background Overlay Color and Opacity

Your background overlay should never be anything besides a single color. It will be too distracting otherwise. If you want to use a secondary color, make the text and content of your map that color. Remember, color can be very powerful for invoking emotions in your audience. Use it wisely.

So what color should you make your background overlay? I recommend one of three options.

  1. Your Primary Brand Color
  2. Black
  3. White

Unless you want to put more emphasis on your background image, you should use your primary brand color for the background overlay. For example, Coca-Cola would use red, UPS would brown, and John Deere would use green.

Start with the opacity set at 75 to 85%, and adjust it as needed. You should be able to see your background image through the overlay and be able to immediately recognize what it is. However, you don’t want the background image to distract from the content on your map.

The background image subtly shows through the background overlay that’s set to 80% opacity

Interestingly, you may have a situation where you want to emphasize the background image a little more. It comes up more often than you’d think. I use it on the title screens of pretty much all of my videos.

In that case, you should use a black or white background overlay, and set the opacity to 30 to 50% to start. Like before, you’ll need to adjust it as necessary. I also recommend using a color background photo, because the black or white overlay won’t distort the colors of your image.

Example of a Black Background Overlay Set to 40% Opacity from Our Arches and Canyonlands Video

4. Add Any and All Map Titles, Subtitles, Labels, and Branding

The final elements to add are the title, labels, and branding. Like the background overlay, most of these should go either in the same layer as the background image and/or overlay, or in their own layer. However, there is one distinct exception. All feature labels should go in the same layer as the feature itself, or in their own layer. If you plan to animate the feature labels independently of the features themselves, each label must go in its own layer.

Use the text tool in Adobe Illustrator to add text to your custom map. Set the font to either match your brand fonts, which I highly recommend, or, to an easy-to-read font. The last thing you want is your viewers struggling to read the beautiful map you put such effort into.

Title text and Branding on our Utah National Parks map. We labeled the features, but you can’t see them because they’re still underneath the background image.

5. Arrange the Layers in the Correct Order

Now that we’ve got all of the elements of our map in place, it’s time to put the layers into the correct order so you can see all of your features. If you’re not familiar with the concept of layers, it’s very similar to making a sandwich. For example, the layers of a ham sandwich, from top to bottom, would be something like this:

  • Bread
  • Mayo/Mustard
  • Cheese
  • Veggies
  • Ham
  • Mayo/Mustard
  • Bread

Likewise, we can arrange the layers of our map in a similar order. From top to bottom, the layers of our map are as follows.

  • Features and Feature Labels (unless they overlap, the order of each individual feature layer does not matter)
  • Titles, Subtitles, Labels, and Branding
  • Background Overlay
  • Background Image

To rearrange the order of your custom map layers in Adobe Illustrator, open the Layers panel. Then, all you have to do is click and drag the layers into the correct order. Make sure you don’t accidentally put one layer into another. However, if you do, a Ctrl/Cmd-Z is all it takes to undo your mistake.

Utah National Parks Map with Layers in the Correct Order

6. Set the Colors of Your Custom Map Features in Adobe Illustrator

All right, we’re almost there. All that’s left is to set the colors of our map features. And thankfully, that’s an easy, straightforward task. On the map, hold down the Shift key and click on all of the features you want to color to select them. To set the color, go to the properties tab and set the fill and stroke colors. You can also add opacity to each feature if you wish. On the Utah National Parks map, we left the opacity at 100% for all features.

Utah National Parks map after coloring the parks white and removing the fill from the Utah boundary

Congratulations, you’re all done! You should have a final map that looks similar to the one below.

Conclusion

Creating a custom map in Adobe Illustrator is a fantastic way to increase brand awareness. And now, you’re completely ready to take the next big step into the world of map animation. You’ll learn all about that in the next installment of this series.

Additionally, custom maps are much easier to read and will put you leaps and bounds ahead of your competitors who are still using Google Maps. They’ll also make you look way more professional. Are you ready to get started with your own custom, branded maps? Get in touch with us today and get started with a free info session.

Top Photos: Hoodoos in the Late Afternoon Sun
Bryce Canyon National Park, Utah – May, 2017

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How to Import Shapefiles into Adobe Illustrator https://blog.matthewgove.com/2022/06/03/how-to-import-shapefiles-into-adobe-illustrator/ Fri, 03 Jun 2022 15:00:00 +0000 https://blog.matthewgove.com/?p=4744 GIS software is an incredibly powerful tool for displaying data on a map. However, they have their limits. And content creators often push well beyond those limits. Thankfully, Adobe Illustrator can help fill that void for creators that GIS programs, which are geared towards a much more technical audience, leave […]

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GIS software is an incredibly powerful tool for displaying data on a map. However, they have their limits. And content creators often push well beyond those limits. Thankfully, Adobe Illustrator can help fill that void for creators that GIS programs, which are geared towards a much more technical audience, leave behind. Today, you’re going to learn how to import GIS shapefiles into Adobe Illustrator. Not only will this enhance your professional brand, but also put you leaps and bounds ahead of the crowds that are still using Google Maps.

Which begs the question…why are so many people still using Google Maps screenshots in their videos, presentations, and other content? Yes, Google Maps is an incredible tool, but they were not designed to be used in videos and presentations. Worst of all, they tend to flash on the screen for such a short time that it’s next to impossible to tell where you are, where you’re going, or what you’re doing. In which of the following maps can you locate Utah’s “Big 5” National Parks faster?

Using Branded, Custom Maps Really Makes You Stand Out From the Crowds Still Using Google Maps

Creating custom maps in Adobe Illustrator can fix all of that. Put your own branding and style on the map. Remove everything that’s not relevant to the story you’re trying to tell. Give it a breathtaking design. Make it uniquely you. It’s such an easy way to look very professional and really stand apart from everyone still using Google Maps.

Finally, and best of all, you don’t have to spend a fortune to achieve incredible results with your maps. In this tutorial, the only thing you’ll need to pay for is Adobe Illustrator. Everything else is available free of charge. Let’s go.

What is a Shapefile?

A shapefile is simply a geospatial vector data format. Vector data formats in GIS and mapping applications are incredibly fast and efficient because of their small file size. You can put an enormous amount of data into a pretty small file, which also makes vector data formats ideal for web-based applications.

ESRI originally created the shapefile for its ArcView GIS software back in the early 1990’s. Today, shapefiles are widely used and nearly universally supported throughout the GIS world. However, I do want to point out that despite their widespread use, they are still a proprietary format. As a result, if you prefer open source file formats, I recommend using either GeoJSON or CSV to store your data. Both can be used as vector formats and you can import them into Adobe Illustrator using the same method we’ll use for shapefiles below.

Shapefiles exist for just about every type of feature out there. You can store data as points, lines, or polygons. Indeed, I’ve used them for everything, including severe weather warnings, road trip routes, National Park boundaries, and much more. Because of their widespread availability, both ESRI and government entities (federal, state/province, and local) maintain extensive databases of shapefiles. If you can’t find what you’re looking for there, you should be able to find it with a quick Google search. While this tutorial only uses the geometry of the shapefiles, you can easily add your own data either directly into the shapefile or through region mapping.

Shapefiles of the State of Utah and its “Big 5” National Parks Open in QGIS

Why Import Shapefiles into Adobe Illustrator?

If you’re just looking to plot data on a map, then by all means, a GIS program is the best way to go. However, GIS programs definitely have their limits. That’s where Adobe Illustrator comes in. When you import your shapefiles into Adobe Illustrator, you get much finer control over the final map design and look. The end result is a much more polished and professional-looking map, especially if you’re putting them into videos or presentations.

Furthermore, Adobe Illustrator provides the bridge to animating your maps. If you’re a content creator or giving a presentation, fully animated maps will put you in a class above your competition who are still using screenshots of Google Maps in their videos and presentations. Don’t believe me? Have a look at the maps below. Which one is easier to identify the “Big 5” National Parks in southern Utah?

While GIS software does support the bare basics for animation, you can make far more powerful animations even just using Illustrator itself. However, to unlock its full potential, you’ll need to use something like Adobe After Effects.

Click Play to See an Example of a Custom Map I made in Adobe Illustrator and Animated in After Effects

Unfortunately, animation is a topic for another day. We’ll cover that in a future tutorial. Let’s get back to learning how to import shapefiles into Adobe Illustrator.

1. Download and Install QGIS, a Free GIS Program

As a content creator myself, I know how critical it is to keep the cost of doing business to a minimum. And as a GIS specialist, I also know how expensive some proprietary GIS software can be. As a result, I’ve designed this tutorial so that the only piece of software you need to pay for is Adobe Illustrator.

If you’ve used ESRI’s ArcGIS before, you may be aware that Arc has an “Export to Illustrator” option built into it. That will export your shapefiles directly into a .ai Adobe Illustrator file. However, the desktop version of Arc also costs a bare minimum of $700 per year to use. Instead, we’ll use QGIS for this tutorial. QGIS is open source and, best of all, completely free. And unlike Arc, it runs on MacOS, Windows, and Linux. You can download QGIS here.

2. Prepare Your Shapefiles in QGIS

Before we can import our shapefiles into Adobe Illustrator, we first need to prepare them in QGIS. Using QGIS will ensure that each feature appears on your map in its proper location. You can try to eyeball the correct location once it’s all imported into Illustrator, but trust me, that never ends well.

Create a New Project in QGIS

First, you’ll need to create a new project in QGIS into which you’ll load your shapefiles. You’ll also need to change the default map projection, which will prevent your shapefiles from becoming distorted.

First, open QGIS and select Project > New Project. This will open a blank project. Then, in the bottom right, click on the text that says “EPSG:4326”. QGIS will open a window so you can select a new projection.

In the search bar, search for “Pseudo-Mercator”. You’ll likely see multiple results returned. Select the result labeled “EPSG:3857”.

Click OK to confirm your changes. The text in the bottom right should change from “EPSG:4326” to “EPSG:3857”.

Finally, if you want to include a basemap to confirm your features are both properly projected and in the correct location, double click on the OpenStreetMap option in the browser on the left-hand side of your QGIS dashboard. Please note that you should only use the basemap should a reference and never import it into Adobe Illustrator with the rest of your shapefiles.

Load Your Shapefiles into QGIS

When you prep your shapefiles in QGIS for import into Adobe Illustrator, you can include as many or as few as you want. When you export them to Adobe Illustrator, they’ll all get exported as a single-layer entity, so you don’t need to worry about keeping track of a ton of layers.

Adding shapefiles to your QGIS project is easy.

  1. Select Layer > Add Layer > Add Vector Layer from the top menu. A window will open.
  2. Under the “Source” section, you’ll see an input labeled “Vector Dataset(s)”. Click on the three dots to the right of the text input.
  3. Navigate to the folder with your shapefiles and select all the shapefiles you wish to load into QGIS. You only need to select files with the .shp extension.
  4. Click the “Add” button at the bottom of the window to add them to your QGIS project.
  5. Repeat steps 2-5 until all of your shapefiles are loaded into QGIS.
  6. Close the window.

Once everything is loaded into QGIS, make sure that all of the features in the shapefiles that you want to import into Adobe Illustrator are visible. You may need to re-arrange the layers in the Layers panel on the left hand side if you can’t see something.

Finally, hide any features or sublayers in the shapefiles that you do not want to import into Adobe Illustrator. Simply uncheck the feature in the Layers panel to hide it. If you need finer control for removing an individual item, you can easily do that once we import it into Illustrator.

Don’t Worry About Appearance in QGIS

Don’t worry about what the map looks like in QGIS. There’s no need to adjust colors, line thicknesses, or anything else. We’ll do that in Illustrator. Adobe Illustrator gives you much better and finer control over the look of the map than QGIS does. The one exception would be if two features are blocking each other and you need to remove the fill of one so you can see the other.

Finally, if you’ve used a basemap, uncheck it from the layers panel on the left to hide it. The basemap will create all kinds of headaches if you import it into Illustrator. Alternatively, if you’re having issues with white features on a white background in QGIS, just change the background color. You can easily delete that solid background once you get it into Illustrator.

To change the background color, follow these steps.

  1. In the top menu, select Project > Properties. A window will open.
  2. Click on the “General” tab in the upper-left.
  3. In the fourth row down from the top, click on the white box to the right of “Background color” and select the background color you wish.

3. Create a Layout in QGIS to Easily Export Your Shapefiles into Adobe Illustrator

First, zoom and pan the map in your QGIS project to the exact level and position you want to display it in Illustrator. It doesn’t need to be exact, but you should include a little more than you intend to use. It’s easy to clip off the extra after importing the map into Illustrator.

Once your map is zoomed and positioned correctly, it’s time to create a layout so you can export it out of QGIS. In the top menu, select Project > New Print Layout. Follow the prompts to create your new layout. For best results, make sure the layout size is set to either US Letter or A4. Then click the “Add Map” button on the left-hand side.

Finally, click and drag your map so it fills the blank layout. You should see your map appear. If you didn’t get the entire page filled, simply click and drag each corner of the map out to the corners of the blank layout.

Congratulations, you’re ready to export your map out of QGIS. Don’t close the layout window just yet, because you’ll still need it in the next step.

4. Export Your QGIS Layout into SVG Format

Scalable Vector Graphics, or SVG, is an open-source XML-based framework for defining two-dimensional scalable vector images. It’s the most common type of vector image used in web-based applications today. The main advantage of vector images is that they can be scaled infinitely up or down without losing quality or becoming pixelated. As a result, you can cram a huge amount of data into a very small file. And best of all, Illustrator can automatically convert your .svg image into its default .ai format on import.

To export your shapefiles into .svg format, go back to your layout window. In the top window of the layout window (not the main QGIS dashboard), select File > Export Image as SVG. Follow the prompts to save the .svg file to your local hard drive.

SVG File Exported from QGIS Opened in a Web Browser

One thing to be aware of is that QGIS may give you a warning about some SVG’s not being exported correctly. I have not had any issues with SVG exports, but if your SVG’s do not export correctly, simply export your shapefiles as a .pdf file instead. In the layout window, select File > Export Image as PDF. PDF files are also a vector format, and you follow the exact same steps to import everything into Illustrator, regardless of whether your file is an SVG or PDF.

If you encounter this warning, continue exporting your SVG. It will more likely than not export just fine.

5. Place Your Exported SVG File into Illustrator

All right, we’re almost there. All that’s left to do is to import our shapefiles (in SVG/PDF format) into Adobe Illustrator. Once that’s done, let your creative side take over and have some fun.

First, open Adobe Illustrator and create a new file. You can use any size artboard you want. However, because I create these maps for use in my travel videos, I’ll use a 4K (3840×2160) artboard.

Second, create a new layer that will hold only your SVG file. Putting the SVG file into its own layer allows us to filter, parse, and extract specific elements of the SVG file into our Illustrator project. Then, once we’ve extracted everything, all we have to do is delete or hide the SVG layer to remove all of the extras.

Linking vs. Embedding Images in Adobe Illustrator

When you import any kind of image into Adobe Illustrator, you can choose whether to embed the file in Illustrator or just link to it. Linking the image file means that Illustrator will reference it from wherever it is on your computer. If you move or delete the image, it will disappear from your Illustrator project. Embedding, on the other hand, copies the image into Illustrator and saves it as part of the .ai file. That way, if you move or delete the original image file, it will still be in your Illustrator project.

Because your exported shapefile vectors are so small, I highly recommend you embed the SVG into Illustrator. Embedding the SVG into Illustrator is easy and straightforward.

