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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 Monday 22nd April 2024

Teams named for JWOC and EYOC

The GBR teams for the Junior World Orienteering Championships (JWOC) and the European Youth Orienteering Championships (EYOC) are announced.

The JWOC races are in Plzeň, Czechia from 1 - 6 July and the EYOC races are in Szczecin, Poland from 21 - 24 June.

All named athletes are selected to all disciplines at each competition.

In alphabetical order of surname, the JWOC team is:

JWOC Men M20

JWOC Women W20

Ben Gostick

Ruth Gooch

James Hammond

Jocie Hilton

Adam Methven

Isobel Howard

Thomas Rollins

Daisy May McNamara

Ben Squire

Imogen Pieters

Euan Tryner

Freya Tryner

Non-travelling reserves: Adam Barrie and Emma Crawford

 

In alphabetical order of surname, the EYOC team is:

EYOC Men M18 EYOC Women W18
James Hammond Ruth Gooch
Daniel Heppell Heather High
Thomas Rollins Jocie Hilton
Oliver Prince (subject to fitness) Freya Tryner
Non-travelling reserve: Laurence Ward Non-travelling reserve: Kate McLuckie
   
EYOC Men M16 EYOC Women W16
Finn Selmer Duguid Emily Atkinson
Finlay McLuckie Ella Baxter
Oscar Peel Katie Buckley
Marcus Perry Scarlett Kelly

Non-travelling reserve 1: Ruari Cottier

Non-travelling reserve 1: Anna Todd
Non-travelling reserve 2: Caspar Reynolds Non-travelling reserve 2: Sophie Crawford
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Share  Tweet Friday 24th September 2021

Scottish 6-Day, Lochaber 2021 – reflections from a first timer

Report by Ric Gamble, Development Officer and Chair of Lagan Valley Orienteers

Pre-event

In the summer of 2019, I travelled for my first big orienteering competition at Kainuu in Finland, but I had yet to experience a large multi-day event in the UK and neither had my wife Sarah or son Peter. So when entries opened for the Scottish 6-Days at Lochaber we were quick to add our names, living in hope that lockdown restrictions would be lifted. Whether the event would go ahead at all certainly seemed 50/50 at times. The organising team did an amazing job negotiating all the ups and down, twists and turns and in the end it did turn out 50/50, the event was arranged into two separate groups so that competitors ran on half of the allocated 6 days.

We along with 20 others travelling over from Northern Ireland, mainly from Lagan Valley Orienteers, were arranged to run in Group A on Days 1, 2 and 5. It was a great idea from the organisers to keep the club atmosphere on these days and having the whole of Day 6 to travel down and catch the ferry home, took the pressure off on the last day. Going by some of the times out on the hill on earlier days this was appreciated – but more about that later!

Day 1 – Ardchattan (Sunday 1 August)

After a long day in the car travelling up to Fort William the day before, it wasn’t too early a start on the Sunday for the first race at Ardchattan – just as well, as it was a fair jaunt down towards Oban. The weather was beautiful and the views along the sea lochs of Linnhe, Creran and Etive were stunning and made the drive a joy.

Ardchattan was described in the Event Information as “an area of fast open moorland offering fine views over Loch Etive down to Connel Bridge and the Falls of Lora”. I don’t think I will ever know what fast means on moorland but at least I can appreciate fine views. To get to the start was an effort in itself but fortunately I gave myself enough time to catch my breath and take in the stunning views before adjusting my focus on the start. Entered for M45L, the C3 course which was down as 7.9km with 335m climb; I knew I was going to be out for a while, so I needed to pace myself. Planners Graham McIntyre & Mike Stewart (INT) ensured I wasn’t going to go out too quick, with a good climb up to control 1, thanks! The course heavily relied on keeping tabs on contour detail which I was happy with until things started unravel a little as I sped up going off the hill to the finish and my oxygen starved brain was even less alert than normal. But I got home, all controls visited in the correct order, job done!

Back to the field where the cars were parked, food and water and a good catch up with friends from the club and even some sun bathing (if an exhausted person lying in a heap in the heat can be classified as sunbathing).

Day 2 – Inverlochy (Monday 2 August)

No commute today, this course was situated just outside Fort William at the golf course with more fantastic views up towards the North and West faces of Ben Nevis, which was clear all the way to the summit.

So, a Middle-distance run on a golf course, can’t be that hard surely?! The planners Nick Hale & Dan Gooch (MAROC) I think had different ideas. The first half of the course took me up into steep, mixed wooded slopes. Although Peel Land Surveys produced an excellent map, especially the areas of bracken, I had errors galore and not quite the start I was hoping for. The move into the commercial forested area went a lot more smoothly and I relaxed a bit too much as I looked forward to getting into the easy golf club area - well, I shouldn’t have. I quickly proved that orienteering is a more frustrating sport than golf. It was heard that there were more lost golf balls found out there in the rough than controls.

