Find The Garmin Forerunner 110 GPS At Amazon.com

This new Forerunner Addition Is Designed For "Ease Of Use"

Garmin knows how to make GPS watches right with its long-standing Forerunner line, but the vast majority of 'em have been useful only to computer geeks who aren't deterred by lengthy setup procedures.

Designed to provide just the basics to runners and other fitness buffs, this timepiece provides near-instant access to distance, pace and time within seconds of stepping outside.

Check Availability of the Garmin Forerunner 110 GPS Now!

Wet Christmas

 Wet ChristmasTake a look at our list of gift ideas for the outdoors lover in your family December 09, 2011 from staff reports

The theme of this year’s Oregon Outdoors Christmas gift guide is water: Playing in it, drinking it, staying dry from it. and because we have plenty of it around — from the salty version in the Pacific to the running kind in the Rogue — the outdoorsy types on your gift list will be able to use at least one of the items described below.

Sometime water is a pain — especially if you’re traveling with expensive electronic gear. The Seattle company that produces popular dry bags and sacks for boaters and rafters has personal electronics covered, too. Its E-Cases feature tough, transparent, urethane windows and trademarked SealLock closures, which withstand submersion in up to 1 meter of water for 30 minutes. yet the cases are soft enough to allow easy navigation of button-based electronics. Two corner lash points accommodate cords or other tie-downs to keep electronics secure. The small case fits iPhones and similar-sized devices, while the large could hold tablets and some laptops. E-Cases are stocked at Northwest Outdoor Store in Medford for $19.95 (small) and $29.95 (large). See www.seallinegear.com.

If your electronic device does takes a swim, the Bheestie Bag likely is your best hope for reviving it. The zipper-close bag contains highly absorbent but nontoxic beads that suck moisture from items sealed inside and left overnight. used on a regular basis, Bheestie can extend the life and improve the performance of cell phones, cameras, watches, game players and other small electronics. when used for 24 to 72 hours, the bags have restored electronic items that went through washing machines or were left out in a gale, the company says. Not surprisingly, Bheestie is based in Portland. The bead-filled bags, which can be used for up to year if properly sealed, cost $20 at Northwest Outdoor Store in Medford. See www.bheestie.com.

When you’re the one taking a dip in the outdoors, this small, light, fast-drying, microfiber towel should be a staple. Compared with other materials, trademarked Aquitex microfibers are twice as fine as silk and three times finer than cotton but have more surface area for absorption and evaporation, according to the San Francisco-based Britanne Corp., which also markets these towels to travelers. We’ve had ours for more than 10 years, and it’s still a must-have for any aquatic activity, particularly when we need to pack light. The large towel (19 by 39 inches) weighs less than 7 ounces and is available for $20.50 at Northwest Outdoor Store in Medford. See www.aquis.com.

Anyone with a driftboat or raft knows that wear and the weather can take a toll on oars, particularly the oar blades, and that you might need to sell a kidney to afford replacing them. but rehabbing those old oars not only adds years to the sticks, it’s also much cheaper than you think.

For $20, Sawyer Paddles and Oars of Talent can add what they call a “Pro Tip” to a frayed oar blade. It’s a layer of Kevlar covered by a tubular webbing called Dynel that rehabs the blade while adding just an ounce to its weight.

Considering that good, new oars start at more than $200 each, that’s a stocking stuffer worth the time it takes to actually find Sawyer’s shop (299 Rogue River Parkway, around the corner from Talent City Hall).

Anyone who has sloshed around Oregon streams and rivers long enough realizes that all waders leak at some point, and with gravity being what it is, that water always puddles around your feet. Short of buying new waders every year, a good interim move is to wear neoprene socks to keep those toes warmer and drier.

Seal Skinz makes a great waterproof sock that has a thin inner lining that’s perfect for those cold days standing in the chilly upper Rogue River during the coming winter steelhead season. They’re available at Black Bird Shopping Center in Medford for $30, and they’re worth every penny when you’re standing in the Rogue in January and can still feel your toes.

