Title: Recreation Area
1 PART I
- Recreation Area
- Mapping Exercise
These presentation slides taken from the Mapping
Exercise Slides.
05Oct09
2VERS ModernizationRecreation Area and Traffic
Meter Evaluation Exercise
Mapping Exercise Slides
Mapping Quick Reference Slides
3Purpose of Mapping Exercise
- Produce an annotated map of each recreation area
that clearly and unambiguously shows recreation
area layout, visitor access points, and the
visitation monitoring set up. - Maps will be used in combination with data from
the worksheets to - Assess traffic visitation monitoring set up
and adequacy of traffic - meter locations at each recreation area.
- Identify options for obtaining visitation
associated with different - providers ( i.e., Corps-managed vs.
marina-provided visitation) - Identify situations on the recreation that
that may affect load-factors. - Aid in planning visitation surveys.
4Procedure
- Download and open the Mapping Exercise Slides.
- Download and open-or-print Mapping Quick
Reference Slides. - Use tutorial and example slides for reference.
- After last slide, create additional PowerPoint
slides containing annotated maps of your
recreation areas. - When finished, delete the tutorial and example
slides from file, and save recreation area maps
of your project. - Send completed PowerPoint maps to ERDC.
5Project Name Table Rock Lake Area Name Eagle
Rock ANRMS Code No 006 Access Configuration D
Street Map View
Eagle Rock Marina
Satellite Photo View
- Example Of A Finished Map
- Standard Parts
- Annotated street map of recreation area
(Required) - Supplemental aerial or satellite photo of
recreation area showing features not visible on
street map, such as marinas (As needed). - Title box with four standard pieces of
information (Required).
6Each Map Must Show
Your goal is to produce an annotated map of each
designated recreation area that clearly and
unambiguously shows the recreation area layout,
visitor access points, and traffic monitoring
set up.
- Recreation area boundary.
- Recreation sites comprising the recreation
area, where they occur. - Access roads into or out of the recreation area.
- Location of gatehouse (fee booth).
- Locations and names of all traffic meters.
- Locations of administrative facilities, visitor
center, marinas, resorts, and other types of
facilities influencing types of visitors and
traffic through the area. - As needed, text notes describing situations or
conditions that may affect visitation monitoring
(i.e., sources of non-visitor traffic regularly
passing over traffic meter, etc). - Title box containing
- Name of Project
- Name of Recreation Area
- Recreation Area ANRMS No. (from WebVERS)
- Access configuration of recreation area
Exactly like this (example)
Project Name Table Rock Lake Area Name Eagle
Rock ANRMS Code No 006 Access Configuration D
7 External Information You Will Need For
Identifying Recreation Areas and Constructing
Title Box
- From WebVERS Monthly Meter Reading Report
- List of designated recreation areas
- Name of each traffic meter
- Recreation area ANRMS code number0
8Sample Monthly Meter Reading Report
Traffic Meter Name
Recreation Area Name (ANRMS codes 0-799 only)
Area ANRMS Code No. (Note that ANRMS column
heading is misidentified in this report)
9What is a recreation area?
- Known by different terms- not necessarily
identical - Developed recreation area- in VERS manual
- Park, Day-use area, Campground, Marina,
Beach, Access Point etc- in recreation
brochures, on Corps websites, in Rec.gov, and in
informal usage. - Designated area - areas in WebVERS with an
ANRMS code of 0-799 - Recreation PSA- in OMBIL.
- Some recreation areas may be identified in OMBIL
as one of several other Area Types - For this exercise, a recreation area is a
Project-Site-Area (PSA) as it is defined in
OMBIL!!! - Splitters tend to divide a recreation area into
multiple PSAs. - Lumpers tend to combine separate recreation
areas into a single PSA.
10Steps in preparing a recreation area (PSA) map
1. Obtain a suitable base map(s) of recreation
area. 2. Identify boundaries of
recreation area and recreation sites
comprising the area. 3. Finish out the
map by adding features needed to show recreation
area layout, visitor access points,
and visitation monitoring setup.
___________________________ Step
1. Obtaining Base Maps Of Recreation
Areas
11- Base Map Sources
- Maps produced from your project GIS database.