  1. In the top menu, select File > Place.
  2. Navigate to the SVG File you exported from QGIS. Click “Add”.
  3. Click anywhere in your Illustrator window to place the SVG.
Your map will likely not look terribly glorious when you first import it into Adobe Illustrator

You should now see the SVG file that you exported from QGIS. However, it’s probably not in the right place in the Illustrator window, nor is it scaled correctly.

A Note on Moving and Scaling Your SVG File in Adobe Illustrator

Adobe Illustrator automatically separates the features in your SVG file to mirror the original shapefile. That’s a good thing, as it makes incredibly easy to separate out each element in Illustrator. However, if you’re not careful, you can easily move or scale features of your map out of place. Thankfully, it doesn’t take much to prevent things from moving out of place.

The easiest way to move or scale the SVG as a whole is to lock all of the other layers first. Because the SVG is in its own layer, then all we have to do is just hit Control + A on Windows or Command + A on a Mac to select all. With the other layers being locked, you’ve selected your entire SVG file without bothering anything else in the Illustrator file.

Second, make sure you hold down the Shift key when scaling the SVG. Doing so maintains the aspect ratio of the SVG. Without it, your map will become distorted and misshapen.

Positioning Your Map in Adobe Illustrator

it’s best to center your map in your Illustrator project, filling as much of the artboard as possible. However, make sure you leave room, particularly at the top, for any titles, headers, labels, and legends you would like to include.

At this point, it’s still perfectly fine if parts of the map extend beyond the boundaries of the artboard. We’ll delete those parts in the next section. And remember, you’re working with vectors, so you can infinitely scale them up or down without losing quality or pixelating.

6. Organize the components of the SVG into Layers in Adobe Illustrator

Depending on what you’re using the Illustrator map for, this can be one layer or many. It’s entirely up to you. However, do note that if you’re animating the map, every individual item or group of items that you’ll be animating as a single unit needs to be in their own layer. In other words, you can’t animate pieces of a layer. You can only animate the whole layer.

Additionally, if you have roads or routes on your map, make sure that you join the pieces of each route together so the route can be a single entity on the map. Having a route in several pieces can be an absolute nightmare if you’re trying to animate it. But even if it’s just going to be static, it’s still much easier to manage a single route than several pieces of it. To join paths in Illustrator, select each element of the paths you want to join and go to Object > Path > Join.

How to Extract SVG Components into Adobe Illustrator Layers

  1. Click the New Layer button on the bottom right of the Illustrator window to create a new layer.
  2. Go through the components of the SVG layer and find the ones you want to extract. This may take some trial and error by showing and hiding each piece.
  3. In the Layers panel in Illustrator, click and drag that component from the SVG layer to the new layer.
  4. Adjust the line width, colors, fills, strokes, opacities, etc. to set the final look or design of the feature you just moved.
  5. Add any features to the layer that were not in the SVG file. These are most often the feature labels you can add with Illustrator’s text tool.
  6. Repeat steps 1 through 5 for each feature layer you wish to create.
The Utah “Big 5” National Parks in Illustrator After Being Extracted From the SVG File

When you finish extracting the SVG components you’re using in your Illustrator map, there will likely still be features left over in the SVG layer that you’re not using. Putting the SVG file in its own layer makes it very easy to clean up the leftovers. If you know you’re not going to be using anything else in the SVG layer, you can go ahead and delete the layer. On the other hand, if you know you’re going to be using the leftovers or are not sure, simply hide the SVG layer so you can access it later.

Conclusion

Being able to export ESRI shapefiles into Adobe Illustrator opens up a whole new set of opportunities for content creators, artists, and other creatives to use maps. Creating professional branded, elegant, and easy-to-read maps in Adobe Illustrator will put you leaps and bounds ahead of the masses that are still using screenshots of Google Maps in their videos and presentations.

In the next tutorial, learn how to transform the extracted layers above into this.

In future tutorials, we’ll go over how to put the full Illustrator files together like you see in my travel videos. Then, learn how to animate your maps using both Adobe Illustrator and After Effects. In the meantime, we’d love to help you get started with your creative maps and animations. Please get in touch with us today to discuss your project and how we can bring your mapping visions to life.

Top Image: Warm Later Afternoon Light Provides a Dramatic Contrast Against Grey Winter Skies
Canyonlands National Park, Utah – December, 2021

The post How to Import Shapefiles into Adobe Illustrator appeared first on Matthew Gove Blog.

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Weird Geography: 10 Bizarre and Unusual Facts About the United States https://blog.matthewgove.com/2022/04/29/weird-geography-10-bizarre-and-unusual-facts-about-the-united-states/ Fri, 29 Apr 2022 15:00:00 +0000 https://blog.matthewgove.com/?p=4312 As the fourth largest country in the world, the United States has no shortage of weird, bizarre, and unusual geography. Like France, the United States has territories scattered throughout the world. Even without the territories, Alaska and Hawaii give you plenty of fodder for weird geography. From the hustle and […]

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As the fourth largest country in the world, the United States has no shortage of weird, bizarre, and unusual geography. Like France, the United States has territories scattered throughout the world. Even without the territories, Alaska and Hawaii give you plenty of fodder for weird geography. From the hustle and bustle of New York and LA to the remotest outposts on America’s farthest frontiers, let’s look at some of the most unusual and downright bizarre facts about American geography.

1. Contrary to Popular Belief, Maine is not the Easternmost State in the United States

If you want to see the first sunlight in the United States, you have to head to Maine, right? Well, not quite. While Maine is certainly easy and convenient to get to, it’s doesn’t see the day’s first sunrise in the United States. For that, you paradoxically have to go west. So far west, in fact, that you actually go east.

Fall Colors in Western Maine – October, 2015

So where is the United States’ first sunrise? Believe it or not, it’s actually in Alaska. And it’s not in the main part of Alaska, either. You have to venture to the westernmost parts of the Aleutian Islands. Because those islands stretch so far west, they actually stretch into the Eastern Hemisphere. Excluding territories, the Aleutian Islands are the only part of the United States located in the Eastern Hemisphere. That means you’ll see not just the first sunrise in the United States, but one of the first sunrises in the entire world.

And Alaska’s claims don’t stop there.

2. Alaska is the Easternmost, Westernmost, and Northernmost State in the United States

At the eastern end of Semisopochnoi Island in the Aleutians, you’ll find the easternmost point in the United States (179.777°E). Interestingly, Semisopochnoi Island is actually closer to Russia than the main part of Alaska. But it’s far from the closest point to Russia. That belongs to Little Diomede Island in the Bering Strait. Little Diomede sits just 2.5 miles (4 km) from Big Diomede, it’s Russian counterpart, despite a 21-hour time difference between the two islands.

Only 65 miles (105 km) to the southeast of Semisopochnoi Island, you’ll find the westernmost point in the United States in the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge (179.143°W). Consisting of several uninhabited islands, the refuge is one of the most remote outposts on America’s northern frontier. But you can go further. The furthest, westernmost, and remotest post in the Aleutian Islands is Attu Station. At 172°E, Attu Station sits just 475 miles (770 km) from Ust’-Kamchatsk (Усть-Камчатск) on the Russian mainland. That’s a stark difference from the 1,500 miles (2,400 km) you’d have to travel to return to Anchorage.

Thankfully, things are much less complicated if you look north and south. It’s pretty clear that Alaska is the northernmost state in the United States. The town of Utqiagvik, which was formerly called Barrow, is the northernmost town in the United States. At 71.18 °N, it’s also one of the northernmost towns in the world. Only Canada, Russia, Norway, and Greenland have population centers further north.

And for the southernmost state…

3. Key West is not the Southernmost Point in the United States

While it’s true that Key West is the southernmost point in the Lower 48, it’s not even close to being the southernmost point in the United States. For that, you’ll need to look six degrees of latitude further south and a long way west. At the southern tip of Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, you’ll find Ka Lae, the actual southernmost point in the United States.

Additionally, if you include territories, you can go a lot further south. The southernmost point in a US territory is located at the Rose Atoll in American Samoa. The tiny island covers just 0.21 square kilometers and reaches latitudes of 14.6°S.

Southernmost PointLatitude
Key West, Florida24.55°N
Ka Lae, Hawaii18.55°N
Rose Atoll, American Samoa14.6°S

4. Los Angeles County Has a Larger Population than 41 States

It’s hard to believe, but Los Angeles County does actually have a larger population than 41 states. With a population of 10.04 million as of 2019, LA County is by far the most populous county in the United States.

And what are those 9 states that have a larger population? Here they are, ranked by population.

State2020 Population
California39.613 million
Texas29.730 million
Florida21.944 million
New York19.299 million
Pennsylvania12.804 million
Illinois12.569 million
Ohio11.714 million
Georgia10.830 million
North Carolina10.701 million
Los Angeles County10.014 million

5. You Can Get on a Plane in Anchorage, Alaska and Be Anywhere in the Northern Hemisphere in Less Than 10 Hours

Amazingly, Anchorage is the only city in the world that can lay claim to this fact, even if you include the equivalent in the Southern Hemisphere. So what makes Anchorage so special? First, it has a major international airport that processes most cargo and many passengers bound for the United States from east Asia.

Not only does Anchorage have a major international airport, but it’s also the closest major international airport to either pole. Anchorage’s proximity to the North Pole makes it very quick and easy to fly over the pole to reach the other side of the world.

Consider an “over-the-pole” flight from New York City to Tokyo or Beijing. At the very minimum, you’re looking at 13 to 14 hours of total flight time. That’s because half of that time is spent getting from New York up to the pole.

When you start in Anchorage, you’re already most of the way to the pole. As a result, a direct flight from Anchorage to Frankfurt, Germany covers basically the same distance as a flight from Boston to Los Angeles.

Flight LegDistance (mi)Distance (km)
Anchorage to Frankfurt2,8954,659
Boston to Los Angeles2,6114,202

6. Maine is a Particular Geographic Oddity

The state of Maine is best-known for its rugged outdoors, diverse wildlife, and world-famous seafood. However, being wedged between New Hampshire, Québec, and New Brunswick means that it’s got its fair share of geographic oddities.

  • Maine is the closest US State to Africa. Quoddy Head, Maine sits just 3,154 miles from El Beddouzza, Morocco. For comparison, Florida is more than 4,000 miles from its nearest point on the African continent.
  • If you take a road trip through the Lower 48, passing through each state only once, you always end in Maine. That’s because Maine is the only state in the continental United States that borders only one other state.
  • More French is spoken in Maine than any state in the United States. When French explorers landed in eastern Canada back in the 1600’s, many of them settled in what is present-day Maine. Their descendants are still there today. It doesn’t hurt bordering two French-speaking Canadian provinces, either.
  • Maine is the single largest producer of blueberries in the United States.
  • Nobody knows how Maine got its name. All they know is that the name first appeared in writing in 1622.
  • Despite the mystery behind its name, Maine was part of Massachusetts until 1819.
  • Maine is larger than the other 5 New England States combined.
  • If you visited one island per day, it would take you more than 9 years to visit every island in Maine
  • At 3,478 miles, Maine’s coastline is longer than California’s (3,427 miles)
  • Maine is home to the only desert in New England (40 acres outside Freeport). It formed 11,000 years ago, when a glacier deposited large amounts of sand on the site.
  • Portland, Oregon is named after Portland, Maine. The Oregon city’s name was decided on a coin toss between Portland and Boston.

7. The United States is Home to the Shortest River in the World

The Roe River in Montana is only 200 feet long. That’s a stark contrast to the Missouri (2,341 miles) and Mississippi (2,202 miles), the United States’ two longest rivers.

8. Nebraska is the Only Triply Landlocked State in the United States

A triply landlocked state means that you have to pass through at least three other states (and/or Canadian Provinces) to reach the ocean. Nebraska is the only state in the United States that can make the claim of being triply landlocked. Don’t believe me? Have a look at some of its neighbors. Do note that in the table below, there may be more than one way to reach the ocean. The table lists the fewest states you need to pass through to reach the ocean.

StateStates to Pass Through to Reach the Ocean
NebraskaKansas, Oklahoma, Texas
South DakotaNorth Dakota, Manitoba
WyomingIdaho, Oregon
ColoradoOklahoma, Texas
KansasOklahoma, Texas
IowaMinnesota, Ontario
MissouriArkansas, Louisiana

9. Hawaii’s Mauna Kea is Taller Than Mt. Everest

The summit of Mauna Kea is only 13,796 feet above sea level, less than half the elevation of Everest’s summit (29,032 feet). However, Mauna Kea extends deep into the depths of the Pacific Ocean, while Everest is completely landlocked. The Pacific Ocean has a mean depth of over 14,000 feet, and the Hawaiian Trough reaches an average depth of over 18,000 feet.

As a result, when you account for the underwater part of Mauna Kea, it’s much taller than what you see on the Big Island in Hawaii. Mauna Kea is actually 32,808 feet tall, surpassing the height of Mt. Everest, despite the stark difference in elevation at each respective summits.

10. The Statue of Liberty Should Be in New Jersey, not New York

When you think of New York City, the Statue of Liberty is probably one of the first things that comes to mind. Lady Liberty is so quintessentially New York. But did you know that she should actually be in New Jersey, not New York?

When France gifted the Statue of Liberty to the United States in 1885, the US Geological Survey placed Liberty Island in New York’s 8th Congressional District. However, when you look at a map, you’ll see the Statue of Liberty is actually in New Jersey Waters. Regardless of what the state line says, the statue remains part of both the State and the City of New York.

Bonus: America’s Four Most Sprawling Cities Are All in Alaska

Alaska’s large size and small population means that its cities and towns have plenty of room to spread out. Indeed, Alaska has one of the lowest population densities in the United States. What surprises most people is that Alaska is home to the country’s four most sprawling cities.

From a strictly surface area to population ratio, the Alaskan Cities sprawl far more than Los Angeles, Phoenix, Houston, and every other major city in the Lower 48. For example, the City of Juneau is larger than Rhode Island and Delaware combined. And the winner, Yakutat, is larger than eight other states.

CitySurface Area (sq mi)Population
Anchorage, AK1,704294,356
Wrangell, AK2,5412,521
Juneau, AK2,71732,094
Sitka, AK2,8748,689
Yakutat, AK9,459605
Los Angeles, CA5033,967,000
Phoenix, AZ5171,633,000

Bonus #2: You Can Get a Taste for Driving on the Left Side of the Road Without Leaving the United States. Just Head to the U.S. Virgin Islands.

It’s incredibly rare for a state or territory to drive on the opposite side of the road from its parent country. But the United States has one. The other country that boasts a few of them is the United Kingdom.

The US Virgin Islands is the only jurisdiction in the United States where you drive on the left. But unlike other locations that drive on the left, most cars in the USVI are imported from the mainland US, and still have the steering wheel on the left side of the car.

The United States purchased the Virgin Islands from Denmark in 1917. At the time, traffic in Denmark drove on the left. To keep the islands’ residents happy and prevent animosity towards the US, the federal government kept traffic in the Virgin Islands on the left side of the road.

While Denmark switched to driving on the right in 1967, along with much of the rest of Europe, the Virgin Islands never did. To this day, the US Virgin Islands continues to drive on the left. For what it’s worth, so do the British Virgin Islands.

Conclusion

Whether you’re trying to figure out how to drive on the left in the Virgin Islands or trying to catch the day’s first sunrise at its easternmost point in Alaska, the United States has plenty of geographic quirks and oddities to explore. But we’re just scratching the surface here. The US is a big country, and I could easily write another whole post or two about its weird geography. Have you been experienced any of the United States’ weird geography in your travels? Let us know in the comments below.