Just how are you supposed to remember exactly where last year’s hotspot was on Diamond Lake or Howard Prairie where you caught those big trout? Finding your “honey hole” by lining up that rock with this tree and that mountain peak are sooo 1990s.

Portable global-positioning system units can be carried on boats to pinpoint exactly where that sweet spot is on a lake. Ocean anglers love them as well, because you can program the locations of outcroppings or rock humps where all the rockfish hang out.

Garmin makes an eTrex 10 model for a little over $100 that’s available at Black Bird Shopping Center. It does all the nifty GPS things you need, plus it is waterproof, so it will survive that ocean storm so you do, too.

Channel your inner bill Dance with one of these nifty little portable waterproof video cameras that can capture remarkable footage of your outdoor adventures — and owning one of these nifty little cameras is quite do-able these days.

GoPro owns this market, and its Hero 1 is the perfect camera to chronicle your wet and wild adventures. The Black Bird Shopping Center has them for $200, and you can buy various mounts to put the camera on everything from skis and surfboards to kayaks and mountain bike helmets. The newer and better HD Hero 2 runs $300.

Mount it on a dowel and you can hold the camera under water to capture video of fish coming to your boat, then post the videos on Facebook and be the next smiling face of Oregon angling.

You are an Oregonian. therefore, you crab. but you’re not really a crabber if you have to rent rings every time you go to the coast.

If you have a wannabe crabber on your list, get them their own crab trap. The only decision you’ll have to make is whether to buy pots or rings.

Pots are best if you want to throw your trap off a dock and then come back a few hours later to pull it up and measure your catch. Rings are best if you enjoy sitting on the dock and watching the boats, sea lions and people — or maybe flipping the pages of a book and sipping some coffee — and pulling your rings up every 20 minutes or so to check the action. Either way, Sportsman’s Warehouse on Delta Waters Road has it covered. The store carries various options that run in the neighborhood of $32 to $55 for rings or collapsible traps.

Oregon State Parks day-use passes, good at state parks and state-operated boat ramps, are on sale through December for $25, which is $5 off. That’s a great deal considering it costs $5 a day without the pass. The permit is required at 26 Oregon state parks, including TouVelle State Park. It’s also good at Jackson County boat ramps along the upper Rogue River as part of a reciprocity agreement for river-users. The Oregon Coast Passport also is discounted by $5 in December. The passport is a multi-agency product, valid at Oregon State Parks, U.S. Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management and National Park Service sites along the coast. The coastal passports are on sale for $30, also $5 off, in December. They’re available at most local sporting goods and outdoors stores, as well as the customer-service counters at many larger retail chains. (Correction: Stores that don’t sell passes but were included in a earlier version of this list have been removed from this version.)

Sometimes water in the backcountry will make you sick, which is where this tight little device comes in. SteriPEN’s Adventurer Opti is a lightweight unit that uses ultraviolet light to purify water. you insert the device into any water bottle or container to ensure safe drinking water. It exceeds U.S. EPA guidelines, destroying more than 99.9 percent of bacteria, viruses and protozoa when used as directed. Operation is easy: just press a button and wait for the device to indicate it has completed the purification process. The optical sensor can also double as a flashlight. The Adventurer Opti weighs 3.6 ounces. It includes a UV lamp (good for up to 8,000 treatments), two nonrechargeable batteries and a neoprene case with belt loop. The price is $99.95 at Northwest Outdoor Store in Medford, which carries four other SteriPEN models, including the new Sidewinder, which includes a hand crank instead of batteries.

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<a href="http://www.mailtribune.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20111209/LIFE/112090309/-1/lifetag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://www.mailtribune.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20111209/LIFE/112090309/-1/lifeFri, 09 Dec 2011 10:02:50 GMT”>Wet Christmas


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     Sharon Laws ready for London 2012 challenge (From Wilts and Gloucestershire Standard)Sharon Laws ready for London 2012 challenge

    7:20pm Wednesday 23rd November 2011

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    SHARON LAWS will not be able to relax until June 7, 2012 has been crossed off her calendar – that’s the date the GB women’s road race quartet is announced for the London Olympics.

