The little doctor from Québec who got lost in the back woods of northern NB for three days, in winter, driving from Sherbrooke, to Bathurst, is a case in point. Three snowmobilers found her. I K*N*E*W those damn machines were good for something other than noise and air pollution. What did she use to guide her? Her car's GPS system. GPS sends you down the nearest road, if you get off track. That road, in NB, more often than NOT, can be a DIRT road. Do you need to be on a dirt road? I think not. You can read about that medical student's adventure, below.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/gps-stranded-driver-stuck-3-days-in-snow-1.993878
We have all been lost at some point, but with a GPS, you can sometimes get REALLY lost. I wanted to go from Riverview, to Hillsborough, about eight years ago. Where did my GPS take me? Into the woods as well, where I ended up on a dirt road in the middle of nowhere, and a total dead end!
I even found a Garmin GPS in the woods, when I was looking for my golf ball. I cleaned it up and it looked brand new, but of course it didn't work. I guess THAT is why someone chucked it in the woods in TOTAL frustration, in the first place.
I won't even mention about when I left St.Martin's, and ended up in Sussex, when I should have been in Rothesay!
So, recently, when I wanted to leave the bright lights of our major city in NB, Moncton, SANS GPS, I headed out on what I thought was the correct highway, to take the first exit going north. Well, that WAS NOT it. I ended up out in the middle of nowhere, where all I could see were rural roads branching off in all directions, along with several long on or off ramps. Total confusion, and no road signs that made any sense to me.
I knew I was lost. I also knew I should pay attention to those numbers they assign to roads but I never do. I consulted Google maps on my phone. Way too many directions, none of which made sense to me. Then I saw a vehicle approaching with what looked like a sympathetic woman driver, so I rolled down my window and flagged her down, so to speak.
I must admit, her funky hairdo (think a fluorescent Mohawk!) was a big distraction, but I strove to listen carefully as she very patiently explained that it would be easier for me to follow these back roads out to Route 126, then to send me back to my original departure point. I followed her instructions precisely, and arrived at route 126, where I turned right. W.e.l.l.... I knew when I saw a familiar landmark, (a school), that I should have turned left, as I was heading right back to Moncton. I turned Jiminy on a dime, and we were finally on our way home.
My little adventure set me back twenty minutes. Peanuts, compared to how much more time I could have wasted, had I used the GPS on my phone, possibly ending up on some D=E=A=D=E=N=D,
DIRT ROAD, AGAIN!
PS: To myself - change the settings on my phone to eliminate dirt roads?