Top Photo: Afternoon Sun Illuminates a Beautiful Canyon Landscape
Canyonlands National Park, Utah – December, 2021

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How to Geotag Your Photos in Adobe Lightroom Without a Built-in GPS https://blog.matthewgove.com/2022/04/22/how-to-geotag-your-photos-in-adobe-lightroom-without-a-built-in-gps/ https://blog.matthewgove.com/2022/04/22/how-to-geotag-your-photos-in-adobe-lightroom-without-a-built-in-gps/#comments Fri, 22 Apr 2022 15:00:00 +0000 https://blog.matthewgove.com/?p=4270 As both a GIS professional and digital nomad, being able to geotag photos is critical to staying organized. With travel photography, you need to be able to search by both date and location, at the very least. But believe it or not, I’ve never owned a camera with a built-in […]

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As both a GIS professional and digital nomad, being able to geotag photos is critical to staying organized. With travel photography, you need to be able to search by both date and location, at the very least. But believe it or not, I’ve never owned a camera with a built-in GPS. Today, I want to teach you how to geotag your photos in Adobe Lightroom without having a built-in GPS. And best of all, this method is infinitely scalable. It requires just one GPS and the same minimal effort regardless if you’re shooting with one camera or a thousand.

An Introduction to the Lightroom Map Area

Adobe Lightroom comes with a really nice map interface to browse, explore, and view your photos. Unfortunately, if your photos aren’t geotagged, the feature is worthless.

Map in Adobe Lightroom Showing a Subset of Geotagged Photos I Took on a Recent Trip to Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming

Lightroom’s map feature lets you browse, explore, and view your photos and videos on an interactive map. You can also easily edit and geotag your photos from the map, as well as create collections, tag keywords, and much more.

Are You One of the Many Travel Photographers Struggling to Geotag Your Photos in Lightroom Without a Built-in GPS?

If your photos and videos are already geotagged when you import them into Lightroom, the map gets set up automatically. However, many cameras still don’t have built-in GPS. You can buy a GPS adaptor to mount to the top of your camera, but they come with plenty of drawbacks. First, with a GPS mounted to the top of your camera, you won’t be able to mount a flash or a mic there. And what if you have multiple cameras? At $200-300 a pop, the cost of outfitting each camera with a GPS unit can snowball out of control incredibly fast.

Alternatively, you can use a smartphone app that your camera manufacturer makes. When you snap a picture, the app uses the GPS in your phone to record the location and sends it to your camera over bluetooth. While I have not used these apps much, be aware that smartphones usually disable the GPS when it’s not actively in use to conserve battery. Unfortunately, if you phone’s GPS goes into standby or sleep mode during a photo shoot, it will often send the last location the GPS registered, which may not necessarily be your current location. As a result, many people have complained that these apps are not accurate or reliable for geotagging photos and videos.

So where do you go from here? This is where my method comes in. This method is by no means anything bleeding edge or earth-shattering. In fact, a quick Google search will reveal that it’s widely used throughout the photography and filmmaking industries. And best of all, it only requires one GPS regardless of how many cameras you have. However, there are still a few places it can trip you up. As a result, I want to use my background in GIS and data science to make sure that you fully understand both what the data is and what you’re doing with it. You unfortunately won’t find that in many other tutorials.

How to Use Handheld GPS (or Smartphone) to Geotag Your Photos and Videos in Adobe Lightroom

The strategy to geotag photos in Adobe Lightroom without a built-in GPS is staggeringly simple. While you’re out on your photo or video shoot, use a handheld GPS to record your movement. Then, in post-production match the timestamp on the GPS track to the timestamp on your camera to get the latitude and longitude coordinates for the geotag. Once you add the latitude and longitude to the metadata, Lightroom will automatically look up and add the city, state/province, and country that correspond to those coordinates.

I use a simple handheld GPS to log my adventures in GPX files

Software You’ll Need

The only software you need to geotag your photos without a built-in GPS is Adobe Lightroom itself. Additionally, depending on what GPS and computer models you’re using, you may need additional software to pull the track off the GPS. If you have a Garmin GPS, don’t worry. All of their software is available free of charge. For example, my handheld GPS uses Garmin’s Basecamp software to offload the track data. On the other hand, the GPS I use in the car mounts like an external hard drive, so I can copy the track to my local disk using the Finder or File Explorer.

The track files you pull off your GPS are stored in GPS Exchange, or GPX format. GPX is an open source, non-proprietary file that stores GPS data for software applications. Data is stored in XML format, which is light-weight and usable in both desktop and web-based applications. In addition to latitude/longitude coordinates and timestamps, GPX files can also store speed, elevation, waypoints, routes, points of interest, and much more.

You can view GPX files in numerous desktop and web-based applications, ranging from Google Maps to QGIS and ArcMap to even the Matt Gove Photo maps. However, for the purpose of geotagging photos, the easiest application to view your GPX files is actually Lightroom. You can preview your track right in the Lightroom map before you geotag your photos.

Previewing a GPX File from my adventure in Wyoming last February in Adobe Lightroom

Sync the Clocks on Your GPS and Camera Before You Head Out in the Field

Before you head out for your shoot, your single most important task is to sync the clocks between your handheld GPS and each camera you’ll be using. If the clocks are not synced, your photos and videos will not be geotagged in the correct location.

If your travels keep you confined to a single time zone, feel free to sync everything to your local time zone. However, if your travels take you across multiple time zones, you should sync all of your devices to UTC. Also called Zulu Time, UTC is the modern standard that the world uses to regulate time. It differs from Greenwich Mean Time (GMT), as GMT is based on the Earth’s rotation, while the more accurate UTC is based on the atomic measurements.

If your camera or GPS does not offer UTC as a time zone, set it to London (make sure daylight savings is off) or Iceland. In addition, Dakar, the capital of Senegal, is on UTC year-round.

One of my cameras set to UTC using London’s Time Zone with Daylight Savings Disabled
Time ZoneWinter OffsetSummer Offset
NewfoundlandUTC – 3:30UTC – 2:30
AtlanticUTC – 4UTC – 3
EasternUTC – 5UTC – 4
CentralUTC – 6UTC – 5
MountainUTC – 7UTC – 6
PacificUTC – 8UTC – 7
AlaskaUTC – 9UTC – 8
HawaiiUTC – 10UTC – 10
U.S. and Canada Time Zone Offsets from UTC, from East to West

Once you get out in the field where you’ll be shooting, simply turn on your handheld GPS and throw it in your bag, or put it somewhere that will be out of the way, but with you all day. Make sure the batteries are all charged at the beginning of the day. Finally, don’t forget to carry a spare set of batteries if you’re expecting a lengthy shoot.

Add Location Data in Post-Production in Adobe Lightroom

Now that your shoot is finished, it’s time to geotag your photos and videos in Lightroom. Before we get started, though, there’s another important note about time zones that if not done correctly, will result in your photos not being geotagged correctly.

A Word of Caution About Time Zones in GPX Data vs EXIF Camera Metadata

If you’ve synced your GPS and cameras to UTC, be aware of the difference in how GPX files handle time zones vs the camera’s EXIF metadata. GPX files have the time zone embedded in them. EXIF metadata records the time in the time zone that your camera is set to, but does not actually record the time zone itself in the metadata. In other words, the GPX file sees the time stamp as “2022-04-11 15:21 UTC”, while the EXIF metadata in the camera only sees “2022-04-11 15:21”.

Why is this important, you ask? Because when you offload the GPX file to your computer, your computer automatically converts its timestamp back to local time. For example, let’s say I’m on the east coast of the US, which is 4 hours behind UTC. The computer all of a sudden now sees the GPX timestamp as “2022-04-11 11:21 EDT”, while it still sees the EXIF metadata as “2022-04-11 15:21” (which it incorrectly assumes is also EDT because the EXIF data does not include the time zone). If you try to sync your photos to the GPX track, they’ll all be four hours off!

Thankfully, re-aligning the time zones is incredibly easy in Adobe Lightroom. When you load the GPX file into Lightroom, it will ask you if you want to correct the time zone. If you’ve synced your cameras to UTC, simply take the UTC offset of your local timezone and reverse the sign. For example, if you’re on the US east coast, which is UTC-4, set the time zone correction to +4 hours. This tells Lightroom to add 4 hours to the “2022-04-11 11:21 EDT” GPX timestamp, syncing it back up with the “2022-04-11 15:21” timestamp on the camera.

Menu Option to Adjust the Time Zone of a GPX File in Lightroom

Still confused? If you don’t want to deal with having to adjust timezones in Lightroom, there’s an easy alternative. Simply set your computer’s time zone to UTC before you import anything into Lightroom. Once you’re finished geotagging your photos, set the time zone on your computer back to local time.

Import the GPX File and the Photos and Videos From Your Shoot into Lightroom

To import the GPX File into Lightroom, first open the map viewer. At the bottom of the window, you’ll see a bar to select the map style, a zoom slider, a lock, and a track button, which is circled in green below.

Click the track button and select “Load Tracklog” at the very top of the menu. Navigate to the tracklogs you just pulled off your GPS. Click OK to load them into Lightroom.

Now, you’ll set the time zone offset as we discussed in the previous section. If you’re working in your local time zone (or have set your computer’s time zone to UTC to match the camera and GPS), you don’t need to add any offset to the track. Remember, if you synced the camera and GPS to UTC, simply take the UTC offset of your local time zone and flip the sign. In other words, set the offset to +4 hours for Eastern Time (UTC-4) or +7 hours for Pacific Time (UTC-7). Click OK to confirm the time zone offset.

You should see the trackline from your adventure appear on the map. Do note that if Lightroom detects that your tracklog time zone does not appear to match the time zone of your photos, it will highlight the trackline log time in red. In that case, click the track button at the bottom and select “Set Time Zone Offset” to set the correct time zone.

GPX Track After Being Imported into Lightroom

Once you’ve confirmed that the track loaded correctly, then import your photos and videos just like you always have.

Geotag Your Photos in Lightroom with the Click of a Button

Now that both the track and your media are all in place, it’s time to geotag them in Lightroom. In the filmstrip at the bottom of the window, select the photos and videos you want to geotag. Then, click on the track button once again, and select “Auto-Tag XX Selected Photos”, where XX is the number of photos you selected.

Geotagging Images from the Columbia River Gorge in Oregon and Washington

You should see a bunch of points appear on your trackline. Hover over them and you’ll see your photos. If they’re not quite in the right position, you can drag them around to put them in the right place.

Geotagged Images from My Adventure at the Columbia River Gorge

Don’t Have a Handheld GPS? Use a Smartphone Instead.

If you don’t have a handheld GPS, there are plenty of smartphone apps out there to generate a GPX file of your adventure. In the past I’ve always used the AllTrails app, which is available for free for both Apple and Android devices. AllTrails is designed for hiking and biking, but you can use it to track any activity. Here are directions to export your track from the AllTrails app. Make sure you export it as a GPX track, and not a GPX route.

Alternate Methods to Geotag Your Photos in Lightroom without a Built-in GPS

While geotagging photos and videos in Adobe Lightroom using a GPX track is by far the easiest and most accurate way to add location data to your images and videos, it’s not the only way.

First off, Lightroom offers several ways to add location data manually. You can directly edit the metadata of your images directly in Lightroom, or use the map interface to geotag your images. You can find plenty of tutorials for manual geotagging with a quick Google search. For more information, here is Adobe’s official documentation.

Unfortunately, there are quite a few drawbacks to geotagging your images manually. While it works fine for a few photos, it’s impossible to scale up to large photo albums, collections, and libraries, unless you have a serious amount of both time and will to put into it.

You can also geotag your photos using Python. We’ll cover this in a future tutorial, but you can use Python’s Pillow library to add location to your images’ metadata. You’ll need to loop through your image files, add the appropriate location metadata (lat/long coordinates or city/state/country), and then save the files. Be aware that this can get very complicated if you have a lot of photos taken in a lot of different locations. However, unlike manually adding location data, using Python is infinitely scalable, both up and down.

Conclusion

Geotagging photos is a critical part of both the workflow and staying organized as a landscape and travel photographer. With so many cameras still lacking built-in GPS functionalities, it becomes even more critical to know how to geotag photos in Adobe Lightroom without built-in GPS. Using GPX track files is by far the best alternative to built-in GPS that’s out there. Except for a few spots time zones can trip you up, the method is foolproof, accurate, reliable, and only requires one GPS, regardless of how many cameras you have. In my book, though, the benefits of having a geotagged library far outweigh the occasional hiccup from a mislabeled time zone.

Interested in more of these tutorials? I’n addition to the blog entries, I’ll be posting them to YouTube and sending them out via our email newsletter as well. Please subscribe to our email newsletter and our YouTube channel for the latest tutorials, and get exclusive deals to our online store that are not available anywhere else.

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The Cyrillic Alphabet: A Fascinating Glimpse into the Russia-Ukraine War https://blog.matthewgove.com/2022/04/15/the-cyrillic-alphabet-a-fascinating-glimpse-into-the-russia-ukraine-war/ Fri, 15 Apr 2022 16:00:00 +0000 https://blog.matthewgove.com/?p=4227 When you see words written in the Cyrillic Alphabet, the Russian language is probably the first thing that comes to your mind. That makes sense, because after all, Russian by far the most widely-spoken language that uses the Cyrillic Alphabet. But the Cyrillic Alphabet goes far beyond Russian language and […]

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When you see words written in the Cyrillic Alphabet, the Russian language is probably the first thing that comes to your mind. That makes sense, because after all, Russian by far the most widely-spoken language that uses the Cyrillic Alphabet. But the Cyrillic Alphabet goes far beyond Russian language and culture. In fact, you’ll find it across a large swath of Europe and Asia. From Serbia and Montenegro to Ukraine in the west, and Tajikistan to Mongolia in the east, the Cyrillic Alphabet covers a vast expanse of the Slavic world.

A Brief History of the Cyrillic Alphabet

The Cyrillic Alphabet is actually one of the newer alphabets in the world today. It was developed in the 9th century during the First Bulgarian Empire. In contrast, we first saw the Latin Alphabet in the 7th Century BC, about 1,500 years earlier. While the Cyrillic Alphabet is named after Saint Cyril, historians continue to hotly debate whether Cyril himself or one of his students actually invented it.

Today, the Cyrillic Alphabet remains prevalent across the Slavic world. From central Europe to central Asia, you’ll find the Cyrillic states stretching from the Balkan states in Europe all the way to Mongolia. Not surprisingly, most Asian nations that use the Cyrillic Alphabet are former Soviet Union members.

Look to the Cyrillic Alphabet to Explain the Pull Between Russia and the West

Long before the war between Russia and Ukraine broke out, you could clearly see the tug between Russia and the west in eastern Europe. Just look at the languages of the Slavic nations in eastern Europe. Poland is the perfect example. Mieszko I, who ruled the Polans tribe during the 10th Century, created the Polish language specifically for the Cyrillic Alphabet. Unfortunately for him, most Poles were converting to Catholicism, while the Orthodox Church was responsible for spreading the Cyrillic Alphabet. As a result, the Polish Language adopted the Latin alphabet used in the Catholic Church instead.

