GSLRO
Member Since: 10 Sep 2008
Location: Sunderland
Posts: 1279
|
xcentric wrote:how easy are the vibration books to follow if your only Spanish is "dos cervecas, pour favor"?
They're usually in French, Google Translator will become your friend as with OCR. Do as I did; scan the book's main text into a pdf then use a free OCR website such as this one http://www.onlineocr.net/ cutting and pasting paragraph's then pop the result into https://translate.google.co.uk/
Really should have took more interest in languages at school Club N.E.R.D.s
|
24th Dec 2015 9:47 am |
|
|
Dr LC8
Member Since: 31 Jul 2015
Location: Manchester but from Rome
Posts: 164
|
Re: Pyrennes/Alps off road routes |
|
xcentric wrote:Has anyone got any routes or suggestions for route books or gpx tracks for off road routes in the mountains of France - want to go off-roading (nothing too extreme) this summer. Multi-day trips fine too.
Ideally books in English but French ok if necessary.
thanks
p.s. I'm aware of http://www.wikiloc.com/
Hi,
I know few trails on the Italian West Alps. Trails there are very long, at times as long as 50km.
Let me know.
Nic
|
3rd Jan 2016 6:24 pm |
|
|
spikekellyrm
Member Since: 23 Jul 2015
Location: Manchester
Posts: 662
|
xcentric, did you make any progress with this?
Im off to the chamonix area in august and I'm trying to find out which routes are legal to drive up. The intention being to access some high areas of the alps whilst acclimatising and to then begin climbing.
Any help of advice appreciated, Dan D4.5 Facelift, Lazer ST4, Prospeed underbody and rack, IID BT, Compomotive/BFG KO2, Series MFlaps, RAI, Dog Gd+XBB, Alive Tuned, T-Max/YellowTop, RemoteFBH, GlassesMod, WheelWinchMod, Jack Mod, LED Mods, Seized Crank Mod....
|
18th Jan 2017 4:05 pm |
|
|