Tuesday 7 June 2011

Let's look at the map

Last week, as it was half term, it seemed like a good idea to let Joel (and thus, all of us...) have a go at orienteering...

Paul (aka Daddy), really enjoyed orienteering at school, and at university - as it combines two of his great loves; running and maps.  Recently, Paul has done a few orienteering events with a local club - The Octavian Droobers - and having talked to Joel about it, he was really keen to have a go.

So, on Wednesday afternoon, we packed a picnic, put on our sporty clothes(!), and set off for some woods near Harbury.

I have to confess to being slightly dubious.  After all, I am really not built for running; I'm pretty terrible at it.  I'm also prone to turning the map round when navigating, much to the amusement of my husband...  Also, the event started at 6pm - which is always tea-time in our house...  I wondered if the changes to the usual routine and general exhaustion might be a recipe for disaster.  Not to mention wondering what would happen if the smallest boy just decided he couldn't go any further... 

We got there early, and thanks to some spectacular organisation (by the organisers...) we were actually able to start at 5:30pm...  Marvellous.

They gave us a map (see below...), and an electronic gizmo, and then we had to start at the triangle, and navigate ourselves round the course - using our clever gizmo to show we'd found all the control points.  (NB - for the uninitiated - these are red and white flags, with numbers to search for...  A genius plan if you're trying to get children like mine to find anything: 'Come on, who can find number 118??'  Very clever...)


My cunning plan was to all stay together, but let Paul and Joel run ahead a bit - which allowed Nathan and me the chance to catch up whilst they were navigating where we were going next.  Amazingly, this pretty much worked...  Although it required running - it was short sharp bursts of running, whilst encouraging Nathan along - the best sort of running.  Nathan did also require the occasional piggy back - whilst also had the additional feature of slowing Paul down.  Very useful.

We made it round in the respectable time of 30:36, which wasn't bad considering three out the four of us had never done anything like this before...  We were also pretty chuffed when we discovered our Result! (click on the link and find us if you can...)

We all felt we'd very much earned our picnic afterwards; although (naturally) Paul didn't eat anything until he'd gone out and completed a much longer and more difficult course...

So - all in all, we had a good time together out in the sunshine, with exercise, and maps, and a crash course in how to use a compass, and a picnic tea.  Can't be bad.  Worth trying if you fancy doing some running, but don't want to be bored...

4 comments:

  1. Well done! Sounds brilliant fun.

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  2. I'm liking the new purple look. I think I'd like orienteering except for the running. Can you do slow orienteering? Have you tried geocacheing? I keep meaning to try but haven't quite got round to it.

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  3. I like the purple too - but then i am a purple freak!!!!

    Orienteering - was not my most favourite thing, but then i hate anything involving running - but i have done geo cashing - which (for the uninitiated) is letter boxing with GPS!!!

    You can have your own couple, but also with some you can add or take travelling objects (or bugs!!) and then trace where they go! Or if you start one - you can give it a task, like get to John O Groats or Cannes - then follow it's progress as other Geo Cashers pick it up and move it along it's route to (hopefully) it's destination.

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  4. Ahhh - Paul and maps eh - that takes me back. Never was that keen on the running though.

    We've done a fair bit of geocaching though and had our own at Wicken fen in a bird hide - until it got dug up. I would heartily recommend that as a way to get the little monsters moving - over significant distances too!! And it gives Daddies an excuse to get an extra gadget to play with.

    All the best to you all.

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