JPG them for use here. - Hardcopies of existing recreation area maps.
Scan and JPG for use here. - Screen captures of satellite imagery and/or map
images that are publically available on the - internet or world wide web. For most
projects, this may be easiest to do and will
provide - the best result for the purpose of
documenting recreation area boundaries and road
access - patterns.
- Suggested web sources Depending on the
project one of these may show recreation area
boundaries, - roads, etc. better than another.
- Google Maps Go to Google search
engine at www.google.com and click on maps
option. -
- Bing Maps (was Microsoft Maps Live)
Access interactively online at http//www.bing.com
/maps/ -
- Google Earth Licensed version of
Google Earth Pro for Corps of Engineers personnel
is available for download at
12Screen Capturing a Base Map XP Operating
System With map displayed on computer screen,
depress Alt and PrtScn keys at same time to
place entire screen image into the clipboard.
Go to PowerPoint and on a blank slide, and paste
image from clipboard. To reduce storage size of
map image, right click on image, select Save As
Picture and copy somewhere to hard drive as jpg
file. Then insert back onto a PowerPoint slide,
replacing the image you inserted from the
clipboard. Crop jpg image to show desired area
of map.
Full Screen Image capture
Use Format options for
Final cropped picture image
cropping and sizing map.
shown enlarged
For purchase Corel Paint Shop Pro at
http//www.paintshoppro.com/ is a good, easy to
use picture and image management tool
that has many uses. Important Notes 1.
Inserting maps that have been converted to jpg
files will ensure that the entire PowerPoint file
remains manageably small. Using maps
that are copied to the clipboard then pasted into
in PowerPoint is more convenient, but may produce
a PowerPoint file that is
unnecessarily and unmanageable large. 2.
It will sometimes be useful to show two images of
the same area on the same slide. An aerial photo
image may show locations of unmapped
roads and other features of interest such as
marina facilities. A road map without the
photographic detail may show park boundaries
and roads more clearly.
13JPEG Your Base Maps Either Before or After
Copying Them onto a PowerPoint Slide !
- Why
- Imported and screen-captured base maps can be 2-5
MB each. Too many maps of this size make the
overall PowerPoint file unmanageably large. - Compressing base maps to JPEG or similar format
can reduce overall size of PowerPoint file by
90. - How (after a screen capture has been pasted to
PowerPoint) - Replace screen copied base map with JPEG picture
of base map.
Then complete Save As Picture screen.
Right click on base map image.
Be sure to select JPEG file interchange format
picture type.
Select Save as picture from menu that appears
on screen.
14Sizing Base Maps Show some of the area
surrounding the recreation area.
This Way
Not This Way
Access patterns and traffic meter setup can only
be evaluated if the entire recreation area and
some of the surrounding area is shown on the base
map. A much larger surrounding area may need to
be shown if the traffic meter is located on a
public roadway well outside the recreation area.
15Map Scale Vs Road Detail Choose a scale that
shows roads clearly!!!
This small scale map of a large recreation area
is convenient to create, but does not show road
detail clearly. At this scale, the map suggests
an additional access point from the highway, that
does not, in fact, exist.
This larger scale map shows road detail more
clearly. At this scale, it is clear that the
encircled stretch of park road has no access to
the highway.
16Map Scale Vs Road Detail If required, you can
overlay screen captures of different parts of the
recreation area that are each captured at a large
enough scale to show an adequate level of road
detail.
Here, two separate screen captures of the upper
and lower halves of a large recreation area have
each been reduced in size by 80, overlaid so
that adjoining features match up , then grouped
together to form a single map.
17Map Scale Vs Road DetailA separate, very
large-scale map of the entrance area may be
needed to show locations of gatehouse and
traffic counters.
Close-up of park entrance large enough to clearly
show location of gatehouse and traffic counter.
18Step 2. Identifying Recreation Area Boundary
- As shown on public map sources
- Added manually to base map(s)
- To show the recreation sites that make up a
recreation area -
19Show the Recreation Area Boundary!
This Way
Not This Way
At some lakes, Google maps and Bing maps show the
larger Corps property boundary, but not the
actual recreation area boundary. Always show the
approximate boundary line of the recreation area,
drawn manually, if necessary. The recreation
area layout and traffic monitoring setup usually
cannot be evaluated if the recreation area
boundary is not explicitly shown on the map.
