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Coming Events


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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.


Toby, Brooner dead heat at Goanna

Andrew Brown (Big Foot) and Toby Wilson (Garingal) tied for first place as the fifth annual Garingal Goanna enjoyed its closest ever finish on Sunday.

While "Brooner" punched the finish a fraction of a second ahead of Toby, they recorded identical times of 45m28s around the 7.3km course on the fiendish Clay Pan map at Beacon Hill. Brooner's clubmate Andy Simpson was just seven seconds adrift in third place on the long course. Michele Dawson (GO) was fastest female in fifth place.

In the DraGOn (5.3km), Paul Shingler delivered more good news for the Feet with victory in 41m28s, a bare 10 seconds ahead of Tom Kennedy (Garingal). Bennelong's David McGhee was third in exactly 43 minutes.

In the short GeckO (3.9km), Tom's older brother Alex climbed out of his sick bed to take the honours in 42m21s, a clear six minutes in front of Terence Chiang, one of a number of promising Garingal juniors coming through the North Sydney Boys High School program. Only one second separated WHO veterans Steve Dunlop and Ian Miller for third place.

This newish area is a ripper of a map on Sydney's northern beaches with its complex track network and coastal scrub making map contact a necessity.

In this unique 'goat racing' format, runners:
* have a mass start
* may follow each other
* have a box of 4 controls that can be done in any order
* may skip a control or two (depending on the course)
* have to choose a or b at a forked control

There was lots of animated discussion about skips, forks etc - and many runners realised in the post mortem that they had overlooked yet another option that may have been better. 

Click on the blue links for the GOanna, DraGOn and GeckO course maps. Which control(s) would you skip? Which fork would you take? The 'clay pan' area which hosted the box was blown up (see pic top left) for easier reading on the run... but it seems 80% of entrants forgot to refer to it! 

A massive thank you to Colin Burnett for configuring the courses in SI - this is a huge task for this event, and to setter Ian Jessup and controller Ken Jacobson for offering something off the beaten track, so to speak.

Results are here (including a brief analysis of skips, forks and box routes) - feel free to put your course on Routegadget. And there are photos on Facebook.