Guess what I found after cleaning up all the piles of paper in my office. My lost San Bernardino Co. shooting map. I scanned it up and ###you can download the maps for future reference if you want since S.B no longer sells this map. From what I know, this map is still current but ###you can check with the local sheriff office to make sure. I've drawn in some crude boundaries for the National Parks and military land but you should use a topo map or GPS to be sure where you are. Each little grid square on these maps is a section on your topo map and all the sections are marked with Township, Range and Section info.
These maps files are big, about 200k to 300k so they may take time to load if you're on a dial up modem. If the map doesn't load all the way, hit the refresh button on your browser.
To save the maps to your computer using Internet Explorer, right click on the map after it downloads, and click save "Save pic as" and then pick a folder or location to save the map on your puter.
Guess what I found after cleaning up all the piles of paper in my office. My lost San Bernardino Co. shooting map. I scanned it up and ###you can download the maps for future reference if you want since S.B no longer sells this map. From what I know, this map is still current but ###you can check with the local sheriff office to make sure. I've drawn in some crude boundaries for the National Parks and military land but you should use a topo map or GPS to be sure where you are. Each little grid square on these maps is a section on your topo map and all the sections are marked with Township, Range and Section info.
These maps files are big, about 200k to 300k so they may take time to load if you're on a dial up modem. If the map doesn't load all the way, hit the refresh button on your browser.
To save the maps to your computer using Internet Explorer, right click on the map after it downloads, and click save "Save pic as" and then pick a folder or location to save the map on your puter.
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