20Recreation Area Boundaries Examples of
recreation area boundaries shown in Google Maps,
Google Earth, and Microsoft Live Maps.
Recreation boundaries shown on this map somewhat
over state the spatial extent of the recreation
area, but is otherwise correct. This map is
usable for visitation planning purposes, provided
that it is annotated to note the boundary
inaccuracies.
21Recreation Area Boundaries Examples of
recreation area boundaries drawn manually
Recreation area boundaries may not be available
for some or all recreation areas at a project..
For these recreation areas, boundaries must be
drawn manually using the freehand line drawing
option available on the AutoShapes menu in
PowerPoint.
The recreation area shown on this Google Maps map
view is partially correct, but does not show the
entire extent of the area. An Autoshapes freehand
line has been added to show the boundary of the
remaining portion of the recreation area. Also
added is a camping loop which has its own
entrance from the highway and notes explaining
these freehand map additions.
22Recreation Area BoundariesCreating a freehand
boundary
23Recreation Area BoundariesEditing a freehand
boundary shape or line
Boundary appearance as created
After changing fill color to No Fill
Fill Color select No Fill
After changing line color to green
After changing line width to 3 pt
24Not Sure of the Recreation Area (PSA) Boundary?
- Approximate it as best you can
- Good enough to show road access points and
visitation monitoring set up. - Not an officially-recognized boundary.
- Include
- Area readily recognized by visitor as part of the
park. - If applicable, all of the separate parts included
in the corresponding OMBIL PSA. - Exclude
- Adjacent undeveloped Corps lands.
25Use boundary lines to identify separate
recreation sites in the recreation area
- In some recreation areas, the park layout or
park road system is configured in such a way that
different parts of the recreation area are
isolated from each other, preventing a visitor
in one part of the recreation area from driving
directly to another part of the same area without
first leaving, and then re-entering the
recreation area at another access point. - An objective of the mapping exercise is to
identify portions of a recreation area that are
isolated from each other in the way described
above. We refer to these different places in the
recreation area as separate recreation sites.
Every recreation area can be organized into one
(most common) or more recreation sites. - How to Recognize a Recreation Site
- Different places inside a recreation area are
part of a different recreation site when - There are no roads inside the recreation area
that connect the two places. - Driving from one place to the other within the
same recreation area requires that you exit the
recreation area at one access point, then
re-enter it at a different access point. - Examples
- See next three slides
26Drawing recreation area boundaries to show
separate recreation sites- Example 1 of 3
Show This Way
Not This Way
This recreation area consists of two separate
recreation sites located on opposite sides of a
state highway, each with its own access points
from the highway. To travel from one site to the
other, you must exit the recreation area to the
highway then reenter the recreation area at an
access point to the other site. In the
recreation area classification system introduced
on a later slide, this recreation area has Access
Configuration D.
27Drawing recreation area boundaries to show
separate recreation sites- Example 2 of 3
Show This Way
Not This Way
This edited base map, obtained from Google Maps,
accurately shows the recreation area boundary,
but an internal boundary line is needed to show
the separate marina and campground recreation
sites that comprise this area. The marina and
campground are separate recreation sites because
there are no roads inside the recreation area
connecting one to the other. To drive from the
campground to the marina, you must exit the
recreation area at the campground access point to
a public road, then re-enter the recreation area
at the marina access point. In the recreation
area classification system introduced on a later
slide, this recreation area has Access
Configuration C.
28Does this recreation area consist of one
recreation site or two? Example 3 of 3
Correct
Incorrect
A recreation area that separates day-use and
camping visitors may or may not consist of
separate recreation sites. This map, taken from a
project brochure, shows a single access point to
a recreation area that is internally divided into
day-use and camping sections. Because vehicle
travel between the day-use and camping sections
can be accomplished on park roads without leaving
the recreation area, the recreation area boundary
should show the recreation area as a single
recreation site. In the recreation area
classification system introduced on the next
slide, this recreation area has Access
Configuration A.