    Sharon is the ultimate team player, a mountain specialist who does the hard miles to break down the opposition until the team’s No.1 comes through to claim the glory.

    it worked at the 2008 Beijing Olympics when Sharon was part of the team which helped Britain’s Nicole Cooke to gold; it worked at the World Championships the same year with the same result.

    but Sharon admits she will have to prove herself all over again ahead of selection next summer.

    Speaking to the Standard on a brief pre-Christmas visit to her family home in Bourton-on-the Water, the much-travelled Laws sounded positive about her prospects for 2012, not least because after breaking a leg, dislocating a shoulder and cracking a collarbone in her previous three seasons, she went through 2011 injury-free.

    There were no race wins in her first year with the powerful Garmin-Cervelo team, but a number of eye-catching performances including third place in the National Road race Championships and a runner-up slot in the second stage of the Giro d’Italia Donne.

    “Perhaps my results did not reflect it, but I feel I have ridden better than ever this year,” said Sharon.

    “First of all, it was great to get through a season without breaking something.

    “I was delighted, but also disappointed, with my second place finish (to Australia’s Sharon Gillow) in a stage at the Giro Donne, which is the biggest race in the women’s calendar and our equivalent of the Tour de France.

    “I so wanted to wear the (leader’s) pink jersey if I had won that stage.

    “Then I was really pleased to finish eighth in a sprinter’s stage in Verona, because one thing I am not is a sprinter.

    “I was just disappointed that I did not hold on for a top ten finish, but I was sick for the second half of the race.”

    Sharon now lives in Girona, Spain, close to some of her Garmin-Cervelo team-mates, and said: “The move has been really positive on so many fronts. it has made such a difference to have a proper base.”

    Living overseas comes naturally to Laws, who was born in Nairobi in 1974 and grew up as an only child with mum Joy in idyllic Bourton after her dad died when she was six.

    after graduating from Nottingham University with a degree in biology and a Masters from University College London, she has worked on countless conservation projects in places like Zimbabwe, Uganda and South Africa before moving to Australia to work for the Rio Tinto mining company.

    it was there in late 2006 that this mountain bike enthusiast discovered road racing and so successful has been her transition that she decided to (temporarily) give up her high-profile career for the precarious life of the international professional cyclist.

    “GB is the fourth ranked team in the world and we have a strong medal chance next year,” she said.

    “I think Lizzie Armistead will one of the favourites to win the gold, while Nicole (Cooke) and Emma (Pooley) are almost guaranteed their places on the team.

    “That leaves myself and three or four other younger girls, including my Garmin-Cervelo teammate Lucy Martin, going for that final place.

    “The challenge is to peak in the early part of the season – to justify selection – and then peak again for the Olympics.”

    after a two-week end-of-season break, including some hiking in the Pyrenees, the hard graft of gym work has begun, although there are some winter compensations.

    Sharon heads to South Africa for three months on December 1 for road race training, with a little mountain biking thrown in for some variety. and she leaves with a message for the cycling selectors: “I know I can still do a really good job.”

    Let’s hope they continue to reward Bourton’s ultimate team player.

    Read these Sport stories

    <a href="http://www.wiltsglosstandard.co.uk/sport/latestsport/9379090.CYCLING__Bourton_s_ultimate_team_player_pitches_for_Olympic_slot/tag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://www.wiltsglosstandard.co.uk/sport/latestsport/9379090.CYCLING__Bourton_s_ultimate_team_player_pitches_for_Olympic_slot/Wed, 23 Nov 2011 19:29:37 GMT”>Sharon Laws ready for London 2012 challenge (From Wilts and Gloucestershire Standard)


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      i got a garmin nuvi 1300 for christmas, and i can't figure out how to do an alternative route. any help?

      Where do you go to do an alternative route for the garmin nuvi 1300?


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        I got a Garmin Nuvi 350 for Christmas and I tried it out today and I am unsure how to change a setting. My sister has a Garmin Street Pilot c340 and when using it before it said…."In 0.2 miles turn right on to Miami Ave. the Nuvi 350 says "…in 0.2 miles turn right" is there a way to add the street name?

