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Wed 1 May 6:30 pm
Newcastle Night Champs - Eleebana
Thomas H Halton Park. Revised by D. Orr 2024. 1:4000, 2 metre contours and 1:1000, 2 metre contours.
, Thomas H Halton Park, Eleebana

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Sat 4 May 9:30 am
SOS Northside - Warriewood
Turimetta Beach Reserve (off Peal Place, Warriewood)

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Sat 4 May 9:30 am
SOS Hawkesbury - Penrith
Penrith Selective High School - enter from Colless St, Penrith NSW
Sat 4 May 9:30 am
SOS Term 2 Season Pass

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Sun 5 May 9:30 am
2024 Metro League #2 - Sydney Park, St Peters
Sydney Park, St Peters.

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Sun 5 May 9:30 am
NOY3 - Missing Link [Elrington)
"Missing Link" 1:7,500 for all courses., Elrington (Missing Link)

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Sun 5 May 10:00 am
Goldseekers Bush Series #3 -Ophir South
Ophir South, North East of Orange.

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Tue 7 May 9:00 am
Riverina Schools Day Individual, Willan's Hill
Willans Hill, Wagga Wagga.
Tue 7 May 10:00 am
Riverina Schools Relays, Willan's Hill

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Sat 11 May 9:30 am
SOS Northside - Killara
Swain Gardens, 77 Stanhope Rd, Killara NSW 2071

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.


Australia takes Sprint race in Aus/NZ Challenge

Strong performances across the age classes saw Australia even up the scores in the Australia/New Zealand Challenge on Tuesday by winning the Sprint Race match.

Inspired perhaps by the international elite field whose World Cup races preceded the Oceania competition, NSW competitors delivered a stunning series of podium placings to give Australia the edge it needed to come back on terms with New Zealand after their fine win in the Middle Distance at the weekend.

Fedor Ishakov Bennelong Northside was the first Australian back in M21, Eric Morris also Bennelong Northside 1st place in M40, Karen Blatchford Newcastle 3rd W45, Michael Burton Big Foot 2nd M50, Debbie Davey Waggaroos 3rd W55, Nick Dent Central Coast 2nd M60, Bryony Cox Garingal 1st W65, Ross Barr Garingal (and Mr Sydney Summer Series himself) 3rd M65, Jean Baldwin Goldseekers 3rd W70, Basil Baldwin Goldseekers 3rd M70, and Maureen Ogilvie Uringa 1st W80.  Full results listings here

The Australia/NZ Challenge moves on to the Long Distance race on Thursday near Masterton, with a very different set of terrain challenges for the runners.

 

Julian best of the Australians in World Cup Sprints

Julian Dent had a great qualifying run on Monday placing 10th in a field which read like a Who's Who of the orienteering sprinting elite.  Simon Uppill also had a good run to qualify but there was a veritable battalion of Australian girls including Grace Crane, Rachel Effeney, Felicity Brown, Mace Neve, Jasmine Neve, Aislinn Prendergast, Kathryn Preston and  Anna Sheldon whose great performances saw them all getting places in the final.

The Sprint Final at Wellington College was highly technical and demanded full concentration.  Minor mistakes were severely punished with even some veteran campaigners being caught out by the tricky detail.  Helena Janssen found herself on what looked like a perfect route along the red line only to end up staring at an uncrossable fence she had somehow missed in her route planning.  Tove Alexandersson made the same mistake but was able to adjust and pick up the pace to take the title.  Home grown talent Lizzie Ingham had a great race to take a very popular 3rd place. The men's final was hugely competitive as was to be expected, with mere seconds separating places.  Mattias Kyberz, recently profiled in the IOF e-magazine, Inside Orienteering, was the winner, with Jerker Lysell of Sweden preventing the Swiss three Mattias' taking out all the top placings.  Julian Dent was the best of the Australians with a 13th place, Simon Uppill placing 17th. Amongst the girls Grace Crane topped the Australian listings with 18th place and Rachel Effeney in 21st spot.  Special note must be made of Felicity Brown who, in her first time representing Australia at World Cup level, delivered a very creditable performance in 28th place.

Sprint Final results:

Women:1st Tove Alexandersson Sweden,2nd Annika Billstam Sweden,3rd Lizzie Ingham New Zealand

Men: 1st Mattias Kyburz Switzerland, 2nd Jerker Lysell Sweden, 3rd Mattias Merz Switzerland

Full results listings here

 

 

Oceania enjoys World Cup spectacle in New Zealand

The first of the World Cup races at Oceania were held yesterday at Waikawa on the west coast of New Zealand's north island.  The world's best orienteers had primed themselves for a stunning display of technical prowess and pure speed which delighted the spectators who lined the banks of the nearby estuary to watch the action. 

For many of the international runners, this was their first trip to New Zealand but that didn't mean that the terrain came as a surprise.  The Danes in particular felt at home in the technical sand dune areas mapped especially for these races, which are very similar to their own training areas in Denmark.  Fabian Hertner of Switzerland held off Swedes Johan Runesson and Jerker Lysell to win the men's race, whilst champion Helena Jansson (Sweden) won the women's race with Ida Bobach (Denmark) and Tatyana Riabkina (Russia) hot on her heels.

Julian Dent, NSW, was the best of the Australians in 27th place in a race where the times were as tightly packed as those of a sprint race.

The next race for these international elites is the Sprint Qualification which takes place around Wellington on Monday with the Sprint finals on Tuesday.

 

Lynn Dabbs and Maureen Ogilvie shine at Oceania

After two days of running in soft dune terrain you might have been expecting NSW runners legs to be a bit sore for the first of the Australia/NZ Challenge races but Lynn Dabbs (Western Hills) and Maureen Ogilvie (Uringa) showed their stamina by winning their classes yesterday in New Zealand.

The New Zealanders dominated on their home turf and swept the majority of classes.  The terrain was challenging for the Australians who rarely come across soft complex dune terrain in their national races, but the mapping of this new area for NZ was excellent and highly readable.  Course setter Yvette Baker set a thoroughly enjoyable competition for the runners with courses which provided an interesting mix of short and longer legs, combined with quick changes of direction over the highly technical area.

There were good performances from the NSW contingent, with the Central Coast club having a particularly rewarding outing; Nick Dent 3rd, Colin Price 10th (M60A), Julia Prudhoe 3rd, Hilary Wood 12th (W55A), Robyn Pallas 5th (W60A) and Marianne Birch 4th (W21C).  Newcastle's Russell Blatchford was 6rd (M50A) with Michael Burton 8th,  Daniel Hill GO (M16A) Lawrence Jones UR 10th, Aidan Dawson GO 12th (M18A), Matthew Hill GO 9th (M20A), Kasimir Gregory NTOC 6th (M21E), Fedor Ishakova BNN 3rd M21A, Dale Wallace WP 3rd (M21AS), James Lithgow GO 7th (M55A), Peter Shepherd IKN 8th (M60A), Ross Barr GO 9th (M65A), Basil Baldwin GS 10th (M70A).  Joanna Hill GO took 2nd with Sophie Jones UR 6th in W12A, Katie Wallace WP 3rd (W14B), Georgia Jones UR 7th (W16A), Nicola Blatchford NC 10th (W18A), Michele Dawson GO 8th(W20A), Barbara Hill GO 10th (W40A), Barbara Dawson GO 7th (W40AS), Debbie Davey WR 5th(W55A) and Jean Baldwin GS 2nd (W70A).

After a rest day the Oceania carnival moves on to the Sprint races in Wellington on Tuesday.

 

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