29Assessing the Access Configuration of a
Recreation Area
- The boundary you show for a recreation area
should reveal the number of recreation sites
that make up the recreation area. - The number of access points associated with a
recreation site can be determined by counting the
number of visitor-accessible roads crossing the
recreation site boundary line. - These two pieces of information, taken together,
allow you to determine the Access Configuration
of each recreation area using the classification
rules outlined in the chart below. - Enter the Access Configuration in the Title Box
of each recreation area map.
30(No Transcript)
31 Step 3. Finishing out the map
adding traffic meters, other
features, and explanatory
notes
32Use Provided Symbols and Suggested Colors to Show
Recreation Area Features
PowerPoint Copy and Paste Icons click on icon,
copy to clipboard, then paste onto your map where
desired. Resize as needed.
Vehicle Traffic Counter
Visitor Center or Office Facility
Gatehouse
No Traffic Counter
No Traffic Counter Installed At This Area
33Adding Notes And Arrows
34Helpful Editing Features- 1 of 3
35Helpful Editing Features- 2 of 3
Order of Objects Objects are added to a slide
in layers, one on top of the other. To see all
objects, the largest (usually the base map)
should be the bottom layer, and progressively
smaller objects layered on top. Adding a large
object may cause previously added objects to
disappear from view. To bring a hidden object
back into view, double-click on the larger,
overlying object, to select it and bring up the
edit menu, then send the selected object
backwards using the Oder option.
Undo Some actions, whether intentional or
accidental, produce an undesirable result. To
undo the action, choose the undo option (first on
list) from the Edit menu located at the top of
your browser screen.
36Helpful Editing Features- 3 of 3Convenient
Access to Object Editing Features
1. Select object, then right click on mouse to
show object editing options.
3. This will bring up a Format dialog
box that will give you access all editing
features.
2. Select Format Object
Commonly Used Options Colors and Lines Access
to outline characteristics for shapes, lines, and
arrows, all in one place. Size Resize an
object, vertically or horizontally, in inches
or by percent of original size. Applies to
pictures, shapes, lines, and arrows. Picture
Crop picture from top, bottom, right, or left.
Applies only to picture objects.
37Examples of Maps Arranged in groups by Access
Configuration
38 1 of 2 Access Configuration A
Recreation areas consisting of a single site
with a single access point into / out of the
site. 1. 110 Mile Recreation Area,
Pomona Lake. Map view showing all
major features of interest at this relatively
small recreation area. 2. Long Creek
Recreation Area, Table Rock Lake. Web map view
shows the recreation area boundaries
and layout of roads. A supplemental satellite
view shows marina and other features
of area. 3. Oakland / Ozark Isle, Bull
Shoals Lake. None of the 3 web map sources
show a recreation area boundary, so the
boundary was manually added to the
road view map shown. With the recreation area
boundary in place, the map suggests 3
access points. But as explained by the added
text note, two of the apparent access
points no longer exist because the roads have
been permanently blocked-off. A
close-up view of a portion of the recreation area
was added so gatehouse and traffic
counter locations could be more clearly shown.
39 2 of 2 Access
Configuration A Recreation areas consisting of
a single recreation site with a single access
point into / out of the site. 4. Dam
Site and Tionesta Launch Recreation Areas,
Tionesta Lake. This map shows a
Corps-owned scenic loop road on which there are
two recreation areas. Both
recreation areas consist of s single recreation
site with a single exit road, so
both have Access Configuration A. However, a
case could be make for classifying
the Tionesta Launch as Access Configuration B
because the access road spits into
two roads (ramp entrance and parking lot
entrance) at the recreation area
entrance. They are shown on the same map to
better communicate the fact that both
areas utilize traffic counts from the same
traffic meter to estimate visitation.
This is an uncommon situation, but does occur
elsewhere.
40Project Name Pomona Lake Area Name 110 Mile
ANRMS Code No 005 Access Configuration A
110 Mile meter
Boat Ramp
Class C Camping
41Project Name Table Rock Lake Area Name Long
Creek ANRMS Code No 009 Access Configuration A
42Only one access to Oakland / Ozark Isle complex
Oakland
Ozark Isle
No. entrance or exit here. Connecting roads shown
entering / exiting recreation area are
permanently blocked.
