Hikers reviewing a paper map at a trail junction

Built for People Who Plan in the Field

We design outdoor activity documentation that survives poor signal, muddy pockets, and last-minute route changes.

Why Grid-Based Planning

Most trip notes live in scattered messages and half-finished spreadsheets. We wanted a single schematic language—fold lines, coordinate blocks, and time columns—that groups could read without training.

The Grid Map approach treats each day as an architectural sheet: layers for transit, meals, gear checks, and contingency branches clearly separated.

Founded: Kettering, Great Britain

Focus: Day trips, weekend circuits, multi-day river and ridge routes

Format: Digital blueprints with offline print variants

Our Planning Method

Measure

Segment distances, elevation notes, and realistic pace assumptions recorded before you pack.

Allocate

Food, water, and gear distributed across manifest cards with named responsibilities.

Archive

Export printer-safe sheets and GPX files for zones where connectivity ends.

What Guides Our Work

Trail equipment laid out for pre-departure inspection

We test layouts on real outings—checking whether a timeline still makes sense when a ferry is late or a path is muddier than the guidebook suggests.

Language stays neutral and factual. We describe tools and formats, not outcomes. Your crew brings the experience; we supply the structure.

Get in Touch

Explore the Planning Suite

Blueprint Builder, Supply Manifest, and Offline Vault work together as one workflow.