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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.


Many goats, few sheep at Goanna event

Youth prevailed at Garingal's annual Goanna event on Sunday at Macquarie Uni, where participants faced a host of decisions on top of the usual route choice conundrums.
 
Ewan Shingler (Big Foot) pipped Sophie Jones (Uringa) by eight seconds in a sprint to the finish to take out the GeckO (4km), while Garingal's Duncan Currie was a clear three-minute winner over Ewan's mum Paula (BF) in the DraGOn (6.6km).
In the blue ribbon GOanna (8.8km), GO star Glenn Horrocks won for the second year in a row (and backed up his recent triumph at WHO's Turkey Trot) with a 1m13s victory on clubmate Jeremy Fowler. Andrew Brown (BF) was third.
 
In each of the 3 races (with one big mass start) there was a box of 4 controls that could be done in any order, and some forks (where you had to visit a or b). In addition, on the GOanna you could skip two other controls, while the DraGOn and GeckO offered one skip. While the usual orienteering post-mortem is about route choice, at the Goanna it's all about the other choices: which fork? which skip? which order for the box?
 
While Ewan skipped #4, Sophie omitted the very last control - so the NSW Schools team buddies converged on the finish from different angles - with Ewan getting the gold after finishing second the two previous years. Airdrie Long (GO) was third.
 
Tom Kennedy (GO), the youngest of his family, pulled a swifty to pip older brother Alex for third in the DraGOn. Tom was not going to skip any controls (he's building up his fitness for the Aus champs in September) until he hit #11 at the pipe. Spotting an unmarked clearing beside the M2 fence, he powered through, decided to skip #12 and took bragging rights at the dinner table for the first time! 
 
Unfortunately, due to concerns about water levels following a deluge last week, course setter Ian Jessup had to forego a lovely cluster of 4 controls on the northern side of Lane Cove River that would have posed a very tough physical, mental and navigational challenge for the two longer courses.
 
See the Eventor page for results and course maps.
 
Also on Sunday, Mountain Devils staged a double header MTBO (mountain bike orienteering event) at Belanglo State Forest with a 5km sprint followed by a 10km middle distance score event.
 
The weather was cold and foggy, with the temperature at 9am hovering around 4 degrees Celsius! The sun emerged around midday, producing a beautiful windless mid-winter day, just in time for the post-race barbecue.
 
Results are on Eventor. Thanks to Michael Roylance for this report and the picture.
 
 

Hunter, Sydney SW champs wrap up Term 2

Almost 500 students had a great day out as our Term 2 program of school championships wrapped up with events in the Hunter and Sydney South West regions.

Newcastle hosted 79 students from nine high schools on The Tank Paddock map at Minmi on Tuesday. This was a terrific new area first used for last year's NSW schools champs. 

After an event and terrain briefing the students completed two courses through the flat gully systems then into the more open area of the paddock. A morning line course for the Age Championships was followed by an early lunch then a 45-minute score course.

While for most students this is their first experience of orienteering in the bush, they still enjoy discussing their courses post run with school mates, teachers and other competitors. Thanks to Colin Bailey for organising, Geoff Todkill for setting the course (for the 13th year in a row!) and all the NC helpers.

The champion school for the 3rd year in a row was Hunter River High from Raymond Terrace whose students benefit from orienteering being included as part of their Years 9/10 PASS elective subject. The boys champion was Thomas Whitehead from Merewether High and the girls champion was Claire Burgess from Hunter School of the Performing Arts.

On Wednesday SHOO hosted 393 primary school students at Camden Bicentennial Equestrian Park. There was a lot of mud around following recent heavy rain but the kids were not put off at all - and the sight of the coffee van selling slushies was like finding that elusive control. Their courses were mainly flat, but the 12-year-olds ventured across the creek into the grassy hill in the NW corner of the map in a loop before returning.

After a map walk with a coach and their age races, it was time for the wonderful pandemonium of the 3-person relays (see pic) with 130 students in a mass start as first runners.

A massive thank you to Lyn Malmgron, Sandra Stewart and the dozens of helpers who came from all across Sydney to make the day a success.

 

Scout park no obstacle for MetrO frontrunners

The MetrO League picture is much clearer after the favourites dominated in Round 4 at Cataract Scout Park on Sunday.

The leaders in Divisions 1-2-3-5 remained unbeaten and thus sealed spots in the final at Nurragingy in late August.

The many open campsites around the middle of the park appear to offer simple navigation, but it's easy to stray off bearing if you're trying to run at speed. Likewise, the dozens of small tracks can present parallax errors for those in a hurry.

The standout feature of the park is the obstacle course in the far western sector of the park. Control #230 (No. 6 on the Division 5 course) was at a flying fox. Did anyone take the aerial route here?

Numbers were down a little on the previous round at Centennial Park, but SHOO arrived with a small army and donated a handful of runners to other teams. Thanks SHOO!

The tightest race is in Division 4 where KNOX, Uringa-Central Coast and WHO are all on six points, followed by the Garingal Legless team on 4. The North Sydney Boys High squad who make up the GO Legless team squandered their chance against KNOX by having two runners mp. In the final round it's WHO v KNOX - with the winner into the final - while UR-CC have the GO Monitors and the Legless face last-placed Bennelong needing other results to go their way.

At the pointy end of the comp, the Division 1 looks like being a Big Foot-Garingal, although WHO's second placing on Sunday gives them a remote chance of finishing second overall.

In Division 2 the GO Dragons pipped Bennelong 28-27 to make it four straight wins, while Big Foot ( a runner short) tied with SHOO 26-26 after Dean Williamson mispunched. The last round again has many permutations.

Unbeaten IKO appear set to face UR-CC in the final barring a major upset in Division 3, while in Division 5 UR-CC, WHO and SHOO are on 8, 6 and 4 points respectively and should finish in that order.

The MetrO League web page has been updated with results, scores, points tables and individual scores.

A big thanks to IKO for their organisation. The next round is on July 26 at Manly Dam.

 

Ski O champs back for another year

Big Foot are delighted to announce they will again stage a ski orienteering event in conjunction with Perisher Cross Country week.

Swedish expat Patrik Gunnarsson got the concept, usually confined to the northern hemisphere, up and running two years ago with a trial run and last year combined with Perisher for the first time - and it even has NSW championship status!

All details are on the Big Foot website. We thank Patrik, the Feet and Perisher for this great initiative.

 

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