        Yes hit the wrench picture/ navagation/ preferences. Just play with it for 10 minutes you'll get it. or actually read the directions.

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          when i turn my nuvi 200 on, it goes through the process, "loading maps" and then asks me to confirm the agreement. a new message is displayed "no detailed maps found that support routing. the nuvi cannot be used without them"

          i got the Satnav unit for christmas 2007 whitch came with no cd. i looked on the garmin website and they want £60 to "update the maps".

          i just want my maps back? can anyone help?

          I have a magellon sorry. ask your folks for the dinero.

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            Auto turn on and off for Garmin Nuvi 255W?

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            I received the Garmin Nuvi 255 fr Christmas and when I first used it, it would automatically turn on when I turned my car on (as the power cord was turned on) and then when the car was shut off, it would display "turn off or stay on, and would automatically turn off in 30 secs. its just all the sudden stopped doing that. is there a way to set it back up to turn on and off automatically????

            Are you using the GPS in a different vehicle? in some cars, the power to the cigarette lighter goes out when you turn off the ignition, and in other cars, the cigarette power stays on (running on the battery) even if you switch off ignition. in that case, the GPS stays on also since it's still drawing power from the lighter.

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            you might have to pay 70 to 80 for the update. you might want to consider a newer gps.

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            1301496615 32 Garmin Forerunner 305 with heartrate monitor reviewby Johnny99

            I bought the Garmin 305 just after Christmas. My new year’s resolution was to get out and do some more running. I’ve always been a keen runner however I struggle for motivation some times and that was the driving reason for purchasing this watch. the main thing I wanted was a watch which would tell me how far I’d ran, the time it had taken me and how many feet I’d climbed. I wanted all this for around the £100 mark.

            The initial pictures of the 305 made it look quite bulky and cumbersome however I was quite surprised when I got it out the box as to how compact and user friendly it was. With all the varying functions that it provides it would have been easy for Garmin to make it far too complicated to operate and alienated the less computer proficient of us, however they have done a very good job of making it simple and easy to use.

            When the watch is first switched on it locates the satellites which track you as you run. it usually takes the watch about 2 minutes to locate them however that varies each time. if you live in a built up area you may have to find a more open space in order for the watch to locate the satellites quickly.

            Once on, the watch has a quick start function which is the one I primarily use. it allows the user to just select the displays they want to see such as distance, time, and speed and then just start running. this is an ideal function for me as I’m not really one for changing settings and messing around with these things, I like to just switch on and get going. if your training requires more than just basic long distance running then the watch also provides a much more focused training package. the watch comes with software to upload to your computer. this software is in fact a virtual personal trainer and you program what workouts you wish to do on which day of the month. There are multiple workout types to choose from such as interval training, fartlek training etc. all of which are edited by yourself to suit your needs. These are then uploaded to the watch and away your go. I was particularly impressed when I realised that this function was available. the whole system is veryuser friendly and workouts can be planned long in advance allowing future goals to be met.

            Another feature I was impressed with was the ability to automatically request the watch to stop the timer when you stop running. this is beneficial in built up areas when you have to cross roads or wait on traffic and ensures that your time isn’t effected due to these unforeseen circumstances.

            Upon completion of your run you are able to upload the route to Google earth so you can see exactly where you ran. the Software also shows you your pace at varying points of the run and which parts you struggled on the most.one thing I wasn’t really impressed with was the heart rate monitor. rather than being built into the watch which would be more desirable it is in fact a band which you strap round your chest. I personally don’t like this and find it uncomfortable but it does work and is effective.

            What I’ve noticed the most since buying this watch is my eagerness to get out and run. I no longer feel like I have to stick to the same old routes anymore, I can leave the beaten path and venture further afield and still be sure that I’ve run the distance I want. I can even plan a route on the computer before, upload it to the watch and then it will tell me which way to go.

            For me it is an excellent watch and well worth the money of anyone who enjoys running.

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