I miss orienteering in the summer. Here in the South-East of England, the bracken, nettles, brambles and briars grow so high and it can be so hot that running around woodland in August is extremely difficult and with so many people on holiday, very little orienteering takes place. Some good folks worked very hard to offer a “three in one, fun but challenging” event today, with two light green courses and a “map memory” course, as well as orange courses for juniors and others. Houghton was a new area for me. Basically a good area of mixed woodland “recovering well from severe forestry” – there were brashings and tree stumps everywhere, but the hilly terrain and the mixed vegetation made for interesting orienteering.
I decided to do the harder of the two “light green” courses which was offered as “route choice”. It was only when I saw the results that I realised that this meant that you did not have to do the controls in order, like a score event. I saw that there was no course on the master map, just controls, but I thought this was to encourage you to look wider than usual for the routes.
I was pleased with the early part of the course. I ran continously and quite comfortably for the first one and a half km, taking in the first three controls in reasonable time. Thinking I had to go to “control 4″ I did so. Going to control 5 first would have made all the course much easier. Following in order put me into some nasty undergrowth areas, more than once, with less than ideal approaches to controls. Taking the controls in order made me make bad route choices really. Still, no excuses – some others tackled the controls in the same order as me and were much faster. I faded away in the second half of the course and was much slower.
Still, an enjoyable afternoon out and a worthwhile exercise, though I wish I had realised the rules before I ran. My fitness and running were definitely improved too.