blchandl2 posted: I just wish Google Maps would let you send a custom route to your phone.
I don't "send" anything to my phone, but navigate by Google Maps all the time. Two ways ...
1) For rally riding, where you have to stop for a bonus photo at each waypoint: create your route in
Google Maps / Your Places / Maps and make sure it saves. When you're ready to ride, pull up your phone's Google Maps app and load your Rally Map, also via
Your Places / Maps. Zoom to and select any bonus location, and the app will provide turn-by-turn directions USING THE FASTEST (or shortest) CURRENT ROUTE. Note: not necessarily the route you planned, but for rally riding, don't you always want the fastest route?
When you're finished at bonus #1, zoom and select bonus #2, mount up and ride.
2) For following a specific route, Google Maps is far less useful: Create and save your route as above,
with the minimum waypoints that force the specific route you desire. Ten minutes before you're ready to ride, call up the custom map and turn on/off layers such that only the waypoints are shown. Click the "directions" button to call up directions from Your location with the destination field empty. Click inside the destination field and select Choose on map. A red marker and X appear. Pan and zoom until the first waypoint is under the X, and select OK. NOTE: Be as accurate as possible with the on-screen selection!
You should now see the desired route from your current location to the first waypoint. Touch the triple-dots next to Your Location, and select
Add stop. Add additional waypoints as above, selecting them on-screen, up to the limit of 10 waypoints.
As you're riding the pre-planned route, I think you have to press "continue" or something like that when you've reached each waypoint. Be prepared to stop for a few seconds if you don't have smartphone-enabled gloves.
Honestly, I don't use Technique #2 often, because I usually want to get to my destination as efficiently as possible. If I'm flower-sniffing, then I instruct Google Maps to route me "home", and start riding wherever the wind blows. When the "ETA at home" time gets close to when I've promised I'll be back, I begin following Miss Google's directions.
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You do know that any custom Google Map (or individual Map layer) can be indirectly exported to a GPX file, right? Open the desired map in My Maps and click the triple-dots beside the map name. Export to KMZ, then use any number of websites to convert to GPX. My favorite is
GPSvisualizer.com (no affiliation) because it's quick, precise, and has minimal BS.