In 1772, the Russian Empire seized about 80% of Poland-Lithuania, which encompassed much of what is today the Baltic States, Belarus, Poland, and Ukraine. Over the next 40-plus years, the Russians introduced a Polish Cyrillic, and relentlessly tried to “Cyrillify” Poland. The Catholics fiercely resisted because they did not want to convert to the Orthodox Church. As a result, the only way the Russians succeeded in introducing the Cyrillic Alphabet to Poland was to introduce the Russian language. In the 1970’s, the Soviet Union tried once more to get Poland to adopt the Cyrillic alphabet, but was again unsuccessful.

To this day, Polish remains one of the few Slavic Languages that never adopted the Cyrillic Alphabet. And geography continues to play a major role in that. On one hand, as a member of both NATO and the European Union, Poland’s strong ties to the west are undeniable. But on the other hand, it’s hard to not look east from a linguistics perspective. Would Polish be any easier or any better off using the Cyrillic Alphabet? The two are a seemingly perfect match, after all. But that’s for the historians and language scholars to debate.

The Cyrillic Alphabet’s Roots Lie in Greece

While Greece has never used it, that’s where you’ll find the Cyrillic Alphabet’s deep roots. The Cyrillic Alphabet solved numerous linguistics issues for the Slavic people living in central and eastern Europe between the 5th and 9th Centuries. At the time, they used the Greek alphabet, which presented one major problem. There were numerous phonetics – both written and oral – in Slavic languages that don’t exist in the Greek Alphabet. As a result, the Cyrillic Alphabet is essentially just the Greek Alphabet with a few added letters to cover those missing Slavic phonetics. Can you spot the similarities?

When I first learned the Cyrillic Alphabet, I had a deep knowledge of the Greek Alphabet, from both my background in mathematics and taking a year of Ancient Greek. If you already know the Greek Alphabet, learning Cyrillic is very easy. If you want to learn the Cyrillic Alphabet, I highly recommend learning the Greek Alphabet first. However, I must note that while I know the Cyrillic alphabet, I claim no knowledge of anything more than just the basics of any language that actually uses it.

Cyrillic Letters Derived Directly from the Greek Alphabet

NameGreek LetterCyrillic LetterLatin Equivalent
AlphaΑ αА аA a
BetaΒ βБ бB b
GammaΓ γГ гG g
DeltaΔ δД дD d
EpsilonΕ εЕ еE e
ZetaΖ ζЗ зZ z
EtaΗ ηNo Longer UsedH h
ThetaΘ θNoneTH / th
IotaΙ ιИ иI i
KappaΚ κК кK k
LambdaΛ λЛ лL l
MuΜ μМ мM m
NuΝ νН нN n
XiΞ ξNo Longer UsedKS / ks
OmicronΟ οО оO o
PiΠ πП пP p
RhoΡ ρР рR r
SigmaΣ σС сS s
TauΤ τТ тT t
UpsilonΥ υУ уU u
PhiΦ φФ фF f
ChiΧ χХ хKH / kh
PsiΨ ψNo Longer UsedPS / ps
OmegaΩ ωNo Longer UsedAW / aw

A Strategy for Learning the Cyrillic Alphabet

If you’re interested in learning the Cyrillic Alphabet, you should break it down into four steps. The first two are easy, but the second two are more of a challenge. Don’t fret, though. The Cyrillic Alphabet itself is very easy to learn. The languages that use it? Well, that’s a whole. different story.

First, start with the Cyrillic letters that both look and sound the same as their counterparts in the Latin Alphabet and in English. Then, learn the Cyrillic letters that are directly imported from the Greek Alphabet.

CategoryCyrillic Letters
Look and Sound the Same as Englishа, е, о, м, т, к
Imported Directly from Greekг, х, ф, п, р, л, з, б

Now that you have a base established, then you can jump into the trickier letters. We’ll start with the letters that look like Latin letters, bur are not. When I first learned the Cyrillic Alphabet, I kept wanting to pronounce these like their Latin counterparts. Once you can break through that barrier, you’re pretty much there.

Cyrillic LetterLatin Equivalent Letter or Pronunciation
У уThe letter “U”. Pronounced like the U in Ukraine
Н нThe letter “N”
В вThe letter “V”
Я яMakes a “ya” sound, like “yard” or the Spanish word “playa”
С сThe letter “S”
И иThe letter “i”. Pronounced “ee” like tree or “i” like sit.
Ь ьSoft sign. Written after a consonant and indicates a softening or palatalization of that consonant.

The Trickier Letters of the Cyrillic Alphabet

Finally, finish up with the Cyrillic letters that were added for Slavic phonetics. Hopefully these letters won’t be too hard to learn, as they bear little to no resemblance to anything in either the Greek or Latin alphabets.

Cyrillic LetterLatin Equivalent or Pronunciation
Й йThe letter “Y”. Pronounced like the Y in boy
Ц цMakes a “TS” sound, like the words tsar or bits
Ш шMakes a hard “SH” sound, like in shrimp or push
Щ щMakes a softer “SH” or “SCH” sound, like shoes or Schengen
Ы ыNo English equivalent. Falls right between the “ee” of feet and the “oo” of boot
Ж жA “ZH” sound that’s a cross between Z and J, such as pleasure or measure. Pronounced the same way as the “zh” in Guangzhou or Shenzhen.
Э эMakes a short “e” sound, like in bet, pen, or edit
Ч чMakes a “CH” sound, like the word church
Ю юPronounced the same way as the english word “you”

Most Slavic Languages Add Their Own Letters to the Cyrillic Alphabet

One of the most fascinating aspects of the Cyrillic Alphabet is that it leaves room for each language to add its own letters. There is really no equivalent to that in any languages that use the Latin Alphabet. The closest thing any western language has to that is the Spanish enye (ñ) or the French cédille (ç). But the Slavic languages take it so much further with the Cyrillic alphabet. Believe it or not, some languages have added 10 or more letters to the Cyrillic alphabet.

The geography of the Slavic languages is absolutely fascinating. The Central Asian nations, all of whom are former Soviet Union states, have added the most letters to the Cyrillic alphabet. Even the more traditionally Cyrillic languages, including Russian and Ukrainian, have added their own letters. This not only adapts the Cyrillic alphabet to better fit their own native languages, it also helps each nation distance itself from Russia and its Soviet past.

Some nations have even gone as far as converting their language from the Cyrillic alphabet to the Latin alphabet. Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Azerbaijan all reverted back to the Latin alphabet as soon as the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991. Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan also announced recently that they would begin transitioning from Cyrillic to the Latin alphabet starting in 2023.

It’s Incredibly Difficult for Former USSR States to Completely Abandon the Cyrillic Alphabet

This is where it gets complicated. Unfortunately, many former Soviet states have found that they can’t sever those ties completely. Why is that? Nearly every nation that made up the former Soviet Union has retained Russian (the official language of the USSR) as either an official or unofficial language. And that includes Ukraine.

Part of what is driving the war between Russia and Ukraine is Russia’s insistence that Ukraine adopt the Russian language. And while it’s easy to say, oh, Ukraine is its own sovereign nation, they should just tell Russia to piss off, it’s far more complicated than that. And it all ties back to the former Soviet Union. Because Russian was the official language of the USSR, nearly one third of Ukraine’s population speaks Russian as their native language. You can’t just alientate 1/3 of your own citizens.

Use of the Russian language in Ukraine
This map uses fairly old census data (2001), but these trends still very much hold true today

So why is Russia so mad at Ukraine they decided to induce such a horrific war? Part of it is because other than the three Baltic States and Azerbaijan, Ukraine is the only former Soviet Union member that does not use Russian as one of their official languages. Have a look at these language statistics from Ukraine, broken down by oblast (their equivalent of states and provinces). Can you see a correlation between use of the Russian language and where the heaviest of the fighting is taking place?

Ukrainian OblastPercent of Population that Speaks Russian
Autonomous Republic of Crimea97%
Donetsk93%
Luhansk89%
Odessa85%
Zaporizhia81%
Kharkiv74%
Dnipropetrovsk72%
Mykolaiv66%

Kyiv or Kiev: Why There is So Much Debate About the Spelling of the Ukrainian Capital

If you’ve watched the news recently, you’ve probably heard the debates over how the name of Ukraine’s capital is both spelled and pronounced. Is it spelled Kyiv or Kiev? As for which one is correct, well, it depends who you ask. Kyiv is the transliteration of the Ukrainian language spelling, while Kiev is the transliteration of the Russian language spelling. While Kiev was the official spelling during the Soviet Union, the United States adopted Kyiv as the official and preferred spelling in 2006. They actually retired Kiev as an alternate spelling in 2019 in an effort to persuade western media to use the Ukrainian spelling.

LanguageCyrillic SpellingTransliteration
UkrainianКиївKyiv
RussianКиевKiev

Interestingly, from a strictly nuts and bolts perspective, the spelling difference is no different than comparing the spellings of any location in any two languages. It gets complicated and becomes a hot-button issue once you take into account the history, politics, and culture of Russia and Ukraine. Without those aspects, it would be no different than doing this.

English NameFrench SpellingSpanish Spelling
MexicoMéxiqueMéxico
GermanyAllemagneAlemania
ThailandThaïlandeTailandia
SwitzerlandSuisseSuiza
ItalyItalieItalia

What About the Ukrainian President’s Name? How Do You Correctly Spell It?

Is it Zelenskyy, Zelensky, or Zelenskiy? You’ve probably seen it spelled all three ways on the news. To understand the correct spelling, we must look again to the Cyrillic alphabet and the long history between Ukraine and Russia. In Ukrainian, he spells his name Володомир Зеленський.

It turns out that when you use the Cyrillic alphabet, his name is spelled nearly identically in Russian (Володомир Зеленский) as it is in Ukrainian. So how does that help us in the Latin alphabet? You have to look at how the Cyrillic alphabet is transliterated in Russian vs Ukrainian. More specifically, the last two letters of his name. In Ukrainian, while и and й are pronounced differently, they both transliterate to the letter “y”. On the other hand, in Russian, и transliterates to the letter “i” and й transliterates to the letter “y”. So just like Kyiv, this once again boils down to the Russian vs Ukrainian spellings.

LanguageCyrillic SpellingLatin Transliteration
UkrainianЗеленськийZelenskyy
RussianЗеленскийZelenskiy

So what’s the verdict? According to the man himself, the Ukrainian spelling (Zelenskyy) is the correct one. And the third spelling? Zelensky is simply an anglicized version of the Ukrainian spelling, as the double-y does not exist in English.

Zelenskyy’s History Doesn’t End There

Because Ukraine was part of the Soviet Union during Zelenskyy’s childhood, he actually grew up speaking Russian, not Ukrainian. In fact, he used the Russian spelling of his own name (Zelenskiy) up until 2018. And why is that timing relevant? Because he became president of Ukraine in 2019. That’s just more proof that the long, intertwined history between Russia and Ukraine runs deeper than we can imagine. It took becoming president of Ukraine for Zelenskyy to finally distance himself from Russia.

Learn to Read the Cyrillic Alphabet with Geographic Names

Once you get a basic grasp of the Cyrillic alphabet, it’s time to build on that knowledge and get comfortable reading the Cyrillic alphabet. I find the best way to do that is to remove any aspect of having to bounce back and forth between languages and focus only on the transliteration. For that, we’ll look at the names of places, which we’ll transliterate directly from English.

We’ll start with the easy ones, where all letters except for one or two match the Latin alphabet. Cover up the right hand column and see if you can correctly identify each location. These are all major cities and states in the US and Canada.

The Easy Ones

Cyrillic TransliterationEnglish Name
ТампаTampa
АлабамаAlabama
БостонBoston
ТехасTexas
АтлантаAtlanta
ТоронтоToronto
МонтанаMontana
ТакомаTacoma
ОмахаOmaha
МанитобаManitoba

The Medium Ones

Now that you’ve mastered the easy ones, let’s up the difficulty. These will be a little more complex, but you should still be able to figure them out from looking at them.

Cyrillic TransliterationEnglish Name
ДалласDallas
ДетройтDetroit
ОклахомаOklahoma
СакраментоSacramento
Лас ВегасLas Vegas
БойсеBoise
ОрегонOregon
АризонаArizona
НебраскаNebraska
МиннесотаMinnesota
КанзасKansas
БуффалоBuffalo
ВермонтVermont
БалтиморBaltimore
ЕдмонтонEdmonton

The Hard Ones

Now, it’s time for a challenge. The places have short names, but don’t look anything like their Latin counterparts. Remember, these are all names of states and major cities in the United States. If you’re struggling, start by focusing on letters you know.

Cyrillic TransliterationEnglish Name
ДенверDenver
ЧикагоChicago
АйоваIowa
Ныю ЙоркNew York
МайамиMiami
ЛуизианаLouisiana
ХыюстонHouston
МилуокиMilwaukee
ФиниксPhoenix
МэнMaine
МиссуриMissouri
ОгайоOhio
АляскаAlaska
АйдахоIdaho
ПиттсбургPittsburgh
КливлендCleveland
Массачусетс Massachusetts

The Extreme Ones

The ultimate challenge. These are places with long names whose Cyrillic transliterations look nothing like their English names. However, I’ll give you a hint. The last one is a major city in western Canada. The rest are all states and major cities in the United States.

Cyrillic TransliterationEnglish Name
Лос АнджелесLos Angeles
Сан ФранцискоSan Francisco
КалифорнияCalifornia
ПенсильванияPennsylvania
ФиладелфияPhiladelphia
ИндианаполисIndianapolis
МиннеаполисMinneapolis
МиссиссипиMississippi
ДжорджияGeorgia
ПровиденсProvidence
ВисконсинWisconsin
ВашингтонWashington
ЦинциннатиCincinnati
ВанкуверVancouver

Conclusion

The Cyrillic alphabet offers a fascinating, but powerful glance into the history of Ukraine, Russia, and the rest of the Slavic world. For Russia and Ukraine, it is the thread that ties their long, storied, and even twisted histories together. Yet paradoxically, it causes rifts and divisions that run deep enough to kick off the most brutal and horrific war Europe has seen since World War II.

I’ve always said that the more we understand about each other, the more accepting we’ll be of opposing viewpoints. Hopefully, this introduction to the Cyrillic alphabet has given at least enough of a glance into the history and culture of not just Russia and Ukraine, but the entire Slavic world. Because the history and culture of this region is fascinating. It would be such a shame to ruin it with disinformation. Слава Україні.

The post The Cyrillic Alphabet: A Fascinating Glimpse into the Russia-Ukraine War appeared first on Matthew Gove Blog.

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The 7 Essential Elements You Need to Tell Your Story https://blog.matthewgove.com/2022/04/08/the-7-essential-elements-you-need-to-tell-your-story/ Fri, 08 Apr 2022 16:00:00 +0000 https://blog.matthewgove.com/?p=4190 There are 7 essential elements to deeply engage and grip your audience as you tell your story. Regardless of what type of media you’re using to tell your story, these essential elements will help leave your audience at the edge of their seats, craving to come back and see what […]

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There are 7 essential elements to deeply engage and grip your audience as you tell your story. Regardless of what type of media you’re using to tell your story, these essential elements will help leave your audience at the edge of their seats, craving to come back and see what happens next.

Today, we’ll be using these essential story elements to tell the story of the EF-5 tornado that struck Moore, Oklahoma on 20 May, 2013. Even though we’ll be using maps and photography to tell the story, you could easily use a video, blog post, podcast, and much more, too.

Plan As Many Story Elements as You Can

It’s hard to tell a story if you don’t know the basic elements. As a result, you should plan out as many elements of your story as possible. If you’re planning a photo and video shoot, these elements of your story don’t need to be set in stone – there’s a lot if improvising in making travel videos, for example, especially if you’re going to be shooting in a location you’ve never been to before.

