大秀视频

Plan your cycling route

Plan your cycling route

Use the map below to plan a route, see suggested routes, specify your ride-type preferences and more.

大秀视频 cycling and walking guides

Cycle map help

Follow these steps:

  • click on the map to set your start point
  • click somewhere else on the map to set your destination
  • we鈥檒l find the best route

Advanced features

Researching your route

When planning your route, it鈥檚 good to know what the road or track quality will be like. 

Clicking on any section of your planned route will open up a popup, from where you can choose to see it in Google Street View. Note that Street View images are mostly only available for roads, not paths.

You can also click 鈥淪ee photos鈥 to see pictures from the  project, which has good coverage of paths.


Drawing straight lines

Our route-planner tries to find the best route between two places, but sometimes it won't let you take a direct route.

For example, if there is a new road that isn't in our map yet.

You can draw a straight line to cross that section. Place a point on each side of where you want the straight line to be. (Don't worry about the winding route it might choose.) Then click the first point, and in the popup, select 'Go direct'. The route will change to a straight line to the next point.


Elevation

You can see an elevation profile for any route you plan. Just click the elevation button on the left.

Moving your mouse over the elevation profile will show that place on the map, and vice versa. If you drag the route, you鈥檒l see that the elevation profile is updated as you do. The total climb and descent, and the steepest gradient, are listed in the corner of the profile.

You can even click 鈥3D鈥 to see a 3D elevation profile of the route!


Route tools

There are two additional buttons on the left: one to reverse your route, one to undo the last change you made.

You can delete all the via points before or after a certain point. This is useful if you鈥檙e splitting a long route into several sections. Right click the point (or click while pressing Command on a Mac), then choose 鈥楧elete before鈥 or 鈥楧elete after鈥.


Saving and printing your route

We don鈥檛 offer the feature to save your route here on the 大秀视频 County Council website, but you can transfer it to , the website that powers our route planner.

Click 鈥淥pen in cycle.travel鈥 and your route will be transferred across. You can then create an account on cycle.travel and save your route in that account. cycle.travel also offers facilities to print your route.

General help

Adding more points

If the route doesn鈥檛 go the way you want, you can simply drag it. A new numbered 鈥榲ia point鈥 will appear.

You can also extend the route by clicking points on the map. 

On a desktop: Tick the option on the left that says 鈥榗lick map to add more points鈥, then click at the new end of your route.

On a mobile: Quickly double tap (iPhone) or long press (Android) the new end of your route.

You can remove a via point by clicking on it and selecting 鈥楻emove via鈥 in the popup.


Finding by street or town name

You can type street or town names for the start and end of your route. A pop up menu will appear as you type. Choose the matching place. Click 鈥楪et route鈥 when you鈥檝e chosen the start and end.

Our map data doesn鈥檛 have house numbers recorded, so just type the street name and town, not the number.

You can add a via point at a named place, too. Click 鈥楢dd at鈥 and type the name.


On a road bike?

We aim to choose a balanced route that prefers smooth surfaces, but sometimes go off road to avoid hills, busy roads or long detours. If you鈥檙e on a road bike, you might prefer to stay on tarmac at all times. Flick the switch from 鈥楶aths and roads鈥 to 鈥楶aved only鈥 to change this.


Round trips

Journeys don鈥檛 have to be A to B: you can plan circular round trips too. Choose your start and end points as per usual, then click 鈥楻ound trip鈥. We鈥檒l try to find you a different journey for the way back. (Note that sometimes it won鈥檛 be different, particularly on short journeys or in areas with few roads).


Route ideas

If you just want a ride but you don鈥檛 mind where, we can do that too. Click just one start place on the map, or type it next to 鈥楩rom:鈥, then click 鈥楽uggest a ride鈥. Up to three circular routes will show on the map, choose the one you want by clicking on it. You can drag the slider to change the distance.


Unpaved sections

All things being equal, we choose paved routes. But if a dedicated cycleway is unpaved, or it鈥檇 save a stretch on a busy or hilly road, we鈥檒l sometimes choose an unpaved route instead.

On the basemap, unpaved trails are shown with brown dots or dashes; unpaved roads have dashed edges. When you plan a route, the unpaved sections are highlighted in green, contrasting with the usual blue.

If you want to stick to paved sections only, then change the toggle beneath the from/to places. You can even restrict just the section between two via points to paved-only: click the first via point to bring up a popup, and change 鈥楪o any way鈥 to 鈥榩aved鈥.

On the move

Using a phone app

You鈥檒l need an app on your phone that can read GPX files. Such apps include BikeGPX, MapOut (iPhone only), Viewranger, and OsmAnd.

First, click GPS/phone, then Open in phone app, to download the GPX file from our route-planner.

If it doesn鈥檛 open instantly in your app, look in your download folder, or the Files area of your phone. You can then click the file and choose the app to open it in. Your planned route will appear in your app as a line to follow.


Using a GPS unit

If you have a GPS unit mounted on your handlebars, you can transfer the file to it. You can either do this via a USB lead connected to your computer, or via a phone app. Your device manufacturer will provide instructions.

There are lots of different formats of GPS file. You can access these by clicking GPS/phone then Download GPS files. GPX tracks are simplest, but you can also choose a 鈥楾CX course鈥 which includes turn by turn prompts. We offer these formats:

  • GPX track: This is just the line of your route with no instructions, practically everything will understand this
  • GPX route: This is an icon for each turn on your route (but no line), t鈥檚 good for GPS devices without much memory
  • TCX course: This has both the line and the turns, it鈥檚 best for Garmin Edge and Wahoo units
  • KML: This is the line of your route in a format that Google Earth and Maps.me can read

If you have a Garmin GPS unit, you can transfer your route wirelessly if you register free accounts with both cycle.travel (which provides our route planning) and Garmin Connect. Select  to open your route in cycle.travel, then register an account and click the GPS button there.

Reading the map

Different map layers

The 鈥榣ayer鈥 icon on the map allows you to switch to the OpenStreetMap map style, which is less clear but shows more features.


The map key

There鈥檚 a handy map key (or legend) that shows you what the road and symbol colours mean. Click the link at the corner of the screen, by the credits.


Your planned route

When you鈥檝e planned a route, it鈥檚 highlighted in blue and green on the map. Blue for paved sections; green for unpaved.

 You鈥檒l see summary statistics on the left. These show how much there is of each road type:

 

Credits and copyright

Credits and copyright

The mapping and route-planning feature is powered by .

Our maps are made using open data from , licensed under the , with additional data from  and from the Department for Transport, licensed under the  (漏 Crown copyright and database right 2020).

The information on these maps is recorded by volunteers from the  project. If you see something that鈥檚 missing or wrong, you can become an editor at OpenStreetMap and correct it. We update our maps with the latest OSM data approximately every month.

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