On Sat, 14 Apr 2012 10:37:15 -0400, Larry wrote:
> I am not familiar with G/M at all. But I assume it is for places where
> there are roads and addresses, etc.
It's not. It works just as well for specific points as it does for
addresses, using either a map view or satellite/aerial imagery as per
Google Earth.
> I am using G/E to view some areas of my home state, Florida that have no
> roads but are navigable with a 4 wheeler. I can find places in G/E
> such as Springs and areas of a river that look good for fishing that I
> would like to go to in person.
You can do that with Google Maps too. It may or may not be as quick.
I'm currently running on a very old/slow Linux laptop so can't really
compare.
> As mentioned I have done this by finding a placemark in G/E then
> converting the Lat/Lon and pasting that into a Garmin Mapsource
> waypoint, then downloading to a GPS. It would just be a lot easier and
> faster to be able to save the points if the GPS is connected to G/E.
It appears that one can do exactly this on Google Maps.
Get and install The Garmin Communicator plugin (link below)
Go to Google search page, click Maps off to menu bar. Drag around to get
where you want to go, double left click to zoom in, right for zoom out.
Switch between map or photo view as appropriate. When you find a point
you want to "locate", right click and select centre map here.
Now do what Garmin say here:
http://my.garmin.com/locate/google-sendtoGPSHelp.htm
This will let you store single points. I have no idea if you can create
tracks from this, or even if that's what you want to do but if it is, you
can create multiple points. I assume if you are an experienced off-roader
in your home territory then you don't need fully detailed tracking on
your GPS to get you there.
Ok, so it's not a solution for GE, but from the info you've given, it
does seem to be a viable solution if you can change to using GM instead
of or as well as GE.