The Province of Noord-Holland has chosen a lax approach - Sometimes there
is only a board or a square colum in a certain colour and style, replacing
or put next to a previous board, but it should show the name and info. In
this case, I have the name and position from one source (operator's
website), confirmed by a second, independent source (bicycle platform), but
no recent view to confirm it.

I still have my doubts about that one too. On the one hand it is on a
parking lot, near a train station, on the other hand no major biking or
hiking trails pass by that exact spot. It's on my list, along with several
others could not yet confirm.

If you would check the lot (please do!) i'm sure you would find some more
questionable ones. That's OSM.

Op vr 21 dec. 2018 om 19:56 schreef Andy Townsend <ajt1...@gmail.com>:

> On 21/12/2018 18:12, Peter Elderson wrote:
> >
> > The route starting points in Nederland are multimodal, named, have to
> > fulfill some requirements,  and are recognizable in the field as such
> > by some kind of landmark feature such as an oversize green grass halm,
> > cone of stones, oversize key. They were occasionally mapped as
> > tourism=artwork. We would not consider any waymarked path leading into
> > a nature area to be a trailhead. A verifyable name would be required,
> > at least.
>
> Taking an example that I'm at least a little bit familiar with, I
> suspect that it's a bit of a stretch calling
> https://www.openstreetmap.org/node/6141097057 a trailhead - if memory
> serves it's just an info board describing the area between Castricum and
> the sea?  I don't remember seeing anything else there.
>
> Best Regards,
>
> Andy
>
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>


-- 
Vr gr Peter Elderson
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