But you should have at least a general idea of how you’ll portray your story to your readers. Without that planning, you’ll likely miss shots while you’re out filming, and negatively impact the quality of your final presentation. Simply do your research and plan out your story before you go out on a photo or video shoot. This technique works, even for difficult-to-plan genres, such as travel videos.

1. Set the Stage in the Setting

At the beginning of your story, you have a very limited time to set the stage for your story. With video, you you need to both set the stage and hook your viewer in the first 10-15 seconds.

For the Moore tornado, the stage will be set on the morning of 20 May. It’s the third, and most dangerous day of a three-day tornado outbreak across the southern plains. The previous day had seen violent tornadoes in Oklahoma, including an EF-4 inside the Oklahoma City metro that carved a path from Norman to Shawnee. We’ll use the Day 1 SPC outlooks and discussions to set the stage (note the usage of the strong, long-track tornadoes wording), as well as storm reports from the 19th. Furthermore, when you stepped outside that morning, it just had “that felling” that something significant was about to happen.

2. Determine the Point of View From Which Your Story is Told

From whose point of view will you be telling your story? Consider a murder mystery. The story will have a very different feel being told from the murderer’s point of view vs the detectives’ point of view.

For an event like the Moore tornado, you could choose to tell it through the point of view of the news media. While there is nothing wrong with this approach, there is a much better way to tell the story. And that’s through the eyes of someone who was there when it happened. As a result, I’ll be sharing my firsthand account of my experience that day.

3. Introduce Your Characters

Before you begin telling your story, you should at the very least know who the main characters are. For the Moore tornado (and some of my travel videos), I am the main character. On the other hand, if you’re telling the story of a place or event with historical significance, you’ll need to transport your audience back in time. The people who lived through those historical events will be your main characters. But to fully immerse your audience in your story, try making them the main character. Tell your story in second person, and let your audience experience it.

If you’re planning the story of something that can’t be scripted – like travel videos or blogs – it’s perfectly okay to not know every single character. When you’re traveling, you never know the interesting people with colorful personalities you’ll meet along the way. This could be a random stranger you’re sitting next to at lunch or on the train. Maybe it’s the proprietor of an incredible hole-in-the-wall coffee shop you stopped at along the way. Or perhaps, it’s the local guide that you hired for that bucket-list experience. Once you get done filming your adventure, just make sure you know how every character works into your story. And if they don’t play a meaningful role in moving your story along, leave them out.

4. Every Story Needs a Hook

The hook is one of the most important elements of your story, if not the most important. As you set the stage for your story, you also need to dangle a “hook” to your reader or viewer. That hook is designed to draw them into the story. It shouldn’t leave them just yearning to see what happens next. It should leave them craving it. Have you ever binge-watched a show all at once? The writers of bingeable shows are incredibly gifted at creating effective hooks. Those hooks are what keeps you pushing forward to the next episode instead of turning off the TV and going to do something else.

A good hook gives a sneak peak of what’s coming, but doesn’t give the storyline away. It could be a review of the conflict, the resolution, or anything else in the story. For the Moore tornado, we can state what the tornado hit – two elementary schools and a hospital. Notice that we didn’t say how much damage was done or if there were any injuries or causalities. We could also show the radar and the tornado emergency that was issued for the City of Moore as the tornado barreled towards it.

5. The Plot

The plot is the most important of all story elements, by far. In fact, I could write an entire post (and I probably will) on how to structure your plot to keep your readers engaged and wanting to know what will happen next. Plots are broken into 5 elements, and we can use a Freytag’s Pyramid to illustrate those 5 stages.

Plot Elements for Your Story

  1. Exposition. Set the stage for your story. Introduce your characters, give your audience the hook to draw them in, and begin to introduce the primary conflict.
  2. Rising Action. In this stage, your protagonist addresses the primary conflict with a form of action. As you approach the climax, those actions should build and escalate tension, like approaching the top of a roller coaster.
  3. Climax. This is the pivotal moment your audience has been waiting for. Your protagonist will encounter their greatest challenge of the entire journey. It’s the culmination of the buildup of tension during the rising action phase. Make it exciting for your audience!
  4. Falling Action. Your protagonist will deal with the consequences and fallout – both good and bad – of everything that happened during the climax. Keep your audience engaged by setting the stage for the story’s conclusion. By the end of this phase, you’ll be well on your way to a (hopefully satisfying) conclusion. Additionally, you should start resolving any conflicts that arose as a result of the climax.
  5. Resolution or Dénouement. You can go one of two ways here. If this is actually the end of your story, wrap everything up. Tie up loose ends. Give your audience a sense of closure so they know the fate of your protagonist. On the other hand, if you’re writing a series or sequel, you should introduce another hook to leave your audience craving the next episode. Cliffhangers work exceptionally well as that hook.

Now, let’s look at how we can apply Freytag’s Pyramid to the plot of the story of the Moore tornado.

The Plot Elements of the Moore Tornado

ElementMoore Tornado Plot
ExpositionSummary of first two days of tornado outbreak; SPC Outlook Maps highlighting the extremely dangerous conditions on 20 May
Rising ActionStatements from the National Weather Service with stronger wording as the day goes on. Culminates with a Particularly Dangerous Situation Tornado Watch for Central Oklahoma
ClimaxThe tornado touches down southwest of Moore. The National Weather Service issues a Tornado Emergency issued almost immediately. The tornado tears a 17-mile path through the guts of Moore, packing peak winds of 210 mph (338 km/h). It makes a direct hit on two elementary schools and a hospital.
Falling ActionStarts with the search and rescue efforts in the immediate aftermath of the tornado. The federal government declares Moore a major disaster area. Once critical infrastructure is restored, residents are let back in, but the looters come in too. Then the long cleanup and recovery process can begin. The outpouring of support from all over the world is incredible. The tornado ultimately kills 24 people, including 7 children at Plaza Towers Elementary School.
ResolutionMoore one year later. Neighborhoods in the damage path have largely been rebuilt, and the two destroyed elementary schools are slated to re-open in the fall. The lack of trees in a once lush neighborhood serves as a constant reminder of the tornado’s destruction.
A Destroyed Neighborhood in Moore, Oklahoma Nine Days After the Tornado. This would fall in the Falling Action Plot Element.

6. Without a Conflict, There is No Story

Your story’s conflict answers the question of why your character is embarking on this journey. Without a conflict, you don’t have a story. It’s as simple as that. In your story, the conflict is what causes your character to take action and move the story forward. Conflicts can be both physical and mental. For example, if you’re telling a story about climbing Mt. Everest, the physical or external conflict consists of all the dangers your character encounters on their way to the summit. From frigid temperatures to thin air to dangerous terrain to altitude sickness, one false move could kill your character as they ascend the mountain.

On the other hand, let’s look at a mental conflict. Mental conflicts are internal journeys, and often tend to focus on a single main character. The best example of a simple mental conflict is a character’s journey to overcome their fear of heights so they can go skydiving or bungee jumping. You could also tell the story of how your protagonist overcame their stutter to become a great public speaker.

Keep in mind that while there is usually only one primary conflict, most stories have multiple conflicts. Additional conflicts tend to come in two forms. First, they can be sub-conflicts, that when put together, make up the primary conflict. If you’ve ever seen Monty Python and the Holy Grail, King Arthur’s quest to find the grail is comprised of numerous smaller conflicts they encounter along the way. The conflicts escalate as they get closer to the grail, culminating with the Bridge of Death and the Killer Bunny.

Cascading Conflicts in the Aftermath of the Moore Tornado

Conflicts in the story of the Moore Tornado fall into the second category of multiple conflicts. In these stories, the primary conflict sets off a series of additional conflicts during the falling action. In Moore, the primary conflict is the tornado itself. But after the tornado levels the city, a whole new slate of smaller conflicts emerges.

  • With the city’s critical infrastructure destroyed, how do search and rescue teams coordinate and communicate their efforts?
  • Debris is everywhere, rendering roads impassable. How do search and rescue teams get into these areas and rescue survivors without using the roads?
  • The damage path is 17 miles long and 1 mile wide. Where do search and rescue teams, as well as city and state resources, prioritize their efforts?
  • What do survivors do and where do we send them once they’re rescued? How do we get relief to storm victims as soon as possible?

There are obviously many more conflicts than just this following a major tornado, but this should get you started.

Even the Simplest Stories Have Conflicts

When you tell your story, remember that you can find conflict in even the simplest, most monotonous things. Take going to the grocery store as an example. I can think of one major conflict we’ve encountered going to the grocery store recently: the COVID-19 pandemic.

But even without a global pandemic, you can still find conflict to tell the story of your trip to the grocery store. Maybe you’re looking for a very special ingredient and have to go to 3 or 4 stores before you find it. Perhaps your character has fallen on hard times and needs to stretch a tight budget as far as possible. Or what if there’s a major winter storm coming and you have to fight through treacherous conditions and low supply to stock up ahead of the storm.

Conflicts can be really anything you think of, but you need to know your audience. If you create a story that your audience isn’t interested in, they’re not going to listen to you tell it. If you’re stuck looking for a conflict, ask yourself why your character is going on this journey. The answer to that question is the conflict in your story.

You can find conflict for your story even in simple activities like hiking

7. The Resolution

At the end of your story, you should tie up all loose ends and give your audience a sense of closure for how your story ended. Regardless of whether your story has a happy or sad ending, your audience should know what the characters’ lives will look like now that their struggles are over and the conflict has been resolved.

The Warren Theatre Sits in a Fully Rebuilt Moore, Oklahoma in December, 2021

However, if you’re planning on writing a sequel or another episode, you can easily leave the door open to another chapter of the story. While one conflict is resolved, your character may facing another one. In that case, dangle another hook or cliffhanger to leave your audience eagerly waiting to come back for the next chapter. Then you can go back to the beginning of this guide and start the journey all over again.

The Moore Tornado Story in Maps and Pictures

Conclusion

Regardless of what media you are using to tell your story, you’ll be using the same seven elements to tell it. Planning is critical to being able to tell an insightful and engaging story, especially if you have to go out and shoot photos or video of it. Without a plan, your story will wander and ramble, and your audience will lose interest. Set the stage, hook them in, and leave them craving to see what happens next. Because at the end of the day, you shouldn’t want to just tell your story. You should want your audience to experience it.

Top Photo: The Reward at the End of a Tough Hike
Sedona, Arizona – August, 2016

The post The 7 Essential Elements You Need to Tell Your Story appeared first on Matthew Gove Blog.

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Weird Geography: 10 Bizarre and Unusual Facts About China https://blog.matthewgove.com/2022/02/18/weird-geography-10-bizarre-and-unusual-facts-about-china/ Fri, 18 Feb 2022 16:00:00 +0000 https://blog.matthewgove.com/?p=4008 In China, Beijing just accomplished the rare feat of becoming the first city to host both the Summer and Winter Olympics. China has a long, rich history and culture that far too many people misunderstand. With China hosting the Winter Olympics this year, it seemed only fitting to look at […]

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In China, Beijing just accomplished the rare feat of becoming the first city to host both the Summer and Winter Olympics. China has a long, rich history and culture that far too many people misunderstand. With China hosting the Winter Olympics this year, it seemed only fitting to look at the more weird and bizarre side of its geography. Let’s get going.

1. China Borders 14 Countries, and Has Territorial Disputes with All of Them

Amazingly, the territorial disputes don’t end there. China has numerous additional territorial disputes with countries it doesn’t even border. Most of these disputes are maritime, and include countries such as Indonesia, South Korea, and Singapore.

Back on the mainland, China shares a border with 14 other countries. The only other country in the world that borders that many countries is Russia, which also borders 14 other countries. In alphabetical order, those 14 countries that border China are:

  1. Afghanistan
  2. Bhutan
  3. India
  4. Kazakhstan
  5. Kyrgyzstan
  6. Laos
  7. Mongolia
  8. Myanmar
  9. Nepal
  10. North Korea
  11. Pakistan
  12. Russia
  13. Tajikistan
  14. Vietnam

2. China’s Longest Border is with Mongolia, not Russia

Because Mongolia sits wedged between China and Russia, it comprises China’s longest land border. At 4,630 km (2,877 mi), the China-Mongolia border is the fourth longest land border in the world. Only the Argentina-Chile, Russia-Kazakhstan, and US-Canada borders are longer. On the other hand, China’s shortest border is its disputed border with Pakistan. That border is only 320 km (200 mi) long.

BorderLength (km)Length (mi)
Canada – United States8,893 km5,526 mi
Russia – Kazakhstan7,644 km4,750 mi
Chile – Argentina6,691 km4,158 mi
China – Mongolia4,630 km2,877 mi

3. Both the Highest Point, Highest Plateau, and Highest Border Crossing in the World are Located in China

The Himalayas form China’s southwest frontier with Nepal, India, Pakistan, and Bhutan. Home to all fourteen 8,000 meter peaks, the Himalayas are the tallest mountain range in the world. At 8,893 meters (29,032 feet) above sea level, the summit of Mount Everest is the highest point in the world. And that summit forms part of the border between Nepal and China.

The Top of the World

Unlike Nepal’s multi-day trek, you can actually drive directly to Everest base camp on the Tibet side on a well-maintained paved road. However, it’s a much easier climb to the summit on the Nepal side, which is why most climbers start their journey up Everest in Kathmandu, and not in Lhasa.

The Roof of the World

North of Everest, you’ll find the Tibetan Plateau covers much of southwest China, and even stretches into several neighboring countries. Stretching roughly 2.5 million square kilometers (970,000 square miles), the Tibetan Plateau is both the largest and highest plateau in the world.

At an average elevation of 4,000 meters (13,123 feet), it has earned its nickname “The Roof of the World”. Sitting in the shadow of Everest, the Tibetan capital, Lhasa, is the highest capital city in the world. Lhasa checks in at a whopping 3,658 meters (12,000 feet) above sea level. For comparison, that’s roughly the same elevation of the Continental Divide at Loveland Pass (US-6) in Colorado, and about 300 meters (1,000 feet) higher than the highest point on Interstate 70.

While much of the plateau is arid desert and tundra, you will find several lakes dotted amongst the rugged landscape. Interestingly, these lakes are far from the highest lakes in the world. You’ll find most of the world’s highest lakes in the Andes mountains in South America.

The Highest Border Crossing in the World

Completed in 1982, the highway across Khunjerab Pass marks the highest paved border crossing in the world. Connecting Hunza, Pakistan and Xinjiang, China, Khunjerab Pass sits at 4,693 meters (15,397 feet) above sea level. Interestingly, the pass is long and relatively flat, making it both one of the most scenic drives in the world and a popular choice for trucks to cross between Pakistan and China. However, heavy snow can close the pass any time of year, making it a potentially treacherous journey for even the most seasoned adventurers.

4. China Has Only One Time Zone

One of the most fascinating oddities about China is the fact that despite it being roughly the same size as the United States, it only has one time zone. Not surprisingly, that one time zone is optimized for China’s capital, Beijing. If the United States did this, cities such as Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Seattle would be observing Eastern Time instead of Pacific Time.

As a result, in the City of Urumqi in far western China, sunrises and sunsets are at unusual times. Near the summer solstice, the sun rises at 8:30 AM and sets at 11:45 PM. Likewise, in the winter, daylight runs As a result, Urumqi unofficially sets their clocks 2 hours behind Beijing, but the time zone can still be confusing to visitors.

