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Share  Tweet Friday 26th April 2024

Considering becoming a Mapper? Sign up to our eLearning course!

Mapping is the one of the most rewarding and enjoyable roles. Not only does it improve your navigation skills, but it can also provide you with a different and new type of orienteering challenge.  

The British Orienteering E-Learning Mapping Courses, Introduction to updating Forest Mapping and Introduction to Sprint and Urban Mapping , developed with the expertise of David Olivant (Nottinghamshire Orienteering Club) and the educational robustness  of Pauline Olivant (Nottinghamshire Orienteering Club) .

Both courses are based around learners having access to either of the two most widely used mapping programs, Open Orienteering Mapper and OCAD.

We strongly advise that you seek an experienced mapper as a mentor to support you through your journey towards being a competent mapper.

Both courses are based on updating an existing map and rather than creating a new map from a previously unmapped area.

Course objectives

  • To provide an introduction and basic understanding of the processes involved in how to update and amend an existing Orienteering map.

The course content is designed to only address the course objective rather than attempting to cover the full scope of Mapping. As we recognise that Mapping is a skill that takes much time and practice to hone.

The course should only take around 45- 60 mins to complete and for the whole of May is only £6.00

To access the course and find out more information about our other E-Learning courses, please visit the E-Learning homepage.

Interested in learning about our other E-Learning courses on offer? Visit the E-Learning homepage and access information on all the other resources we provide.

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Share  Tweet Tuesday 23rd April 2024

British Middle Championships and Northern Championships: Final details

AIRE and CLARO look forward to seeing you all at the British Middle Championships this coming weekend. 

You have entered in greater numbers than we anticipated, but we have adapted to cater for you all as best we can.  Both Danefield and Kilnsey Moor is a lovely places in the Spring sunshine and we really hope the weather is kind so that you can enjoy it at its best.  The technical woodland of Danefield is in sharp contrast to the fast open areas of Kilnsey.  You should enjoy some great orienteering on both days.  Str8 compasses is sponsoring a lot of prizes for the Northern Championships and the British Middles so run well and good luck.

Start times and final details are published, maps are printed and lots of equipment is ready to move.  No controls are out yet, but we have been busy at Kilnsey as you may be able to see from a picture.  There are a variety of crossing points on Kilnsey Moor – many of you will only encounter this one.  There are no stiles to cross at Danefield you’ll be relieved to know.

We will be able to accommodate you all in the parking areas for both events, but as always, it would help if you car shared as much as possible.  The Danefield field has remained in good condition throughout the winter, but as some rain has been forecast over the coming days we will have some tracking available.  Kilnsey has the delight of hard standing in the quarry.  We can’t promise that you will keep your feet dry, but at least cars should not get stuck in the mud as might have happened at some recent events.  We’re hoping that’s true for Danefield.  Definitely true for Kilnsey!

Anyone wanting to carry a club tent to Danefield, could reduce the distance to carry the tent by 800m by using the drop off point suggested in the event details.  It would need to be a rapid drop-off as there are often no parking bays available. They are all quite uneven, and the road is very narrow.  To get back to the parking field it is best to not attempt a 5 point turn but to drive in an anti-clockwise route with LH turns for 2.5k to get back to the parking field.  This should take no morfme than 5 minutes.

Have a great weekend.

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Full details on the British Middle Championships are available via this link. Visit the CLARO website for more details regarding the Northern Championships. Good luck to everyone taking part!

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Share  Tweet Tuesday 23rd April 2024

British Orienteering to offer part-year membership to newcomers

As agreed at the AGM 2023, from 1 May 2024 British Orienteering would like to offer an exclusive part-year Membership to new members.

New members are individuals who have not been members of British Orienteering in any of the previous four calendar years.

Part year membership fees 2024

Seniors – £10

Young adults – £7.50

Juniors – £3.00

Families – £25.00 (all members must be new members and not on the database to take up this offer).

No memberships will be merged with existing memberships.

Please note from 1 January 2025, any “new” members will need to renew their membership for 2025.

