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Wed 17 Jul 5:30 pm
Moonlight Madness #4
Artarmon Reserve, Burra Road, Artarmon
Thu 18 Jul 7:30 pm
Orienteering Participation and Engagement Network July Meeting

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Sat 20 Jul 2:00 pm
2024 NSW State League #10 - Poppethead, Kitchener
“The Poppethead” D.Lyons. Partially updated 2024, Cessnock Rd, Kitchener -32.8766698, 151.3657394 https://bitly.cx/wDYvx

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Sun 21 Jul 9:30 am
2024 NSW State League #11 - Barraba Lane, Quorrobolong
“Barraba Lane” - Ian Dempsey, 2021, Barraba Lane, Quorrobolong -32.9630219, 151.3384693

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Sun 21 Jul 10:00 am
Waggaroos Local event, Wolfram
Livingstone State Conservation Area.

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Tue 23 Jul 7:30 pm
Orienteering NSW July Board Meeting

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Wed 24 Jul 4:00 pm
2024 Sydney MapRun #2 Putney
Putney Park Toilets (South), Pellisier Rd, Putney
Sat 27 Jul 9:30 am
SOS Northside
Vision Valley, Arcadia.
Sat 27 Jul 9:30 am
SOS Hills District
Crestwood (Torry Burn map).

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Sat 27 Jul 10:00 am
Learn to Orienteer - Port Macquarie

Welcome to Orienteering NSW

Orienteering is a sport that challenges both the body and the mind. It's also loads of fun!

The aim is to use a special orienteering map to navigate your way around a course and visit marked check points along the way. You choose a course that suits your age and experience and proceed at your own pace: walk, jog or run. It is a race but you decide if you want to just race yourself or be the next world champion! The course may take you through urban areas, parks, schools, farmland or forests.

Events are conducted weekly across NSW and beginners are welcome at all events.

New to orienteering? Click here for more information.

Want to enter an event? You can see what's on by looking at the Coming Events at left or by going to the Event Calendar. Some events are enter on the day - you just turn up and register at the start. Other events require pre-entry and for that you need to know about (and register with) Eventor - read the Eventor FAQ.


Ultra fine way to end a glorious urban carnival

Our first city-based Xmas 5-Days carnival wrapped up with an ultra sprint right outside the Sydney Cricket Ground to great acclaim from elites and amateurs alike.

The setting - among magnificent fig trees (see pic, left), around Kippax Lake, and a stone's throw from so much sporting history - was a fitting end to 5 days of urban O. 

Ultra Sprint is a new form of orienteering, much like cricket's Twenty20 - fast, furious and finished quickly.

Participants had to complete short line courses of about 1km, in any order, inside the two-hour window (8-10am). The maps were drawn at 1:2000 with every tree shown and its canopy covering. Controls could be either side of a tree or fence post or log, and each wrongly punched control brought a 30-second penalty instead of the dreaded 'mp'.

"It's the first time I have done this and it's fantastic," said Christian Tingström of Sweden, who won the Big Foot Sprints a week ago at St Ives Showground. Today he finished four seconds behind Josh Blatchford (NC) who completed the 3 courses in 17m52s. 

"I am an orienteer, not a runner, so I love how you have to concentrate very hard on the map in an area that looks very easy. And all the dummy controls (from the other courses); it's like Trail O and quite tricky. It's a really good training activity, too. I loved it."

In Women's A, Swedish World Cup champs and six-time world championship silver medallist Tove Alexandersson won by a massive two and a half minutes today to easily take out the overall title.

The standout feature of the ultra sprint is the maze (see pic, left) in the middle of the map. Each course had 3-4 controls inside the maze, which was also magnified as a map inset. You can see a two-minute video of the maze in action.

Around 100 Sydneysiders had a test run of the ultra sprint at Callan Park in November, so had an inkling of what lay ahead. Behind the scenes it was a mountain of work for setter Matt Peters, SI guru Ron Pallas and the host club Uringa - triple the work of a normal event. UR awesome !

Click on the blue links for Day 5 maps from the Hard 1 course (Leg 2 and Leg 3), resultssplits, the final carnival standings (your best 4 results counted) and the ONSW album of Facebook photos.

You can see why Garingal's Tony Hill worked as a wedding photographer during his uni days - check out his sensational album from the carnival. Thanks Tony.

We wish safe travels and clean running to all those heading on to Tasmania immediately for the Oceania championships and opening round of the World Cup. We hope you have enjoyed a carnival that aimed to showcase the best of Sydney.