Oakland meter
Project Name Bull Shoals Area Name Oakland /
Ozark Isle ANRMS Code No 002 Access
Configuration A
43Note There are two recreation areas on this
slide that utilize counts from the single traffic
counter shown.
Project Name Tionesta Lake Area Name
Tionesta Launch ANRMS Code No 010 Access
Configuration A
Overview of Dam Site and Tionesta Launch
Recreation Areas
Maintenance Facility
One way road splits to launch ramp and parking
area
Project/ Ranger Offices
Dam Site Entrance
Start one-way traffic
Information Center
Picnic / Trail
Project Name Tionesta Lake Area Name Dam Site
ANRMS Code No 001 Access Configuration A
Water release control tower
Dam Site Recreation Area
44 Access Configuration B Recreation
areas consisting of a single recreation site with
two or more access points from which you can
enter or exit the area. A distinguishing feature
of these recreation areas is that you can enter
at one access point and exit from the same or
another one. 1. Shadow Rock Park,
Bull Shoals Lake. A municipal out-grant park
with a main entrance and a
little-used back road from a nearby subdivision.
2. Theodosia Park, Bull Shoals Lake.
This is another municipal out-grant park,
with several access points into and out of
the park. The street map shown is a
composite of 3 separate screen captures, each
showing an extreme close-up view of
the roads in a portion of the park. This was the
only way to show roads with
sufficient detail to clearly show entrance and
exit points. 3. Table Rock State
Park, Table Rock Lake. There are two vehicle
access points from which to enter
and/or exit Hwy 165. There is no other vehicle
access to the park. The park access
shown near at the Branson Belle tour boat site
is incorrect. This road actually
dead-ends near the State Park boundary. A text
note was added to the map to this
effect.
45Shadow Rock Park meter
Project Name Bull Shoals Area Name Shadow
Rock ANRMS Code No 011 Area Configuration B
Elevated highways have no park access
Unmetered back road to / from residential area
46(No Transcript)
47Project Name Table Rock Lake Area Name Table
Rock State Park ANRMS Code No 006 Access
Configuration B
State Park meter
Branson Belle Tour Boat Out-Grant is not part of
State Park
State Park shown in cross-hatched area in this
lake brochure.
Note There are 2 metered vehicle access points
to Hwy 165. No other places to enter or exit the
Park.
Park Boundary is approximately here. Park Road
dead ends here road does not connect to Branson
Belle Out-grant area as shown on base map.
Launch Ramp
Marina
Campground
48Access Configuration C Recreation areas
consisting of two or more recreation sites,
either physically separate or adjacent, with a
separate access road to each.
- 1. Heber Springs Recreation Area, Greers Ferry
Lake. This recreation area has two separate
sites, located on opposite sides of a bay. Each
site has its own access road shown and labeled
on the map. Since recreation area boundaries
were not present on any of the available base
maps, approximate recreation area boundaries were
added manually. - Michigan Valley Recreation Area, Pomona Lake.
This area has the appearance of a single
recreation site, but it functions as two adjacent
sites (marina and campground) , with separate
entrances to them. To drive from one site to the
other, you must exit the recreation area to the
public roadway, then re-enter the recreation area
at the access point for the other site. The
internal boundary line separating (approximately)
the two adjacent sites that make up the
recreation area are show as a dashed line,
instead of the solid line normally used to show
the recreation area boundary. There is a single
traffic counter serving the two sites, which is
located on the adjacent highway. Using the meter
location instead of the access roads as the
reference point for identifying the access
configuration might lead to you to incorrectly
assign Configuration B, instead of Configuration
C to this recreation area. . - 3. Baileys Point Recreation Area, Barren River
Lake. Like the recreation area above, this area
has the appearance of a single recreation site,
but functions as two separate sites because there
are two different access roads that provide
access to two different places (Campground,
picnic area) within the area. To drive between
the campground and picnic area, you must exist
from one site to the county road, then enter the
other site on a different entrance road. This map
was produced by project staff at one of our test
sites. Base maps were produced using the project
GIS system. The maps were JPEGed, copied into
PowerPoint, then annotated using PowerPoint
editing tools. - 4. Indian Point Recreation Area, Table Rock
Lake. There are two slides shown for this
recreation area. One is an overview showing both
satellite and map views. The second is annotated
to show details relevant to visitation
monitoring. This area consists of three adjacent
sites (marina, campground, boat club), with no
internal park roads connecting them. To drive
between one site and another, you must exit the
recreation area out to the public road, then
re-enter the recreation area at the access point
for another site. The recreation area boundary
is shown with the same solid green line used on
maps of other recreation areas. In addition, the
individual sites are shown approximately by a
corresponding dashed line. The four traffic
counters present in this recreation area are
shown where they occur and are labeled with the
meter names used in WebVERS.
