Users beware: Trail apps have been leading to problems in public lands

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Veteran mountaineer Dale Atkins was climbing the challenging Kelso Ridge last week on Torreys Peak, a popular Front Range fourteener, when he encountered a woman in her 20s who had discovered the complexity of the climb required route-finding skills beyond her experience level.

“She said she’d gotten to one of the harder spots and just couldn’t figure out where to go, so she turned around,” said Atkins, a member of the Alpine Rescue Team, a volunteer search-and-rescue group that conducts missions in Clear Creek, Jefferson and Gilpin counties.

“I asked her if she was using an app, and she said, ‘Yes, I was using AllTrails,’” he continued. “She said all the reviews were really positive about the climb, so she figured with three fourteeners under her belt that she could do it. Her ambitions just exceeded her experience.”

Atkins wasn’t surprised. The popular hiking app, with its digital trail maps and user-generated reviews, is the go-to source for many Colorado hikers. But it doesn’t provide a lot of detail in describing complicated climbs like the Kelso Ridge, which is visible from Interstate 70, five miles west of Silver Plume. He and the Alpine Rescue Team had been there before, responding to other climbers who’d gotten stuck on the route while using trail apps and needed to be guided out.

Public land managers across the country are discovering the shortcomings of crowdsourced apps like AllTrails and Gaia GPS, which show where trails are on digital maps, and provide user-generated feedback and reviews, but leave hikers wanting for specific route details. There are other issues, as well, such as leading hikers to trails that are closed or cross private land.

It has become enough of a concern, in fact, that government agencies like the National Park Service, the U.S. Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management have been meeting with these companies and others twice a month for the past two years to talk about solutions.

“It is an issue that we’ve been dealing with in the forest service for a little while now, trying to better understand how we can address it,” said Chad Schneckenburger, trails manager for the Rocky Mountain Region of the USFS. “For us, it’s really a management challenge. All those apps are crowdsourced. It’s essentially user-generated information.”

For Atkins, the issue on trails like the one on Kelso Ridge is with users not understanding the limitations of the apps, especially inexperienced hikers.

“It’s not an AllTrails issue per se,” he said. “Even if she’d had a regular topo map, it would tell her where to go, but it doesn’t tell her how to get through the terrain. The limitations are not necessarily with the apps, they’re in people’s abilities to perceive the terrain around them.”

The working group created to improve the data behind trail apps was spearheaded by Maggie Cawley, the executive director of OpenStreetMap US, the U.S. chapter of an international nonprofit that is a primary source for AllTrails and other apps. OpenStreetMap, which is built with crowdsourced information, is sometimes called the Wikipedia of maps.

Cawley was contacted two years ago by Keri Nelson, then a National Park Service backcountry coordinator for southeast Utah who reached out to report problems caused by trail apps that she was seeing in Canyonlands National Park near Moab. Cawley asked Nelson to give a presentation to a virtual meeting of folks in the mapping community hosted by OpenStreetMap US.

“What we were seeing in the park was, people would add trails or trail systems that aren’t official designated park trails, but they looked like it on the (trails app) map,” said Nelson, now an outdoor recreation planner for the Bureau of Land Management in Moab. “That was causing problems, because people would see these trails, or this data on a map platform, that looked like they were trails. When you see it on a map, a lot of us would expect on the ground that there’s going to be a well-defined, maintained trail there, which often was not the case with these user-added trails.”

The Kelso Ridge trail, front, breaks off from the Grays Peak trail, right, at 12,300 feet in Clear Creek County on Thursday, Aug. 24, 2023. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
The Kelso Ridge trail, front, breaks off from the Grays Peak trail, right, at 12,300 feet in Clear Creek County on Thursday, Aug. 24, 2023. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)

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