GPS Park Guide
You do not need a park ranger to show you around national parks when you have your own GPS park guide
On your next trip to a national park, you will not need a ranger to show you around the park. Instead, you can have your own GPS park guide, which delivers park ranger-type messages about points of interest along a trail or road based on satellite recognition of GPS coordinates. Known as GPS Rangers, the handheld devices deliver multimedia content, including audio, video, text and pictures on a four-inch screen that is easily readable in sunlight.
These portable GPS park guide’s video presentations will enrich your national park hiking trips. As you approach a natural landmark, panoramic viewpoint or historical structure on a park road or trail, the GPS Ranger provides you with fascinating background information that you would not know otherwise. The handheld guides will educate you on park history, geology, and wildlife as you view them. You may also choose to view the guide’s entire program on the park, regardless of location, by scrolling down the touch screen menu for content files.
GPS park guides are available from GeoQuest for three most-visited national parks of the Grand Circle: Zion National Park, Bryce Canyon National Park, and the North Rim of Grand Canyon National Park. GPS Rangers are also available to guide you through Cedar Breaks National Monument, Death Valley National Park, Vicksburg National Military Park, Shenandoah National Park and Martin Luther King Jr. National Historic Site.