If that’s enough, China having one time zone causes some unusual time changes when you cross its western borders. For example, if you cross from China into Afghanistan at Wakhjir Pass, the Afghani side will be three and half hours behind the Chinese side. That is actually the largest official time difference between two sides of any land border in the world.

However, that’s far from the most drastic time change across international borders. You may recall that the Diomede Islands sit just 4 km (2.5 mi) apart, but have a 21-hour time difference thanks to the maritime border between the United States and Russia running between them.

5. 28% of China is Desert…and that Figure is Growing

The Gobi Desert, which covers southern Mongolia and northern China, is responsible for the vast majority of China’s desert. The Gobi is best known for its sand dunes, rare wildlife, and cold temperatures. However, the Gobi Desert’s dunes are migrating south at roughly 2 miles (4.5 km) per year. Like the Indiana Dunes, they swallow everything in their path, including towns. And they’re training their crosshairs on a much bigger target. The nearest dunes are now only about 44 miles (71 km) from Beijing.

To combat the rapid desertification, China is attempting to build a 2,800 mile long “Great Green Wall” of trees to halt the Gobi Desert’s southward creep. While the Great Green Wall has slowed the dunes progress in some areas since the first trees were planted in 1978, the Gobi continues to march south unimpeded across much of the landscape.

Additionally, much of the Tibetan Plateau is classified as a desert. A rain shadow from the Himalayas is the reason that both the Tibetan Plateau desert and the Gobi Desert exist. Interestingly, China’s deserts are among the largest cold weather deserts in the world outside of the polar regions. Winter temperatures in the Gobi routinely drop to -40°C (-40°F). But don’t let the cold weather part fool you. Average high temperatures in the Gobi summer can reach 45°C (113°F).

6. The Great Wall of China Does not Actually Mark any of China’s Current Borders

Originally built to protect ancient Chinese states and Imperial China from nomadic tribes in present-day Mongolia, the Great Wall of China is the largest man-made structure on earth. It stretches endlessly for 21,196 km (13,171 mi) across much of northern China. If you stretched that out in a straight line, it would go half way around the world. Construction of the wall took nearly 3,000 years.

The Great Wall of China did once mark China’s northern border. The Ming Dynasty built over 8,000 km (5,000 mi) on its northern border, which at the time ran just north of Beijing, between 1368 and 1644. Once the Ming Dynasty fell, the Qing Dynasty rose to power. By 1912, they had expanded China’s territory to include all of what’s present-day China and Mongolia. Today, the Great Wall marks an incredible piece of history and engineering, but has no significance to China’s current borders.

7. Despite Having the World’s Largest Population, Over 60% of China is Uninhabited

Much of that 60% is uninhabitable due to extreme climate. For example, the Tibetan Plateau is an empty, arid, and rugged landscape. Its high altitude and extreme temperatures make it incredibly difficult for all but the heartiest of creatures to survive. Most of the rest of western China is cold desert. Because China’s economy is so heavily reliant on agricultural exports, cold temperatures and the lack of precipitation renders much of the west useless for farming and agriculture. You simply cannot generate sufficient economic output from the western lands.

The Heihe-Tengchong Line marks several stark divides between eastern and western China. Most notably, 94% of China’s 1.4 billion people – the largest population in the world – lives in the 40% of China east of the Heihe-Tengchong Line.

China's Heihe-Tengchong Line on a map
China’s Heihe-Tengchong Line

The Heihe-Tengchong Line also starkly divides other demographics, climatology, and geographies.

ParameterWest of LineEast of Line
SoilArid and SandyFertile
PrecipitationDryWet
ElevationHighLow
TemperatureColdTemperate
TerrainRugged MountainsHills, Valleys, and Plains
ClimatePlateau and MountainTropical and Temperate Monsoon
Primary LanguageNon-SiniticSinitic (Traditional Chinese)
Population6%94%
Divisions Along the Heihe-Tengchong Line

8. General Tso was a Real Person

Zuo Zongtang was a highly respected Chinese statesman from Hunan province. He was also one of the top military men of the Qing Dynasty, which ruled China from 1644 to 1912. His greatest accomplishment was helping the Qing Dyansty beat back the Taiping Rebellion, a bloody civil war that raged across China in the mid-1800’s. He is said to be to China what General Sherman was to the United States.

But unlike General Sherman, Zuo Zongtang is not known for his military accomplishments. In fact, most people couldn’t tell you when he was alive, or even which wars he fought in. That’s because in the modern era, Zuo Zongtang is most associated with something he had no connection to when he was alive. Zuo Zongtang is much better known as General Tso.

When General Tso died in 1885, it would still be 70 years before the tasty chicken dish that’s associated with his name came into being. In the 1950’s Chef Peng Chang-kuei served the first General Tso’s Chicken dish to Chinese Nationals who had fled to Taiwan after China fell to Mao Zedong. Chef Peng was born and raised in the same town as Zuo Zongtang, and decided to name the chicken dish after him. Peng eventually immigrated to New York City in 1973. He brought the General Tso’s Chicken recipe with him. Once the dish hit the United States, it took off, and the rest is history. Today, there are more Chinese restaurants in the United States than all of the McDonald’s, KFCs, Pizza Huts, Taco Bells and Wendy’s combined.

9. China’s Train System is so Extensive its Railways Could Wrap Around the Earth…Nearly Four Times

There are over 150,000 kilometers (91,000 miles) of operational railways in China. Today, over 40,000 km (25,000 mi) of those railways are for high-speed trains. Unlike the United States, most of China’s freight moves by train, which is why China’s rail network is so extensive. A long term plan expands the rail network to 274,000 km (170,000 mi) by 2050.

So let’s dive into the math. The earth’s circumference is 40,000 kilometers, or 25,000 miles.

150,000 km / 40,000 km = 3.75 times around the Earth

10. China has Two “Flipper Bridges”, Where You Switch From Driving on the Right to Driving on the Left

Have you ever crossed an international border where traffic switches from driving on the right to driving on the left, or vice versa? Sure, it’s easy to handle at some of the hole-in-the-wall border crossings in rural Africa where so few cars pass through.

In instances where there are more cars, you can use a traffic light to cross the traffic over to the other side of the road. That’s exactly what they do at the Thai-Lao Friendship bridge. Inbound traffic into Vientaine, the Lao Capital, must cross from driving on the left in Thailand to driving on the right in Laos. A traffic light controls the crossover right before you reach the Lao port of entry. In the map below, the crossover is right above the “ST Vegas” icon in the center of the map.

Traffic Crossover Entering Vientaine, Laos from Nong Khai, Thailand

But what if you’re trying to link two major cities in a heavy traffic area? China has exactly this problem, not once, but twice. While mainland China drives on the right side of the road, both Hong Kong and Macau drive on the left. The bridges from China to both Hong Kong and Macau are called “flipper bridges” because they flip which side of the road the traffic drives on. The older bridges use a series of loop-de-loops to switch sides, while the newer bridges simply bring one side of the road underneath the other.

The bridge linking mainland China (left) with Macau (right)

A New Multi-Flipper Bridge

In October, 2018, the new Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau Bridge opened. Spanning 55 km (34 mi) over the ocean, it’s the longest oversea bridge in the world. Furthermore, the bridge doesn’t just link two points. It links three: Mainland China, Macau, and Hong Kong. If you were designing this bridge, how would you handle the traffic and which side of the road it drives on?

To stay in line with mainland China, traffic on the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau bridge drives on the right. Just before traffic enters Macau and Hong Kong, the inbound traffic is brought underneath the outbound traffic. That way, traffic is driving on the left as it enters Macau and Hong Kong.

Conclusion

China is one of the most fascinating, yet misunderstood countries out there. From switching what side of the road you drive on to only having one time zone to the roof of the world, there’s a geographic oddity for everyone. While China rightfully gets a lot of criticism for its censorship and repression today, I think we could all use a lesson in its lengthy, rich, and captivating history. It tells an incredible story of how China got to where it is today. Have you ever traveled to China and experienced one of these oddities? Let us know in the comments below.

Top Photo: Snow-Capped Sierra Nevada
South Lake Tahoe, California – February, 2020

The post Weird Geography: 10 Bizarre and Unusual Facts About China appeared first on Matthew Gove Blog.

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Travel Bloggers: How to Stand Out with Powerful Interactive Maps https://blog.matthewgove.com/2022/02/04/travel-bloggers-how-to-stand-out-with-powerful-interactive-maps/ Fri, 04 Feb 2022 16:00:00 +0000 https://blog.matthewgove.com/?p=3818 Interactive maps are one of the most powerful tools available to travel bloggers today. Unfortunately, far too many travel bloggers today are either using interactive maps incorrectly or not using them to their full potential. As a GIS expert, data scientist, and travel blogger myself, it pains me greatly when […]

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Interactive maps are one of the most powerful tools available to travel bloggers today. Unfortunately, far too many travel bloggers today are either using interactive maps incorrectly or not using them to their full potential. As a GIS expert, data scientist, and travel blogger myself, it pains me greatly when I see so many crappy maps on travel blogs. There is so much potential going to waste. As a result, I want to help you, the travel blogger, realize the full potential of your interactive maps. At the very minimum, you’ll see more traffic, retain more visitors, and make your website easier to navigate.

What Makes a Good Interactive Map?

Regardless of what industry you’re in, a good interactive map is easy to understand, offers an intuitive user experience, and draws the user’s focus to the data on the map. One of the best examples of an interactive map is the RadarScope application, which we covered in detail last month in 6 Powerful Weather Applications for Stunning Landscape Photography. If you’re not familiar with it, RadarScope is an application that plots weather radar data, severe weather warnings, and much more on a map.

So how exactly does RadarScope do it so well? When I look at the maps in the screenshots above, I make a few key observations about what makes it such a powerful interactive map, even without having access to its interactivity.

  1. Your eye is immediately drawn to the radar data on the screen.
  2. The basemap is simple enough that you instantly know where the storms are, while at the same time fading into the background and not distracting you from the data on the map.
  3. RadarScope’s chosen color scheme is easy to understand because it’s the industry standard for the weather and meteorology field.
  4. The design of RadarScope’s user interface is timeless. The last two screenshots in the above gallery are from the El Reno (31 May) and Moore, Oklahoma (20 May) tornadoes in 2013. The remaining screenshots were taken between 2017 and 2021.

You Can Bring That Same User Experience to Your Travel Blog Without Breaking the Bank

Thankfully, there are plenty of tools and applications available today to bring a similar mapping experience to your travel blog. Best of all, many are free and open source, so you don’t have to spend your hard-earned cash on expensive licensing fees. However, before we look at solutions, let’s have a look at the problem.

Too Many Travel Bloggers’ Interactive Maps are Not Actually Fully Interactive

In order to fully understand the problem so many travel bloggers run into, let’s first look at the definition of interactive.

Interactive: allowing a two-way flow of information between a computer and a computer-user; responding to a user’s input.

Oxford Dictionary

Armed with that definition, have a look at what you’ll find on far too many travel blogs. From the home page, you click on a link or button to the interactive map. You see a simple map that looks something like this screenshot. Some of the countries may be shaded to indicate that the blogger has traveled there.

A Map of world with countries shaded is not an interactive map
You’ll find maps that look like this on a lot of travel blogs

If you hover over a country, it’ll often show the country’s name and maybe a count of the number of blog posts, photos, or videos the travel blogger has created. However, if you click on a country, you’ll just be brought to another page with a list of post titles. In the best case scenario, you’ll also see a featured image and the first 20-40 words of the post, much like our All Posts page.

However, this still leaves me asking one question. If you have a map whose only purpose is to redirect visitors off of said map, why even have the map at all?

How Can Travel Bloggers Make Their Maps Interactive?

First and foremost, if you’re going to add a feature to your blog or website, it should serve more of a purpose than just redirecting visitors off of it. Your visitors should be able to gather all of the information they need without leaving the map. There is one exception, however. If you’re trying to display lengthy content, such as an entire blog post, don’t try to put the entire post in a pop-up window on the map. Nobody in their right mind is going to scroll through all of that.

Instead, you want to include key details and a link to the full blog post to make a fully interactive map. For a blog post, you’ll want to include at least four things.

  • Title of the post
  • A summary of the post or the first 20-25 words of it
  • The post’s feature image
  • A link to the full post
  • Anything else that’s relevant and important, such as the date, author, or location

Example: The Matt Gove Photo Visual Media Map

To best demonstrate a fully interactive map, let’s have a look at the Matt Gove Photo Visual Media Map. Instead of blog posts, the map includes datasets to display all of our photos and videos on a map. Notice how it includes all five requirements for full interactivity. As a user, you can easily explore our photos and videos on a map without having to leave the map. In addition, you can click on the link in the pop-up window to view the full album or video.

Best GIS Solutions for Travel Bloggers to Create Interactive Maps

As recently as 10 years ago, getting professional-quality interactive maps meant shelling out hundreds, if not thousands of dollars every year in GIS software licensing fees. Even worse, there were very few online GIS programs to choose from back then.

Thankfully, that has all changed. Today, you there are an plenty of free online mapping programs available. Many of these programs are both incredibly powerful and easy to set up. While it’s certainly not a requirement, I highly recommend investing in a developer to install, connect, and integrate the maps on your website. They’ll be able to connect your maps directly to your database. As a result, new content will automatically be added to your maps, allowing them to effortlessly scale with your business. It’ll cost more up front, but with a good developer, you’ll save money in the long run.

We’d love to help you get set up with your maps. If you want to discuss your project further or get a free quote to add maps to your travel blog, please get in touch with us today. Or if you’re still just kicking tires, please feel free to browse our catalog of GIS products and services.

Google Maps or Bing Maps

If you’re just starting out or are looking for a simple solution, Google or Bing Maps are great options! Both platforms allow you to create high-quality maps and embed them on your website free of charge. And best of all, you don’t need a developer. Instead, you’ll just copy and paste a short block of code into your website or blog.

Unfortunately, the simplicity of both Google and Bing Maps leave them with some downsides. Most notably, if you have a dynamic dataset or high traffic volumes, you’ll run into issues. Neither platform is built to display large datasets. As a result, you’ll struggle to scale your application and will run into high API fees to generate the basemaps as your organization grows.

Mapbox

Mapbox is a direct competitor of both Google and Bing Maps, but it offers so much more. As a result, I typically recommend that my clients use Mapbox over Google or Bing. Mapbox gives you much finer control over your mapping application, allowing you to scale it both up and down as your business evolves. And best of all, it’s completely free to use, unless you have more than 50,000 map loads per month.

Mapbox map of Boston, in a light grey color scheme
Screenshot of a Simple Mapbox Map of Boston, Massachusetts

However, my favorite Mapbox feature is its use of vector tiles, which allows you to display huge amounts (read: gigabytes) of data that load and respond extremely fast.

  • Fully customizable maps
  • Much friendlier pricing than Google or Bing
  • Supports both proprietary and open source data formats
  • Offers a software development kit to add your own functionalities and customizations
  • Developer optional to use maps or embed them on your website

Leaflet

Leaflet is a simple, yet powerful open source JavaScript library that displays two-dimensional maps on your website or blog. Because it’s hosted on your server, you don’t need to worry about API fees, regardless of how much or how little traffic you get. It’s lightweight, fast, powerful, and completely customizable. Furthermore, it has an extensive library of plugins and extensions if you need additional functionality. If you don’t know JavaScript, you’ll need a developer for the initial set up of your maps. You can easily connect Leaflet to nearly any type of database or data repository. As a result, Leaflet maps will easily scale with your business once it’s set up.

