When I first started using Microsoft Flight Simulator 2020, I was instantly hooked on the bush trips. They offered such a unique and adventurous way to explore the sim’s stunning world. However, I quickly ran into a small annoyance: the in-game nav log took up way too much screen space, making it hard to fully enjoy the experience. After some digging, I discovered PDF nav logs on flightsim.to, which were a game-changer—I could follow along on my tablet or phone without cluttering the screen. But then I saw a post on the MSFS forums saying the author was taking a break from Flight Simulator, and I was honestly pretty bummed out. That’s when it hit me: why not create a tool to export bush trip nav logs myself? I could share it with the community, and everyone could generate their own logs whenever they wanted.
As I dove into the project, I studied the bush trip files and started coding. But I soon realized the files weren’t very consistent—each trip seemed to have its own quirks. Building a universal tool that worked flawlessly for every bush trip was going to be a real challenge. So, I shifted gears. Instead of a one-size-fits-all solution, I decided to export as many bush trips as I could, tweaking the code as needed for each one. I began by converting them into Microsoft Word documents, which are super easy to turn into PDFs. Then I thought, why stop there? I could export them as HTML files too. That’s how this website came to be—a place where I’ve gathered all my successful exports to share with the Flight Sim community. I’ve kept the HTML simple and clean, so if you use a “print to PDF” tool, the layout fits perfectly on the page.
You might notice the pictures are pretty big, and that’s intentional. Some bush trips take you to tricky spots like grass strips that can be tough to spot from the air. With larger images, it’s easier to see the details and find those hidden gems when you’re flying. I hope it makes your adventures a little smoother!
I plan to keep exporting bush trips as they’re added to Flight Simulator and update the site with new pages. If I ever figure out how to make the export tool more user-friendly, I’ll happily share the code so anyone can download it and create their own nav logs. For now, though, I’m just excited to contribute something useful to the community that’s given me so much enjoyment.
If you have any suggestions or ideas, feel free to email me at msfsbushnavlog@msfsbushnavlog.com—I’d love to hear from you!
Love this site, it’s really useful for following the trips on my iPad especially on Xbox where we don’t have simlink or littlenavmap.
There used to be something similar on flightsim wiki that converted the bush trips to google earth files but they gave up many world updates ago.
Thanks for making it!
Thanks, I plan to keep it up to date with the newest trips as they are added. I use it as well. I originally started to make these for myself, but then thought why not share it with everyone.
I just got back into bush trips after a year or two virtually circling the world.
Having these desciptions lying beside you is so much easier than using the nav window.
Thanks a lot for your efforts, your work is very much appreciated!
Thanks, trying to keep it updated as much as I can. The UK and the new German, Swiss & Austria came out pretty close together but got them out as well.
Thanks for the work you do, have you also thought about localization for languages other than English?
p.s. i am italian
I can do that actually, I have designed my exporter to choose the language at export. Are there certain trips you would like exported? I could do those right away for you, it will take some time to do all of them though.
Thanks! This is really appreciated! Awesome work!!!! 🙂 by the way, is there a discord group?
There is not a discord group, but I guess I could make one.