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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.

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Sat 27 Jul 9:30 am
SOS Hills District - Baulkham Hills
Meet at 2nd Baulkham Hills Scout Hall, 25 Jasper Rd, Baulkham Hills

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Sat 27 Jul 10:00 am
Learn to Orienteer - Port Macquarie
Mackillop College Oval.

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.


Long legs at NSW Long Champs

What price nostalgia? Can you ever truly go back to the scene of a perfect crime? Or relive glory days?

Well, Jock Davis - our NSW junior squad coach - certainly had a good crack as he set some mind-boggling courses for our Long Championships at Snow Hills on Sunday. More than 330 competitors faced long legs and few controls in an area with few features.

Our friends at Orienteering Australia were just last week musing on a famous similar event in 1991 at Inverary.

"Competitors in most of the Red courses picked up their maps at the start at the southern end of the map and discovered that the 1st control was about 2km away on the northern end of the map. In between there were no tracks; instead complex spur/gully terrain where the best route choice was to navigate via the hill tops," recalled one.

"The first leg on M21A was about 2.5km, then there was a very short turning leg, then another 3.5km. Red 3 was about 9km with 7 controls (and three of those were in the last kilometre)," said another.

Jock's demanding courses resulted in some long winning times. The highlights were Duncan Currie (Garingal) beating a quality field in M16A and Michele Dawson (GO) taking out W21A.

On Saturday, NSW junior Rebecca George set the Middle Distance Championships in the eastern part of the same map. They were applauded as testing courses in complex spur/gully terrain with generally low to medium visibility. Father Simon agreed as he won M50A!

NSW runners on the elite podiums were Georgia Jones (UR, 3rd in W20A), Toby Wilson (GO, 3rd in M20A), Michele Dawson (GO, 2nd in W21A) and Nicola Blatchford (NC, 3rd in W21A). Victorians took the juniors and ACT runners the seniors.

Newcastle couple Martina and Stephen Craig made it a double in 35A and son Alvin won M14A, while Tracy Marsh (W40A) and husband Paul (M45A) were also among the gold.

Thanks to Big Foot for a worthy weekend of NSW championships. All the results, splits etc can be accessed via the BF website and our State League page. We ask all participants to please fill out the very brief Course Setter of the Year survey. Some great photos by Tony Hill are now up, too.