A popup box on a sample Leaflet interactive map
Screenshot of a Data Point on a Leaflet Map

Thankfully, Leaflet requires very little maintenance once you get it up and running. In fact, I tell my clients that it’s often more cost-effective to pay for Leaflet maintenance as you need it instead of paying a recurring monthly maintenance fee. Yes, there are obviously exceptions to that rule. However, for the vast majority of people, Leaflet is an extremely cost-effective way to add high-quality maps to your website or blog.

Cesium

Like Leaflet, Cesium is an open source JavaScript library that creates powerful 3D maps to “unleash the power of 3D data”. Their maps are engineered to maximize performance, precision, and experience. With Cesium, it often feels like there is no limit when it comes to what you can do with a map. In fact, Cesium also includes a timeline, so you could make the argument that its maps are four dimensional instead of three.

Furthermore, they’ve even created their own 3D vector tile format that lets you load enormous datasets in seconds. For example, check out Cesium’s demo that loads 3D models of nearly every building in New York City. It’s fast, fluid, and responsive. For additional demos, have a look at Cesium’s Use Cases. You’ll find examples from many different industries, applications, and regions.

Screenshot of a cockpit from a flight simulator built on Cesium's 3D mapping technology
Someone even built a flight simulator on the Cesium platform

You can get an incredible amount of power and functionality out of Cesium’s free base functionality. For the average travel blog, the free functionality is probably more than you need. However, if you want to harness its full potential, you should at least look into some of the paid add-ons for Cesium. Those paid add-ons will streamline your workflow and optimize your data. As a result, your users will ultimately have a better experience.

Terria

If you’re trying to decide between Leaflet or Cesium, why not use both? Originally developed as an open source platform for the Australian Government, Terria lets your users choose whether they want to view a two or three dimensional map. And you can probably see where this is going. Leaflet powers Terria’s two dimensional maps, which Cesium is behind its three dimensional maps.

The best feature of Terria, however, is its user interface. Easily organize and browse through a huge number of datasets. It uses Cesium’s 3D data optimization to ensure your map remains fast and responsive, even if your datasets are massive. Use Terria’s slider to compare datasets side-by-side. It even includes a feature for you to build stories with your data and share them with your audience.

I use Terria for all of my mapping needs, and also recommend it for most of my clients. Its power and responsiveness across all devices, including mobile phones, coupled with its flexibility and minimal programming required to set it up make it the optimal platform for me. My users and clients have never complained about being confused using Terria, and are often impressed at how easy it is to analyze huge amounts of data. And best of all, I can set it up so it scales up and down as I need without needing hardly any maintenance.

If you want your travel blog to stand out from the rest, adding fully interactive maps with Terria is one of the easiest and most cost-effective way to do so. To learn more or get started, please get in touch with us or browse our online resources.

ESRI ArcGIS Online

If you have a complex dataset, but would prefer not to hire a developer, ESRI’s ArcGIS Online may be the best solution for you. Yes, it does have licensing fees, but you’ll get much of the functionality of the other applications we’ve discussed without needing a developer to set them up for you. Like the other platforms, ArcGIS online can easily handle large numbers of complex datasets, and plot those data on maps that need just a copy and paste to embed in your website. Plus ESRI is widely considered to be the industry standard for anything related to GIS and maps. If anything goes wrong for you, they have excellent documentation and support.

If you’re looking for a real-world example of ArcGIS Online in action, you’ve probably seen them already. Since the COVID-19 pandemic began, most dashboards that display maps of COVID-19 data use ArcGIS online.

Interactive map on Johns Hopkins University's COVID-19 dashboard
ESRI ArcGIS Online powers many COVID-19 Dashboards, including the one by John’s Hopkins University

Summary

PlatformFreeAPI FeesDimensionsDeveloperDynamic Data
Google/Bing MapsYesOptional2D OnlyNot RequiredNo
MapboxYes> 50K loads/mo2D OnlyOptionalYes
LeafletYesNot Required2D OnlyRequiredYes
CesiumYesNot Required3D OnlyRequiredYes
TerriaYesNot Required2D & 3DRequiredYes
ArcGIS OnlineNoN/A2D OnlyNot RequiredYes

Travel Bloggers, Take Your Interactive Maps to the Next Level

Once you have your new interactive map set up on your website or blog, simply adding a link to it is not enough. In addition, you should strategically embed them on different pages of your website to give your users the most immersive experience. For example, you’ll find the Matt Gove Photo Visual Media map embedded both on the home page of this blog and the main photo gallery page on the Matt Gove Photo website, in addition to being embedded above. I’ll continue to add maps as we go forward, too.

Interactive map embedded on the Matt Gove Photo website
You’ll find the Matt Gove Photo Visual Media Map strategically embedded across our websites

To figure out where to embed your interactive maps, have a look at your website’s analytics. Are there pages that have a lot of page views? Is there a specific page people are navigating to that the map could benefit? Are your visitors getting confused and leaving your website instead of navigating somewhere the map could help? Is there a logical place for your maps in your navigation or sales funnel?

Finally, as a travel blogger, you shouldn’t plot just your blog posts on the interactive map. Geotag photo albums, videos, social media posts, guides, fun activities, scenic drives, and much more. Don’t be afraid to make multiple maps, either. Try to use a platform like Terria or ArcGIS Online that organizes your datasets in a logical manner and makes it easy to both add and remove data from the map. If that’s not an option, don’t overwhelm your users with too much data on a single map. That’s one of the best ways to drive visitors off of your website and directly into the arms of your competitors.

Conclusion

Fast, professional quality interactive maps are one of the best ways travel bloggers can stand out from the crowd. Interactive maps are easy and cost-effective to implement and maintain. They’re also incredibly effective at retaining your visitors’ engagement and keeping them on your website. It boggles my mind why so many travel bloggers haven’t taken full advantage of the incredible potential interactive maps present to both grow your audience and keep your existing followers coming back for more.

Are you ready to take the next steps with interactive maps and bring your website or travel blog to the next level? As avid travelers and data science experts who specialize in online GIS and mapping applications, we’d love to help you take that next step in your journey. I invite you to please browse our catalog of GIS and mapping services. Then, get in touch or book a free info session with us to discuss your specific project. We can’t wait to hear from you.

Top Photo: Chapman’s Peak Drive on the Matt Gove Photo Scenic Drives Map
Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa

The post Travel Bloggers: How to Stand Out with Powerful Interactive Maps appeared first on Matthew Gove Blog.

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Weird Geography: 10 Bizarre and Unusual Facts About Chile https://blog.matthewgove.com/2021/12/03/weird-geography-10-bizarre-and-unusual-facts-about-chile/ Fri, 03 Dec 2021 16:00:00 +0000 https://blog.matthewgove.com/?p=3484 With such an unusual shape, there is no shortage of bizarre and unusual facts about Chile. It’s a country that nobody hears much about, yet you get the impression that it’s still largely misunderstood. It’s a land of wild extremes, not just in terms of geography, but also for climate […]

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With such an unusual shape, there is no shortage of bizarre and unusual facts about Chile. It’s a country that nobody hears much about, yet you get the impression that it’s still largely misunderstood. It’s a land of wild extremes, not just in terms of geography, but also for climate and weather. To learn more of the unique facts about Chile, it’s time to hit the road and go south. Way down south.

1. Chile Stretches from 17°S to 56°S Latitude, a Distance of 4,270 km (2,653 mi).

That may not sound like a whole lot, but think about it this way. If you were to put the southern tip of Chile over Los Angeles, its northern tip would be out in the Arctic Ocean north of Canada and Alaska.

Outline of Chile overlaid on a map of the United States and Canada
Outline of Chile Overlaid on the US and Canada

For a little perspective of just how big Chile is from north to south, let’s look at what cities and landmarks sit at its latitudinal extremes in the Northern Hemisphere.

At 17° North Latitude

  • Acapulco, Guerrero, Mexico
  • Belmopan, Belize
  • Antigua and Barbuda
  • The northern Cape Verde Islands
  • The Southern Sahara Desert
  • Hyderabad, India
  • Vientiane, Laos
  • The northern Philippines

At 56° North Latitude

  • Ketchikan, Alaska, USA
  • Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada
  • Aberdeen, Scotland (UK)
  • Gothenburg, Sweden
  • Riga, Latvia
  • Moscow, Russia
  • Krasnoyarsk, Russia
  • The Northern Tip of Lake Baikal

As the crow flies, if you were to travel from the northern tip of Chile to the southern tip, you will have covered the same distance as if you had traveled from Darwin, Australia to Bangkok, Thailand. Closer to home, if you fly from Juneau, Alaska to Houston, Texas, that’s also the equivalent of flying the length of Chile.

2. At Its Widest Point, Chile is 350 km (217 mi) Wide

From a geographical standpoint, Chile is the skinniest country in the world. At its widest, it’s only 350 km (217 mi) wide. Most U.S. States west of the Mississippi River are wider than that. That’s roughly the distance from

  • New York City to Washington, DC
  • Toronto to Ottawa
  • Los Angeles to Las Vegas
  • Dallas to Houston
  • Cleveland to Cincinnati
  • London to Paris
  • Copenhagen to Berlin

Despite Being So Skinny, Chile Actually Has Three Time Zones

For comparison, the continental United States has four time zones. However, Chile’s three time zones are a bit misleading, because one of them belongs to Easter Island, which sits out in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. It’s the equivalent of Hawaii having its own time zone in the US.

Now, it takes an even more bizarre twist. The time zone line in mainland Chile is parallel to lines of latitude, meaning it separates north from south instead of east and west. But when you put it on a map, it does actually make some sense. It’s only the Magallanes Province in the very southern tip Chile that’s in a different time zone from the rest of the country. That’s where Chile actually bends to the east, under Argentina.

Time ZoneUTC OffsetDST Offset
Mainland Chile-04:00-03:00
Magallanes and Chilean Antarctica-03:00-03:00
Easter Island-06:00-05:00
Time Zones in Chile

3. Chile is the 36th Largest Country in the World by Surface Area

Despite its notable lack of width, Chile gets its surface area from its vast north-south reach. Perhaps one the most surprising facts about Chile is that it’s actually smaller than its neighbor, Bolivia. Have a look at the map. I’d bet you wouldn’t guess that at first glance.

Interestingly, Chile is also smaller than Nigeria. If you pan the above map to the northeast slightly, you’ll see Nigeria on the west coast of Africa. You can make the comparison for yourself. It’s also slightly larger than the State of Texas.

RankCountrySurface Area (sq km)Surface Area (sq mi)
30Nigeria923,770356,669
31Venezuela912,050340,561
32Namibia824,290318,261
33Pakistan796,100339,697
34Mozambique786,380313,661
35Turkey785,350300,948
36Chile756,700291,930
37Zambia752,610290,586
38Myanmar676,590261,218
39Afghanistan652,860251,773
40Somalia637,660246,601

4. Excluding Antarctica, Chile is Home to the Southernmost Point in the Southern Hemisphere.

You can find that point at Águila Islet, in the Diego Ramírez Islands. At 56°32’16″S, it’s notably further south than the southernmost points in Africa or Oceania. In fact, the Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego region advertises itself as the Southernmost Point in the world.

ContinentSouthernmost PointLatitude
South AmericaÁguila Islet, Chile56.537778°S
AfricaCape Agulhas, South Africa34.831162°S
OceaniaJauqemart Island, New Zealand52.616973°S

5. The Southern Tip of Chile and Argentina is the Snowiest Region in the Southern Hemisphere

While the Southern Hemisphere doesn’t get anywhere near the amount of snow that the Northern Hemisphere does in the winter, it has its fair share of snowy hotspots. Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego are well-known for being one the premier outdoor winter destinations in the world. The City of Ushuaia, Argentina, which sits on the border with Chile, averages over 118 cm (46 inches) of snow per year.

While Patagonia has recorded snowfall in every month of the year, June is typically the snowiest month in southern Chile and Argentina. Ushuaia averages 16 days of snowfall in June, with 23 cm (9 inches) of snow accumulation.

6. Chile is also Home to the Driest Desert in the World

It comes as a surprise to many people, but for a country that hugs the coast of South America, the majority of Chile is covered in desert. And it’s not just any desert. It’s the driest desert in the world. Beating out Death Valley, the Sahara, and the Arabian desert, the Atacama Desert surrounds the abandoned town of Yungay. The desert as a whole averages only 15 mm (0.6 in) of rain per year. That makes it 50 times drier than Death Valley. And the Atacama Desert’s driest locations? They’re lucky if they get 1 to 3 mm (0.04 to 0.12 inches) of rain per year.

Interestingly, Chile’s deserts are not particularly known for their heat, unlike the deserts in the Northern Hemisphere, or the Australian Outback. And it’s not due to elevation, either. Yungay sits at only 268 m (897 ft) above sea level, which is lower than Phoenix, Arizona. The hottest temperature ever recorded in Chile was 37.7°C (99.9°F) at Santiago on 20 January, 2017. That’s a stark contrast to the Northern Hemisphere deserts that routinely hit 45 to 50°C (115 to 120°F) in the summer!

7. Chile is the Driest Country in the World

If I asked you to name the driest country in the world, what would your first guess be? Probably a country in the Sahara or the Middle East. Saudi Arabia would be a good guess. It’s the only country in the world without rivers. As would some of the colder landlocked desert countries in Central Asia. I’m talking about countries like Mongolia, Uzbekistan, and Afghanistan. Nope, those are all wrong.

Chile is actually the driest country in the world, despite its 6,400 km of coastline and its proximity to the ocean. What’s even more, cloud cover is a fairly frequent sight in Chile. The rain just doesn’t make it to the ground. Why is that?

In Chile, the unique combination of tall mountains and dry deserts work together to both prevent rain and to reinforce each other. As moist air from the Pacific Ocean passes over the mountains, the mountains ring rain out of the air like you ring out a sponge. By the time the air gets to the other side, there’s no more moisture in it. This phenomenon is exactly why the deserts in the western United States exist.

Furthermore, Chile’s deserts are large enough and dry enough that they can actually block rain from reaching the ground. When rain falls through a dry layer, it starts to evaporate. When that dry layer is dry enough and thick enough, the rain simply evaporates before it reaches the ground. The combination of a powerful rain shadow and the mountains blocking moisture from reaching these locations in the first place is why Chile is the driest country in the world. Some parts of Chile haven’t seen rain in over 500 years.

8. Chile is the Coldest Country in the Southern Hemisphere

Interestingly, it’s only the 32nd coldest country in the world. Countries in the Southern Hemisphere are usually warmer then their Northern Hemisphere Counterparts for two reasons. First, the land mass in the northern hemisphere stretches much more poleward. The southernmost point in the Southern Hemisphere is at 56°S. The entire State of Alaska sits above 56°N. Additionally, parts of Canada and Russia reach latitudes of 80°N. Second, the peninsula is surrounded by water, which helps keep temperature extremes at bay.

Chile sees an average temperature of 8.45°C (47.2°F) per year. It saw its coldest temperature ever recorded on 21 June, 2002, when the mercury at Puesto Viejo dropped to -40°C (-40°F).

How Do Other Countries Compare?

For comparison, here are the average temperatures of comparable countries.