Find out more about how to join online today. 

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Share  Tweet Thursday 3rd December 2020

The Lakes Warrior UK Elite Training - Who are the real Lakeland Warriors?

Report by Duncan Birtwistle, UK Elite Orienteering League Co-ordinator

Please note:  this event took place before the new lockdown measures came into force across the country. 

All competitors followed British Orienteering’s Participant Code of Conduct and considered the Alert level guidance.  

The Lakeland Warrior. Three training races in two days tested athletes on some lesser-used areas of the Lake District in a low-key weekend staged at short notice accordingly to national guidance and social distancing by Warrior Orienteering Club with the help of Lakeland Orienteering Club and Masterplan Adventure.

Due to travel restrictions in Wales and Scotland at the time the weekend did not score towards the League. The UK Elite League is sponsored by NVii Str8 UK and supported by Formline online shop.

Like at Lakes Reloaded in early October, then men’s races were a battle of old versus young with Graham Gristwood against junior Alastair Thomas, alongside 2020 debuts for William Gardner and Jonathan Crickmore. In the women’s Laura King and Cecilie Andersen were coming in favourites following a win each a month earlier.

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The Intense One - Middle at Thwaite Head

For Saturday’s middle race athletes started in pairs, heading out onto two 2.5k loops with a run-through in between to gauge progress and ratchet up the pressure. Thwaite Head is a small area tucked at the south end of Graythwaite and a terrain very few had been in before. Athletes were heading into the unknown.

Former JWOC competitor Victoria Stevens (Aire) has been off the scene for some time but she set an early leading time of 42.05 in the womens. It was only the third-last pair of Fay Walsh (Mid Wales) and Helen Ockenden (Cambridge University) that managed to dislodge Stevens from the hot seat. Both competed at Lakes Reloaded so couldn’t pull the ‘out of practice’ card, with Ockenden coming back 18s ahead of Stevens.

Photo above (right):  Victoria Stevens (Aire)

Niamh Hunter (Edinburgh University) and Laura Robertson (Edinburgh Southern) started next with King (Edinburgh University) and Andersen (Bristol) last. The final pair passed each other on their first-loops even on time but heading onto the second loop Andersen was running away. King pushed on through some downhill mistakes, catching Hunter (who took fifth) and finishing 46s in front of Ockenden. Except Andersen hadn’t merely run away, she had flown away, stopping the clock five minutes before King and clipping a couple of top guys in the process.

In the mens the early lead was set by Rhys Findlay-Robinson before Lakes specialist Tom Fellbaum (Manchester & District) took a minute off and the fastest time down to 31.36. Joe Hudd (West Cumberland) and Will Rigg (Lakeland) failed to live up to the pre-race hype and finishing a couple of minutes adrift.

From the Octavian Droobers pairing on fifth-last start it was Matthew Elkington who finished first, 33s ahead of Fellbaum. Starting next, Graham Gristwood (Forth Valley) and Peter Bray (Southern Navigators) both finished in front with the leading time edging down a full two minutes to 29.03. None of the next four could do it and it was left to last-starters Alastair Thomas (Edinburgh University) and William Gardner (Octavian Droobers).

As they climbed to the common control (#11/22) at the end of the first lap Gardner drifted left, letting Thomas enter the run-through 10s ahead. The pressure was getting to Gardner who contoured when he should have dropped to #14, losing precious seconds. Lapping in the other direction however Thomas’ legs were tiring. On the return to the finish Gardner was ahead of Thomas this time, and ahead of everyone else, taking the win in 28.49, with Thomas 14s back on the exact same time as Gristwood.

Photo above (left):  Fay Walsh (Mid-Wales); Photo above (middle):  Matt Elkington (Octavian Droobers)

The Dark One - Night Middle at Bishops Wood

The lights flicked on and the forest lit-up for Saturday evening’s night race at Bishop Woods, with stronger fields than the British Night champs.