49Heber Springs campground and marina
Heber Springs meter
Project Name Greers Ferry Lake Area Name Heber
Springs ANRMS Code No 003 Access Configuration
C
Close-up of entrance
50Project Name Pomona Lake Area Name Michigan
Valley ANRMS Code No 004 Access Configuration
C
51Satellite View
Picnic Area is only accessible by exiting the
main part of the Recreation Area and traveling ¼
mile down a county road. It is metered
separately.
Project Name Barren River Lake Area Name
Baileys Point ANRMS Code No 011 Access
Configuration C
52Project Name Table Rock Lake Area Name Indian
Point ANRMS Code No 001 Access Configuration
C
The Harbor on Table Rock Lake
Campground exit shown here is permanently gated
closed.
- Overview of Indian Point Recreation Area showing
3 separate sites that make up the Recreation
Area. - Harbor (concession)
- Campground (CE)
- Marina (concession)
- Each site has a single
- entrance/exit point to
- public road.
Indian Point Campground
Indian Point Marina
Campground road not connected to marina entrance
road as shown.
53The Harbor on Table Rock
Booth meter
Loop meter
Harbor meter
Note This is the only entrance / exit to
Campground. Park roads shown connecting
Campground to the Harbor and the Marina no longer
exist.
Close-up view of campground entrance with meters
and gatehouse.
Indian Point Campground
Project Name Table Rock Lake Area Name Indian
Point ANRMS Code No 001 Access Configuration
C
Main meter
Indian Point Marina
Note Each of the three separate parts of the
recreation area have their own entrance from the
public road. There are is no way to drive from
one site to another without exiting to the public
road and re-entering at another access point.
54 1 of 2 Access Configuration D
Complex or Unusual Situations
- 1. Eagle Rock Recreation Area, Table Rock
Lake. This recreation area consists of two
parcels or sites on opposite sides of state Hwy
86, each with its own access points from the
highway. This recreation area does not fit any of
the previous configurations because one of the
two sites has one access point and the other has
two access points, giving it elements of both
Configurations B and C. The locations and names
of the three traffic counters associated with the
access points are shown on the map.2. Table
Rock Lake Project Office, Table Rock Lake. This
recreation area consists of three separate sites
that is metered with a total of four traffic
counters. It is a slightly more complicated
version of the situation above. There is a
visitor center at one of the sites that has a
pedestrian meter at the visitor center entrance.
It is noted on the map that two of the three
sites get some visitors who arrive by tour bus. -
55 2 of 2Access
Configuration D Complex or Unusual
Situations
- 3. Bull Shoals State Park, Bull Shoals Lake.
Bull Shoals State Park also has features
corresponding both to Configurations B and C.
This area consists of two separate sites (day-use
and camping), each with its own access from the
public highway analogous to Configuration B,
while the day-use site has 2 access points,
analogous to Configuration C. Two slides are
presented for this recreation area. One is an
overview map showing the locations of the two
sites relative to each other and to the highway.
The second has a close-up view of each site that
is better suited for showing the locations of
traffic counters and the gatehouse. 4.
Stephens-Avery Recreation Area, Lake Ouachita.
This recreation area is made up of several
different recreation sites located along Barkley
Dam Road. Barkley Dam Road is a Corps-owned and
maintained stretch of State Hwy 229 that enters
Corps-owned property below the dam and leaves
Corps-owned property above the dam. Traffic
counters placed at either end of the Corps-owned
stretch of Barkley Dam Road capture recreation
traffic associated with all the component
recreation sites as well as the through-traffic
using Hwy 229. Access roads for some of the
component sites were added by hand, since they do
not appear on the base map. The map is annotated
to identify the separate sites and the one-way
access roads at some of the sites.
