spiralsheep: I have a plan so cunning you could stick a tail on it and call it a weasel (boz4pm Blackadder Cunning Plan)
[personal profile] spiralsheep posting in [community profile] flaneurs
I'm not sure that knowing which way is north, for example, would help me much in an unfamiliar city but I've certainly used example 4, navigation by flow of people. When I arrived in one city for the first time, after 5-30pm, and urgently needed to find a food shop still open (back in the days when even supermarkets often closed at 6pm), I looked around for the direction most people with supermarket/Sainsbury carrier bags were coming from and, several maze-like urban cut-throughs later, I found the shop I needed.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-15125287

Six ways to never get lost in a city again

Many people now rely on their smartphones, sat-navs or other GPS devices to find their way around. But when these fail us, and there's no-one to ask for directions, there's a more natural way to navigate, says Tristan Gooley. It's not every week that a massive solar flare knocks out the GPS network, but all it takes is a flat battery or a mechanical fault to hobble your automated orientation aids. And if there's no-one around to ask and no paper map on hand, you could be in trouble. Natural navigation may be just what you need. This involves working out which way to go without using maps, compasses or any other instruments. It relies on awareness and deduction, so does depend on retaining some awareness of direction throughout each journey.

1. TV satellite dishes

These really are the "get out of jail free" cards in an urban area. This is because the dishes point at a geostationary satellite, one that stays over the same point on the Earth's surface. In the UK there is a dominant satellite broadcaster, hence nearly all the dishes tend to point in the same direction - close to southeast. The same applies in rural areas - especially those blessed with pubs screening sport.

2. Religious buildings

From earliest times, religious buildings and sacred sites have been laid out to give clues as to direction. Christian churches are normally aligned west-east, with the main altar at the eastern end to face the sunrise. Gravestones, too, are aligned west-east. To find direction from a mosque, you need to go inside and look for the niche in one wall, which indicates the direction for prayer. This niche, known as al-Qibla, will be the direction of Mecca, wherever you are in the world. And synagogues normally place the Torah Ark at the eastern end, positioned so worshippers face towards Jerusalem. (Synagogues in countries east of Israel will face west.)

3. Weathering

The prevailing winds carry rain and pollution. These then hit the buildings, leaving patterns. The wind comes from the southwest in the UK more often than from any other direction. This results in asymmetrical weathering patterns on buildings - similar to the erosion seen in nature. Look up, above the cleaned glass and metals of the lower floors, to the natural stone or weathered bricks higher up. Notice how the building's corners all show subtly different weathering patterns. The contrast between southwest and northeast corners is the greatest. But the shifts in colours, where the rain and pollutants have left their mark, can be read on all sides with a little practice. Trees, too, indicate direction, with the very tops combed over by the prevailing wind.

4. Flow of people

Pacific navigators learned to follow the birds in their search of land. They quickly realised that while an individual bird can behave eccentrically, a pair - or even better a flock - will follow a pattern. The same is true of human beings. There is no point following an individual, you could end up anywhere. But following a crowd in the late afternoon will take you towards a station or other transport hub. In the mornings, walk against the flow to find these stations. At lunchtime in sunny weather, crowds move from office blocks towards the open spaces of parks and rivers.

5. Road alignment

Roads do not spring up randomly, they grow to carry traffic - and the bulk of traffic is either heading into or out of a town. So the biggest roads tend to be aligned in a certain way, depending on whether you are in the centre or on the outskirts. In the north or south of town, the major roads will tend to be aligned north/south. In the northwest or southeast, they will have a bias towards northwest/southeast. This is why road maps of big towns show a radial pattern. It is common sense, but very few people realise this when they feel lost in a big city.

6. Clouds

One of the best ways not to lose your sense of direction is to hold onto it. My favourite way of doing this in a city is to orientate myself - using some of the clues above - and then note the direction the clouds are moving. The wind pushing the clouds will remain fairly constant, providing there's no dramatic change in the weather. This technique really earns its keep on underground journeys, especially to a new part of town. Simply look up before you head underground, and remember the direction of the clouds. When you emerge in a strange part of the city, look up again and you'll be able to work out which way is which from the clouds overhead.

Date: 2011-10-07 02:53 pm (UTC)
ninamazing: Black-and-white close up of Cosima from Orphan Black smoking. (Default)
From: [personal profile] ninamazing
This is awesome; thanks for posting! My smartphone might be good for telling me what bus and subway stops to get off at, but not which way I will be facing when I do. ;P

Date: 2011-10-07 03:36 pm (UTC)
rydra_wong: Fragment of a Tube map, with stations renamed Piero della Francesca, Harpo, Socrates and Seneca. (walking -- the great bear)
From: [personal profile] rydra_wong
Oh, good thought. I have a little compass on a carabiner that I clip to my bag, for solving the problem of which way I'm facing when I get out of the tube station, etc..

Date: 2011-10-07 03:55 pm (UTC)
rydra_wong: Fragment of a Tube map, with stations renamed Piero della Francesca, Harpo, Socrates and Seneca. (walking -- the great bear)
From: [personal profile] rydra_wong
It's my current favourite navigational strategy for exploratory walks: compass, plus a map printed off the internet at a scale which gives me the general idea of major streets and landmarks but not all the details.

Date: 2011-10-07 04:47 pm (UTC)
holdthesky: (Default)
From: [personal profile] holdthesky
I find the satellite dish thing useful if I'm lost in suburbia. You know, those kinds of estates all curled up on themselves that you just want to escape!?

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