Where GPS in the rental car does NOT help
BUT the GPS can go wildly wrong in rural areas for South African self drive trips for the reasons mentioned above. If there is a gravel road which is shorter than the tarred one, they may well suggest it. Even though it will probably take you a lot longer as well as making for more taxing driving.
(Our Rule of thumb is that the gravel road needs to be HALF the distance of the tarred road, for it to be faster. That’s rarely the case.)
This seems to be a particular problem when it comes to navigating your way to a game lodge.
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Classic Example
We were travelling from Hazyview to Simbavati River Lodge in the Timbavati Game Reserve of the Greater Kruger. We have been to the lodge before and so we know the route. But I switched on the GPS to check on the distance. Then I decided to keep it on as I was curious about what directions it would suggest…
First the GPS wanted us to take a right into Acornhoek. Which is a rural African town, and not on the tarred route. Later I saw on the map that there was a gravel road which cuts through this large, rather confusing township to the tarred road beyond it leading to Kruger’s Orpen Gate. Shorter (in theory) but definitely not faster, and definitely not a route to suggest!
Having ignored it, it then directed us to take a right onto the tarred route to the Orpen Gate. However this is still not the right road! (There is a lengthy and corrugated gravel road off this tarred road which eventually gets to the Timbavati Game Reserve but this would have seriously added to the journey time.) … Nul points for the GPS!
Then it wanted us to turn right again onto a game reserve road. But there was a small problem: the reserve fence was in the way! But this time, the various occupants in our car were enquiring whether our GPS had had one too many drinks. Its credibility was shot to pieces.
Finally we turned right onto the correct road and continue into the Timbavati reserve. Then it wanted us to take a random selection of gravel tracks (which are used by 4×4 landrovers for game drives,) instead of the main route to the lodge, suitable for self drive rental vehicles. At this point, we turned it off.
The bottom line is that if a client had been relying on the GPS to get them to the game lodge, the routes suggested would ALL have added serious time to the journey. To say nothing of anxiety and added driving pressure from all the unnecessary gravel roads…