CountryAvg. Temp (°C)Avg Temp (°F)
Chile8.4547.2
Argentina14.858.6
New Zealand10.5550.99
United States12.4454.4
Canada-5.3522.37
Norway1.534.7

9. At Its Closest Point, Chile is Less Than 1,000 km (620 mi) from Antarctica

It’s no surprise that if you want to get to Antarctica, you have to go through either Chile or Argentina. The two most popular departure points are Punta Arenas, Chile and Ushuaia, Argentina. During the very short summer season (December to early February), ships routinely depart from both ports, and can reach Antarctica in about 48 hours. You can also fly to Antarctica. However, there are no commercial flights, and weather can be unpredictable, making it one of the most expensive flights around.

The shortest gap between Chile and Antarctica is the Drake Passage. Separating the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, it’s about 985 km (610 mi) from Chile to Antarctica. The Drake Passage has a fierce reputation for being one of the most treacherous voyages for ships to make. However, everyone who has successfully crossed it to Antarctica said it was well worth it and that a trip to Antarctica should be on your bucket list. It’s certainly on mine.

10. The border between Argentina and Chile is one of the Most Stunning Natural Borders in the World

Stretching 5,308 km (3,298 mi) across the spine of the Andes mountains, the Chile-Argentina border is one of the most breathtakingly beautiful natural frontiers in the world. It’s also the third longest international land border in the world. Only the borders between the United States and Canada and between Russia and Kazakhstan are longer. Because the terrain is so rugged, much of the land remains uninhabited, untouched, and pure natural beauty.

Ruta Nacional 40 on the Argentina Side of the Border is one of the Most Scenic Drives in the World.

Looking into Argentina from Chile in Tierra del Fuego

Heading East Towards the Paso de Jama Port of Entry in Northern Chile’s Reserva Nacional Los Flamencos

Conclusion

Chile is one of the most beautiful, unique, and fascinating countries in the world. With so much to offer, it’s no wonder Chile is one of the premier locations in the world for outdoor adventures, nature enthusiasts, and much more. It’s certainly an experience that’s on my bucket list. Is it on yours?

Top Photo: Stunning Snow-Capped Mountains Surrounding Lake Tahoe
Incline Village, Nevada – February, 2020

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Is the United States Nearing the End of the COVID-19 Pandemic? Model Predictions May Surprise You. https://blog.matthewgove.com/2021/11/26/is-the-united-states-nearing-the-end-of-the-covid-19-pandemic-model-predictions-may-surprise-you/ Fri, 26 Nov 2021 16:00:00 +0000 https://blog.matthewgove.com/?p=3444 As the COVID-19 pandemic grinds on towards its two-year anniversary, we’re all wondering when it will finally end. As vaccines fully rolled out to the general public last spring, the United States managed to get new case loads below 10,000 per day. But then the Delta Variant came along. Just […]

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As the COVID-19 pandemic grinds on towards its two-year anniversary, we’re all wondering when it will finally end. As vaccines fully rolled out to the general public last spring, the United States managed to get new case loads below 10,000 per day. But then the Delta Variant came along. Just like that, it dashed our hopes for a smooth transition to post-pandemic life. The Delta variant will likely set the end game of the COVID-19 pandemic back by a year.

I also believe that the Delta Variant is so dominant that it will ultimately help us end the COVID-19 pandemic sooner. How is that, you ask? It’s actually quite simple

  • It blocks other potentially vaccine-resistant variants from taking hold. The Mu Variant that everyone thought was vaccine-resistant has been eradicated. No other variants have been able to establish themselves since Delta became dominant.
  • It spreads so fast that most places will reach herd immunity faster.
  • Treatments continue to improve, which will help drive down the death rate

Furthermore, the models have spoken loud and clear about the outlook for this winter and the end game for the COVID-19 pandemic. And they’re largely in agreement, too. Barring some freak mutant variant emerging, the COVID-19 pandemic will finally start winding down in 2022.

End Game in the United States: COVID-19 Has Started Shifting from Pandemic to Endemic

As soon as COVID-19 began to spread around the world, it became clear the the only end game is for the virus to become endemic. In its final endemic phase, the virus continues to circulate through the population, but at a much slower rate than during the pandemic phase. As treatments become more effective and widely available, the virus becomes much less dangerous. Many infectious disease experts predict that once COVID-19 reaches its final endemic stage, it will be a similar threat to the flu or the common cold.

Current Status of the COVID-19 Pandemic in the United States

First, let’s look back at what the COVID-19 map looked like back in the summer. Highly vaccinated areas had largely suppressed COVID-19 spread. On the other hand, the Delta variant had set the southeast on fire, where you could find the lowest vaccination rates in the country.

Matt's COVID-19 Risk Index in the United States in August, 2021
Matt’s Risk Index in the United States on 19 August, 2021

By September, the epicenter had spread north and west, hitting the Inner Mountain West and the Ohio Valley particularly hard. Both areas still have large pockets of unvaccinated residents.

Matt's COVID-19 Risk Index in the United States in September, 2021
Matt’s Risk Index in the United States on 22 September, 2021

Today, the summer wave has largely subsided. The last dregs of it are rolling through the upper midwest and the northeast, as well as parts of the southwest. All in all, the country is in much better shape than it was back in September. Additionally, notice how the current map looks almost like the inverse of the August map. If reinfections are not occurring in the hard-hit southeast, that’s a major step forward to reaching herd immunity.

Matt’s Risk Index in the United States on 24 November, 2021

Despite the threat of another wave, I do not see any scenario where the United States implements more COVID-19 restrictions. Pandemic fatigue is real, and it’s unlikely further restrictions will be effective. So what exactly lies ahead? Let’s dive into the models.

University of Washington IHME Model

The University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation Model remains the gold standard go-to model in the United States. Everyone from the White House to the media to everyday citizens like you and me use it to plan their lives amidst the COVID-19 pandemic.

Before we dive into the cases and deaths, let’s first look at mobility and vaccination projections. Both parameters will help us understand the big picture. Lots of people will be traveling for the holidays this year, even though large pockets of the population remain unvaccinated. First, let’s look at the vaccination projections.

IHME Vaccine Forecast for the United States as of 24 November, 2021

One thing really jumps out at me here. The model projects that vaccine coverage will basically plateau starting in January 22, with 63% of the population fully vaccinated. With a population of 330 million, that means that 125 million people in the United States will remain unvaccinated. Thankfully, that should be high enough to keep hospitals from being completely overwhelmed.

As for mobility, the IHME agrees with my prediction that the United States will not implement any further restrictions. Mobility should approach its pre-pandemic levels in early 2022.

IHME Mobility and Social Distancing Projections as of 24 November, 2021

Do Case Loads Lead to the End of the COVID-19 Pandemic?

Before we look towards the end of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, there is still one final hurdle to clear: the holidays. Remember that in 2020, holiday travel and gatherings sent COVID-19 cases spiking to nearly 300,000 per day in the U.S. Things are much different this year, but the threat of another wave is still very real.

A fifth wave in the United States would take on one of two forms. You could have a tsunami of cases like we did last winter or when the Delta Variant hit this summer. However, this scenario is quite unlikely due to the vaccines and the high number of infections in the United States. Instead, my gut feeling is that you’ll see much more of a minor uptick, similar to Scenario 2 in the plot below.

Major and minor surges are depicted on the new daily COVID-19 case curve for the United States
New Daily COVID-19 Cases in the United States

The IHME model agrees. Its official projection calls for a minor uptick of COVID-19 cases over the holidays. Only in the worst case scenario do you see anything like what the U.S. experienced this summer.

IHME New Daily Case Projections for the United States as of 24 November, 2021

COVID-19 Simulator Model

The COVID-19 Simulator is run by Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Georgia Tech, and the Boston Medical Center. We’ve used it in many of our past analyses and forecasts. It has been reliable and accurate throughout the duration of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Because I’m not expecting that the United States will make very many changes to the current COVID-19 protocols, let’s initialize the model to run on the current interventions for the full 16 week projection. To account for waning immunity, let’s also bump the vaccine efficacy down to 75% from its default 90%.

The COVID-19 Simulator falls largely in agreement with the IHME. In a worst-case scenario, new daily case loads would remain below the September, 2021 surge, peaking around 148,000 new cases daily. However, the far more likely scenario is that you’ll see a slight bump in cases as people gather for the holidays. Hopefully, once that’s done, we can have a much clearer view of the COVID-19 pandemic’s end game.

COVID-19 Simulator New Daily Case Projections for the United States as of 24 November, 2021

Massachusetts Institute of Technology Model

The MIT Model is based off of the SEIR (Susceptible, Exposed, Infected, Removed) Model. Like our model, it accounts for features specific to the COVID-19 pandemic, such as government intervention, vaccinations, and human behavior. And it’s probably the most optimistic of the three models. It doesn’t expect much, if any, surge due to the holidays. In fact, it predicts that the United States will only gain about 1 million more cases in the eight-week period between now and late January, 2022.

MIT Model Cumulative COVID-19 Case Projections for the United States as of 24 November, 2021

^ Cumulative case projections from the MIT Model ( https://www.covidanalytics.io/projections)

Places Delta Has Hit Hard Appear to Be Reaching Herd Immunity

One very encouraging pattern that has emerged is that places that the Delta Variant has hit very hard to not appear to be getting much by way of reinfections. Indeed, cases loads and risk levels across the southeastern United States are at the lowest levels they’ve been since the beginning of the pandemic.

The Southeastern United States Has Kept COVID-19 at Bay Following a Devastating Delta Wave This Summer

This pattern is becoming prevalent around the world. India and Indonesia both experienced major spikes of the Delta Variant between April and July. Both countries have brought new case loads to near record lows and have kept them there. You can say the same thing for Japan. Following the Olympics in July, Japan experienced a major Delta Variant Spike. It’s now reporting less than 200 new cases per day. Even Brazil, which has had a moderate burn throughout the pandemic instead of a big spike, has gotten new case loads down to their lowest levels since May, 2020.

While these are only a few examples, this scenario is playing out in countries on all 7 continents.

Watch the Southern Hemisphere for a Preview of the COVID-19 End Game

Throughout the pandemic, Southern Hemisphere winters (June to September) have offered a glimpse into what the Northern Hemisphere should expect for its winters. While they haven’t been a perfect crystal ball, they have at least gotten us in the ball park for what to expect. And even though not all Southern Hemisphere countries have experienced a spike of the Delta Variant, the ones that did have all gotten case loads down to near record lows and kept them there.

Southern Hemisphere countries on the African continent have had particular success at keeping case loads down following a Delta Variant spike. And keep in mind, vaccines are still few and far between in many of those countries. In fact, the Southern Hemisphere as a whole seems to confirm the models’ predictions that the end game for the COVID-19 pandemic will come in 2022. However, for the best previews of what the United States has in store, I would watch Australia and South Africa.

How Close is the United States to Herd Immunity?

It’s hard to say for sure how close the United States is to herd immunity, but we can run some back-of-the-envelope calculations to get a ballpark number. First and foremost, there are likely far more actual infections than the data show. And that’s true in every single country across the board. The data only contains diagnosed cases from tests. With so many cases either asymptomatic or mild, many people did not get tested even though they contracted COVID-19.

Even though the U.S. has about 48 million positive tests, experts believe that the actual number of cases could be as high as 200 million. However, I think that it’s unlikely that high. Instead, let’s use the COVID-19 Simulator’s best estimate of total U.S. cases: 157 million.

US Population = 330 million
Estimated Cases = 157 million
157 million / 330 million = 47% of population has contracted COVID-19

Now, we’ll add in the vaccinations. About 59% of the U.S. population is fully vaccinated. However, we must keep in mind that a portion of the vaccinated population has also contracted COVID-19, either before vaccines were available, or as a breakthrough case. For purposes of this argument, let’s assume that half of the vaccinated population has also contracted COVID-19. When calculating the total population that has immunity, we’ll need to subtract those from the vaccinated pool so they’re not counted twice.

330 million * 0.59 = 195 million fully vaccinated
195 / 2 = 98 million vaccinated, but have not contracted COVID-19

157 million infections + 98 million vaccinated = 255 million immunized
255 million immunized / 330 million population = 77% of population immunized

It’s believed that 90 to 95 percent of the population must be immunized to reach full herd immunity against the Delta Variant. The United States isn’t quite there yet, but it’s getting close. These calculations also point to the COVID-19 end game coming in 2022.

A Tale of Caution: Zero-COVID Strategy Does Not Work Against the Delta Variant

Unfortunately, not every country is succeeding in the war against COVID-19. Europe has once again become the epicenter of the pandemic. Cases are surging in New Zealand. Much of Southeast Asia and Oceania are coming down off of record Delta spikes. What do these countries have in common? They all adapted a zero-COVID strategy at the onset of the pandemic, and the Delta Variant is forcing them to abandon that strategy because of its extraordinarily high transmissibility.

Can Zero-COVID Countries End the Pandemic with Vaccines?

It’s unlikely vaccines alone will end the pandemic. The Delta Variant is so contagious and transmissible that you’d need to vaccinate more than 95% of the population to reach herd immunity through vaccination alone. However, that doesn’t mean vaccines can’t suppress clusters, waves, and hotspots. Just have a look at Europe.

CountryPercent Fully Vaccinated
Portugal86.69
Spain79.55
Germany67.53
Czechia57.96

This graph tells the whole story.

There is a stark difference between high and low vaccination rates in the current COVID-19 surge in Europe
Highly-Vaccinated European Countries have avoided the ongoing Delta spike in Europe

So what does this all mean for Europe? Europe is likely going through the same Delta spike that the United States and so many other countries saw back in July and August. Did you notice on the figure above that neither Germany (black line) nor Czechia (blue line) had a major COVID-19 surge over the summer of 2021, while Spain did?

Rapid Vaccine Rollout Kills One-and-Done Delta Spikes in Southeast Asia

Southeast Asia had done a stunningly good job controlling COVID-19 until the Delta Variant arrived in May, 2021. After abandoning their zero-COVID strategy, many countries saw horrific Delta spikes as the variant ripped through the population. But the pattern has mirrored what the rest of the world has seen. You get one major spike in cases, and once it peaks, you can quickly suppress it through both vaccines and natural immunity.

Three countries in Southeast Asia really stand out for having some of the highest vaccination rates in the world. They are Cambodia, Malaysia, and Singapore. All three countries saw a major Delta spike earlier this year, and rapidly rolled out vaccines to kill the outbreak in its tracks. Even neighboring Thailand is seeing remarkable success despite having a much lower vaccination rate. Unlike the United States, all four countries continue to rapidly vaccinate their populations.

CountryPercent Fully Vaccinated
Singapore82.47
Cambodia80.06
Malaysia77.56
Thailand51.32

The lesson for the United States here is that it, too, can keep the Delta Variant at bay. Even if it can’t ramp up its vaccination rate, highly-effective new treatments coming on the market should help blunt the death rate, even in the unvaccinated. Herd immunity is in sight, but you can’t rule out another surge this winter. We just need do everything we can to get there as quickly and safely as possible.

Conclusion

It’s been a long two years, but the end game for the COVID-19 pandemic seems to be finally starting to come into focus. As weird as it sounds, the Delta Variant is actually helping us end the pandemic. It has kept other variants at bay, while establishing a clear pattern around the world. You’ll need to endure one major spike from the Delta variant. And once that’s finished, when coupled with a high vaccination rate, herd immunity should be in sight.

The United States has already endured the worst of the Delta spike. Whatever surge we get this winter should be minor in comparison. The combination of highly effective vaccines and treatments is the silver bullet we’ve been waiting 2 years for. Let’s finally put an end to all of this once and for all.

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