Bishops Woods has hosted the British Relay Champs and the JOK Chasing Sprint so is more than up for testing the country’s best. Deciduous forest in the north gives over to conifer in the south where green plantation has grown into mature white making racing even faster.

You would have been brave to bet against Graham Gristwood in the mens, with seven British Night Champion titles accrued.

Gristwood took the lead on the steep uphill leg to the first control, but Alastair Thomas was the one in first by number 3, a position he commanded for the next fifteen minutes of the race as it looped round the north end of the area via long legs requiring careful map-reading all the way.

The final few controls were easy to lose time on if you didn’t keep your compass when crossing the parallel spurs. They prised Thomas away from the lead and cost Gardner the third that Crickmore was to seize.

Photo above (right):  Laura Robertson (Edinburgh Southern) with Nathan Lawson (Octavian Droobers)

In the womens it was a very close start before legs five and six started to split the times. Helen Ockenden dropped from a 30s lead to sixth in just one control and King from fourth to sixth a checkpoint later where she was caught by Laura Robertson who was running strongly again.

King and Robertson were racing hard and matching the pace of Andersen for most of the course, with King opening a slight gap to Robertson as they approached the finish. Like it did to the guys, the last control caused upset, with Robertson’s lead over Andersen vanishing and King slipping out of third which went to Ockenden.

The Tough One - Classic at Breasty Haws

Another area with little use but many names: Blind Lane, Breasty Haw, Bogle Crag, Bowkerstead. These pockets at the southern end of Grizedale link up a steep slope at the top with a broad craggy hill at the bottom.

Courses started with a loop around the hill and then stepped onto the slope. The women’s course turned back a little sooner but they got to attack all the key long legs. These long legs, plus a couple of shorter ones, decided the race.

#5 - Careful in the green

With a downhill finish over a fairly flat slope, into green, this leg was asking for trouble.

Big time loss here which dropped Bray, Lawson and Gardner out of the fight for third whilst Smithard and Crickmore also missed.

Men #17 / Women #12 - Get to half-way, then you’re on your own

Even to the bottleneck, in the second half do you swing out left for the track or follow one of the broken walls closer to the line?

The round route proved to be faster in both womens and mens with the best executions leaving the track before the quarries to pass near the start on the way to the control.

Men #20 / Women #15 - Getting tired: take on the hill or smash the path?

Gristwood twisted from round to straight for the final long leg, but this was not the fastest route. Bray left #18 at the same time as Gristwood but headed north east to take the track and took a monster 30s out of the rest of the field.

Andersen stuck to her round strategy but King went straight this time and found her 45s deficit getting stretched out to two minutes.

At the finish

Throughout the race Cecilie Andersen and Laura King traded the lead but that final long leg cost King with who finished three minutes down on Andersen’s 56.46. Helen Ockenden added a consistent race to a consistent weekend picking up another third just 8s ahead of Victoria Stevens.

Graham Gristwood caught five competitors through the course of the race on his way to win in 58.14. His two minute man Jonathan Crickmore was a beneficiary of this from half-way but managed to hold on to second even as the elastic snapped at the end. Not known for his tough forest performances, Chris Smithard ran solo to third whilst Alastair Thomas unfortunately finished injured.

So who were the real Lakeland Warriors?

With an incredible win in every race Cecilie Andersen took the women’s with ease. Laura King and Helen Ockenden were second and third with Laura Robertson and Victoria Stevens also getting close.

Photo (middle):  Jonathan Crickmore (Southern Navigators); Photo (right):  Will Gardner (Octavian Droobers) and Cecilie Andersen (Bristol OK).

With a night race and a rough long this was classic Graham Gristwood terrain, who took the overall win. Jonathan Crickmore made his return to elite orienteering for second with William Gardner taking third.

The lead sponsor NVii Str8 UK were in attendance demonstrating their high performance shoes and compasses. NVii and Str8 products are available direct by email at nviistr8.uksales@gmail.com or online from formline.uk.

Big thank you to Warrior OC, Lakeland OC and Masterplan Adventure for staging and assisting. Maps copyright Warrior OC and Lakeland OC.

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