56Project Name Table Rock Lake Area Name Eagle
Rock ANRMS Code No 006 Access Configuration D
Booth meter
This is only entrance / exit west of Hwy 86
North meter
Camping
Camping
Dock meter
Park road does not exit to Hwy 86 as shown
Marina
57Project Name Table Rock Lake Area Name Table
Rock Lake Project Office ANRMS Code No
023 Access Configuration D
Note The Project Office recreation area is made
up of three different and unrelated sites.
Close-up view of Resident Office Site and
Overlook entrance.
Visitor Center/ Project Office Complex
Pedestrian counter at visitor center entrance
Overlook meter
Resident Office meter
58Project Name Bull Shoals Area Name Bull
Shoals State Park ANRMS Code No 010 Access
Configuration D
Slide 1 of 2 Overview
Recreation Area on west side of outlet channel is
not part of State Park
Dam
State Park Day-Use Area
State Park Camping Area
Gastons Resort
Outlet Channel
Residences along road
Map View Of Same Area
59Slide 2 of 2 Close-ups of recreation sites.
Project Name Bull Shoals Area Name Bull
Shoals State Park ANRMS Code No 010 Access
Configuration D
Recreational access to river not considered part
of park.
Main Entrance
Camping Area
Back road access
Day-Use Area
Bull Shoals Dam
Access Points
60Stephens-Avery Recreation Area
Project Name Ouachita Lake Area Name
Stephens-Avery ANRMS Code No 001 Access
Configuration D
Stephens Park Meter
Spillway Recreation Area is separately metered
(see separate map)
Stephens-Avery Owl Ck Rd Meter
61 Project Overview
Maps 1. Lake Ouachita, AR. Screen capture
of lake area from a web map source,
with locations of recreation areas noted using
labels and arrows. 2. Pomona
Lake KS. Scan of brochure.
62Overview of Lake Ouachita, AR
Lena Landing Recreation Area
Cedar Fourche Recreation Area
Camp Storey
Rabbit Tail Recreation Area
Avant Recreation Area
Washita Recreation Area
Little Fir Recreation Area
Highway 27 Recreation Area
Big Fir Recreation Area
Camp Yorktown
Buckville Recreation Area
Tompkins Bend Recreation Area
Spillway Recreation Area
Joplin Recreation Area
Denby Point Recreation Area
Stephens-Avery Recreation Area
Twin Creek Recreation Area
63Overview of Pomona Lake, KS
64Insert Maps For Your Project After Next Slide
When you are Finished Delete the tutorial and
example slides above from this file. This will
reduce the PowerPoint file size by 6MB. Then
save or rename the finished map file as Lichu
Your_project_name Maps. Using this naming
convention, the map file for Table Rock Lake
would be named Lichu-Table Rock Lake Maps.
E-mail your finished maps to Lichu Lee at ERDC.
She is listed in the CE Outlook Address Book
under the name Lee, Lichu, ERDC-EL-MS
Contractor. If your file is too large to send
by E-mail, open this hyperlink to our ftp site
ftp//erdcftp.erdc.usace.army.mil/incoming/el ,
copy or paste your file to this site, then notify
Lichu by E-mail that you have done so. If you are
unable to access the ERDC ftp site from your
Microsoft Internet Browser, try accessing it
through Windows Explorer. To do so, Right Click
on the START button at the bottom of your
desktop, select Explore, then type or copy the
FTP address on the Address Line. Important
Note This ftp site is used as a repository for
files destined for everyone at ERDC, Vicksburg
and may contain hundreds of files. Because of
this, it is critical that you use the file naming
convention suggested above or we may not be able
to locate the file you send. Due Date is 31
October 2009
65POC for Project Mapping ExerciseEnter you name
and Phone number below and return this slide with
maps.
POC Name
Phone No.
66Need Help?
- Contact
- Richard L. Kasul
- Engineer Research and Development Center (ERDC)
- Vicksburg, MS
- E-mail Richard.L.Kasul_at_erdc.usace.army.mil