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The G-Rant : Grant's Rants on Adventure Racing

“Without adventure, civilization is in full decay.” - Alfred North Whitehead

18 hours of team bonding and some orienteering for AR evangelism

All told, those of us Team HRAdventurers who are doing the Georgia 30-hour race Feb. 11th weekend (Mike, Pam, and I) spent 18 hours together over Saturday and Sunday.  It wasn't a single overnight training outing or anything quite so dramatic.  Instead, we paddled the canoe and biked on Saturday and then drove up to Great Falls Virginia (3 hours one-way really pads the "total time together" figure) for the Quantico Orienteering meet on Sunday.  We didn't realize it, but the orienteering meet was the official Virginia State Championships so we picked a good day to make the trip; the longest course, the Blue course, was a great opportunity to exercise our orienteering skills.  Pam and Mike ran the Blue course together, giving Pam a chance to observe and learn from Mike; I ran the Blue course solo. 

I'll post later about the orienteering course details and my specific route choices, etc, but for the moment I want to emphasize what great training an orienteering meet is . . . there is no better way to cram so much navigation into so short a time.  In a real adventure race, the checkpoints may be an hour apart or further and the true navigation choices are separated by long stretches of biking, trekking, or paddling.  If an adventure race has 15 checkpoints, it's safe to bet that at least 5 of them will be at significant roads, boat landings, or trail junctions and there won't be big navigational calculus involved in getting there; it's all about your pace for those 5 checkpoints.   For another 5 CPs, you may have to make a few route decisions such as which trail to follow at an intersection or where to cut through some dense vegetation, but they aren't challenging your orienteering skills in a major fashion.  For the final 5 CPs in my hypothetical adventure race, you may have to use more "real" orienteering skills where you're studying terrain and deciding on which gully, hillside, elevation line, or rock outcropping to attack.  Of course, accomplished orienteerers will claim that there is orienteering involved in getting to all 15 CPS, but I'm generalizing and saying that only 5 will be really challenging in an orienteering sense.  If this hypothetical race is 12 hours long, then you have 5 "tough" CPs spread over 12 hours; that's an average of one "tough" nav scenario every 2 and half hours (approximately).

Now, consider the Blue course for the orienteering meet yesterday.  There were 21 controls and I took about 135 minutes to complete it (how's this for humbling: some of the real pros did the course in 1 hour less than me!).  I'll say there were 6 controls that were gimmes, I think borrowed from a few of the shorter courses, but that still leaves 15 really solid controls.  With a time of 2 hours and 15 minutes that makes for an average of one "tough" nav scenario every 9 minutes.  The orienteering event offers 16 times more navigation challenge (just based on frequency).  In a nutshell, I experienced the equivalent of 3 12-hour adventure races worth of "tough" orienteering in one 135 minute orienteering run.  That can't be beat for training efficiency and when one considers that navigation factors as the most significant skill to adventure racing success (unless the race is more of a track meet such as the defunct Balance Bar Sprints), the orienteering meets should be crowded with adventure racers.

We made the most of the orienteering as a training event by running it with backpacks on etc.  Any serious "pure" orienteer would never bother with the extra weight, but we approach the event as a training day and aren't concerned with the final standings.  I know several adventure racers that build long training days around the o-meet; for example, several AR folks were mountain biking after running the orienteering course.  We decided not to bother bringing the bikes up to Northern Virginia, but it's a smart way to make the most of your training time so good for them!

I don't like driving 3 hours to an O-meet all that often, but once in a while it's really worth it and for those closer to where the Quantico Orienteering Club operates, it's really worth your effort.  They're welcoming to novices and will walk you through the protocol for getting started . . . once you leave the start area, it's just you and your compass and your map!  A great navigation workout is well worth the $5 or $10.

Comments

gkillian said:

It was tough, I estimate I covered 10+ miles on the Blue course. I'll be posting a map and more specifics on my experience later this week.

Most of their events are up in NoVa, but Sunday March 12th will have an O-meet at Westmoreland State Park and expert orienteerer and adventure racer Scott Pleban will be setting the course so it's sure to be good. Westmoreland isn't too far from Richmond + the timing is great as training for our April 1st event.
# January 24, 2006 12:50 PM
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