A lovely undulating fairway provided a natural finish arena and allowed club members to catch up again after their runs and cheer on later finishers.

It was a fairway round that course. 

‘Rest’ Days (Tuesday 3 – Thursday 5 August)

Instead of the usual one we had three rest days in a row this year. You can’t go to an area like this and rest for three days, there is too much to see and do.

Many from Lagan Valley Orienteers club decided the first ‘rest’ day would involve a climb up Ben Nevis, others went to seek out some eagerly anticipated local beverage or do a MapRun of Fort William. The Gambles opted for a climb up past the Pap of Glencoe to the Munroe, Sgorr nam Fiannaidh for views along the Aonach Eagach ridge and south over to the Three Sisters. Afterwards we took the short Corran Ferry trip over to Ardgour to enjoy the evening with family.

The other two ‘rest’ days involved white-water rafting and at last some proper rest, a bit of sightseeing, shopping and coffee shop hopping.

Rest day option 1: Having Lunch with Ben – LVO top club in Scotland, literally. 
Rest day option 2: white-water rafting

Day 5 – Creag Dhubh (Friday 6 August)

We awoke on our third and final race day to look out on a grey and damp landscape, a markable change in the weather. As we drove to the venue the weather deteriorated further, the thunder storms fortunately did not materialise, but we felt for the early starters and hoped the weather would lift for our runs. I’m pleased to report it did, instead of getting wet from above the later starters got soaked from the bottom up by the saturated, oxter high bracken.

The venue was used the previous day by the other 1,000 odd competitors in Group B and was down as a World Ranking Event. In the event information, Creag Dhubh (pronounced Craig Doo, or alternatively pronounced badly by anyone not from Scotland), was described as “Rough open birch forest on fairly uniform slopes either side of a spur projecting from Creag Dhubh with longer courses out on rough open moorland. Boulder fields and areas of scree.  Bracken areas are generally navigable.  Slow runnability for the majority”. My course certainly didn’t disappoint, I had a good mix of all this varied terrain. This time I learnt from day 2 and didn’t rush off, allowing my head to get into the map. Unaware at the time, there were many first controls quite close together and in slightly different directions, so the elephant tracks made by yesterday’s runners could be very misleading. In fact, they did prove very misleading for a number of runners, losing great amounts of time before they hardly started. Having found my first three controls though challenging terrain, my next leg led me 195m straight up onto the open hill. The route choice may have been obvious for some, skirt round to the north of the boulder field and cliffs, but I once considering myself to be a keen climber, so I fancied a more exciting direct approach. On this lonely climb I was joined by a few hundred small, flying, buzzing things, like tiny vultures waiting for me to drop – unfortunately for them I didn’t. When I topped out there was enough of a breeze to blow away my climbing companions only to be replaced by fellow competitors who could have proved equally fierce and distracting if I had allowed. With the big climb out of the way and with more open terrain the course started to run more smoothly, until I got back into the bracken again. Only a few short controls off the finish and I lost my position on the map and stupidly ran along a wayward elephant track. Afraid of losing height, I ended up wandering around for 15 minutes about 20m above my control. Eventually the illusive control was located and a quick finish followed, happy to have completed all the courses over the three days.

Back at the car, soon joined by my son Peter, we got ourselves dried off and some much-needed sustenance. The car park was clearing and uncharacteristically, Sarah was not back, so we went over to chat with the download officials near the finish. With not long before the courses closed, there were half a dozen people still out on the hill. Looking up we could see a frenzy of activity in the vegetation above and they all streamed out, Sarah being the last back with seconds to spare. It turned out she was one of the many who lost a lot of time on the first control. But was Sarah the last out there? On Sarah’s run in, Peter and I were joined by our friend Denis from LVO and Richard Oxlade the event organising coordinator. Denis was looking for the driver of his lift home (who will remain anonymous) and Richard was also interested in a last runner out there. When Richard asked, “Is he the determined type?”, Denis answered, “He is not the type to let things beat him”. Richard pondered this and then asked, “Is he a good navigator”, Denis was less complimentary with his answer this time. Within a few minutes, Denis’ lift arrived and to the applause of those remaining, and not involved in dismantling the site, he managed even to skip to the finish.

Staying to the very last moment of our last day, I and Lagan Valley Orienteers made the most of our 6/3 days. Not all of the NI bunch had their full monies worth though, some ran round their courses more quickly - congratulations to those who performed really well overall: Richard McCourt LVO, M75S 2nd, Olivia Baxter LVO, W21S 2nd, Helen Baxter LVO W65S 1st and Teresa Finlay Fermo W70S 1st.

Thank you all involved in putting this great event together - coordinators, organisers, planners, mappers, landowners, army of helpers and volunteers. In the circumstances, I think everyone appreciates that this was a very challenging and stressful event to stage and you did a fantastic job, well done!

Lochaber no more...............Moray for more!

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Have you attended any orienteering events for the first time this year which you would like to share with others? 
Email:  jtaylor@britishorienteering.org.uk

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