Anthony the part owner of The Map Shop will tell you he has been involved in this shop for as many as twenty years, and the shop has been around for plenty more than that!
It is the second largest map shop in the world, and that's a pretty big deal when you think about it. The biggest map shop is in London and it's called Stanford's, but Adelaide boasts the biggest in the Southern Hemisphere and it's not because it is physically a large shop, it is because they have maps that are literally from all over the place including hard to find maps of walking trails in New Zealand for example that you can't really find anywhere except in New Zealand.
I always get taken off the beaten track talking with Anthony because he is so well travelled. In the last year or so he has travelled to something like thirty five countries, and no, it's not as a tax write off because he part owns a map shop, it's because he really loves to travel. If it was going to be a tax write off he would have to work five hours every day at negotiating maps and doing map business on his holiday. What Anthony loves to do is take photographs. Ask him and he may show you some of the most recent he has taken on his last holiday. They are stunning!
Okay, so this is about the Map Shop, not the wide and wonderful travels of Anthony; imagine a place where you would need a map to get around. Blue Mountains in New South Wales? Easy, go to the Australian section, you'll find a few there. A walking trail in New Zealand? I've already told you about those ones... How about Mozambique or Zimbabwe? Yep sure, in the Africa section... It's not going to be easy to find a place where they don't stock a map for negotiating travel around it.
There are street directories for the Australian States and Territories, world globes and possibly something you wouldn't have expected - a range of magnifying glasses, because some of these places are just a speck on the landscape, so you need a magnifying glass to see them on a map!
They stock Lonely planet Guides and lots of those phrase books that you can use when you are trying to communicate with natives that do not speak English. They're also pretty savvy when it comes to Global Positioning Systems and can train you up on such complex matters if you are heading off on a real adventure. They have some short courses you can do in an afternoon and they keep the numbers of students per course pretty low so you get good one on one interaction and support from the tutor.
Actually if you are intending on heading off into the great unknown, you must stop by here and get some clues as to what to expect so it is a great adventure and not the last one you ever go on; comprehend?
Really interesting shop to look through. If you are about to go travelling it is worth popping in and seeking out Anthony, he's worth his weight in gold when it comes to anecdotes, and if he's not busy he will happily give you some insight that you would never find on any map anywhere! read more