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British Orienteering Championships 2013
BOC 2013 Katrin is about to set off into the forest

British Long Distance Championships

Unlike the dark side, CUOC had a large turnout at the British Champs that took place near “the beautiful village of Peaslake”, south of London. CUOC even hired a minibus for this special occasion. Although only a few days before the weather was forecasted to be sunny with a few clouds, we were instead greeted by heavy showers that alternated with brief sunny intervals. Apparently one of the “best orienteering areas in the country” it turned out to be a bit of an overestimation but it still provided some tough challenges, especially for those of us that are used to the flat plains surrounding Cambridge. At least the forest was nice and runnable. CUOC made its base right next to the run-in which unfortunately was also right next to the commentators‘ speakers which assured that by the end of the afternoon we were all half deaf. The elite start was right at the assembly which was supposedly meant to provide entertainment in the form of commentating on every single elite runner standing in the corridor on the haystack. CUOC members did manage to make it more exciting by sending their elite runners out into the forest accompanied by Mexican waves. Thanks to this excellent moral support Matthew managed to finish in 14th place on the 17.0 km long M21E (Men 21 Elite). James Hoad finished in 30th place on the same course. The best CUOC woman was Carrie Beadle on W20E who finished just one place below the podium, closely followed by Katrin Harding a minute behind.

Matthew storms back in 4th place

Results Individual Day

British Relay Championships

After a good barbecue supplemented by Wilf’s Veggie Chilli, a viewing of a helicopter, and a sound night’s sleep at Matthew’s aunt’s house, the following day was held at nearby forest Holmbury Hill. After a half-hour walk to the brashing-covered assembly area CUOC got prepared. Unfortunately due to two team members being injured, CUOC’s presence was reduced to a single men’s relay team. The terrain was tough, steep and uneven yet Matthew Vokes stormed round the course to bring the team back in fourth place, just a minute and seven seconds behind the leader. The rest of the team consisting of Tom Dobra and James Hoad couldn’t quite match the international level pace set by Oxford and Sheffield universities (who ultimately got the top two podium spots), bringing the team back in 18th.

Results Relay Day

CUPPERS 2013 - RESULTS
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Cuppers 2013 Cuppers 2013

RESULTS

SPLITS

TEAM RESULTS

TEAM RESULTS DETAILS

Results Analysis: WinSplits, Splitsbrowser, Routegadget (please add your route!)


If you have any comments or corrections, please email Matthew.





Thanks to all that turned out - we hope you enjoyed your run around West Cambridge. Congratulations to Clare College (Katrin Harding, Tom Dobra & Matt Halliday) for convincingly retaining the college title, and to the individual winners, the new Captains, Katrin Harding (Clare) for the Women and James Hoad (Christ's) for the Men.

Cuppers 2013

(Click on a photo for larger version!)

This is the annual inter-college competition, so this is your chance to bring sporting glory to your college!
You can turn up and start any time between 2-4pm
There will be two courses, a men's and woman's, both of which are suitable for beginners - you won't be alone if you've never orienteered before! We'll have plenty of people on hand to help out. There will also be the chance to go round a very small practice course first so you can get used to the map and timing equipment.
The competition is for teams of 3 from each college, which must include at least 1 man and 1 woman (except for single sex colleges of course!) Make sure to bring all your friends along as well!
We'll be meeting just by the lake at the south east corner of the West Cambridge Site, map link
You can also join the Facebook group so that we have an idea of how many people might turn up - we'd like as many as possible!

Final Details

Blank Map of West Cambridge Site


Wandlebury Training Score Results
Results from the Score course at the Wandlebury Training on 15th May are now available.
Cambridge West Training Results 08.05.13
Results from the courses around the West of Cambridge are now available.

Results and Splits
Results Analysis:
Winsplits and Splitsbrowser

Any comments or corrections, please email Matthew

Science Park Training Results 01.05.13
Results from the courses at the Science Park training night are now available.

Results and Splits
Results Analysis:
Winsplits and Splitsbrowser

Any comments or corrections, please email Matthew

WE ARE THE UNIVERSITY CLUB OF THE YEAR!
We are Uni Club of the Year!

British Orienteering University Club of the Year
FIRST PLACE

British Orienteering Club of the Year
SECOND PLACE

We are Uni Club of the Year!

At a tremendously exciting British Orienteering AGM, Cambridge University Orienteering Club was awarded the University Club of the Year 2013. We also placed second in the main Club of the Year competition, beating much larger public orienteering clubs and only narrowly losing out to South London Orienteers. This is the result of much hard work and unabated enthusiasm by CUOC members over the last few years, and is a great way to say farewell to our graduating committee members.

Poland Training Tour: 17 - 20 March 2013
Poland Training Tour - 4 Snowy Days in World Class Terrain Budget
(Budget has been averaged out and simplified)

While many of Cambridge’s student population staggered out of clubs at the end of a long night, 8 members of CUOC made their way past Reality Checkpoint to meet the 4am coach to Luton. We were loaded only with the measliest of hand luggage allowances and as much clothing as we could wear, pockets stuffed with everything from compasses to woolly hats. This was the beginning of one of Ben Windsor’s legendary cheap training trips, and this time our sights were set on Gdańsk, Poland – home to the areas used in the Junior World Orienteering Championships in 2004 and 2011.

As the bemused coach driver looked on, we sleepily disembarked the coach in a deserted Luton street and began a 3km walk towards Luton Airport to save the extra £5 cost for a journey all the way to Departures. Ben and Zuzka had found us some very, very cheap flights on the very, very purple airline Wizzair. Their carry-on luggage size is much smaller than any other airline but there’s no limit on how many coats you wear and how full your pockets are, so some of us looked more like barrels than people as we boarded the plane!

Day 1: Szwedzka Grobla

Walking through the snow (click on the links to the names of areas to see maps!)

We touched down in Gdańsk to find Poland covered in a few centimetres of snow but brilliantly sunny. Once we’d met up with Nick Barrable (Editor of Compassport!) and Sarah Jane, we began the training. The first task was to get to the hostel so we could get rid of our stuff and start running. Since this was a budget trip, the only reasonable option was to walk the 8km from the airport including 4km through a forest called Szwedzka Grobla, the area partly used for the Junior World Orienteering Championships in 2004, while practising route choice for long legs. This helped us all get our heads around a map with more contours on it than all of Thetford combined, and we soon realised that the steep slopes were not much fun to climb. Once we made it to the hostel (actually on the east edge of the map!) it was time for some proper training, with a course planned by David to practise contour interpretation. Working out which way was up on the 1:15,000 map was not straightforward, despite the hills, re-entrants and spurs being pretty large!

Day 2: Wejherowo and Zamkowa Góra

One of many chapels, and our base beside it

Wejherowo was the event centre for JWOC 2011, and since it’s only an hour away by train we’d have been daft to miss it – even if the terrain is fairly similar to the first day. Polish trains are a little bit exciting if you’re not familiar with them, and after the ticket machine decided it would only accept Polish coins (the largest of which is worth about £1) we left ourselves not quite enough time to validate all 10 tickets. So our resident Polish speaker had an extra unscheduled intervals session as she jumped out at each station, sprinted to the validator, punched a ticket and ran back to the train just before the doors closed. A little while later our tickets were checked, so Andrea’s efforts were worthwhile…

Group photo in by a chapel in Zamkowa Gora

Zamkowa Góra (or “Mountain Castle”) is a large forested area of intricate, undulating contours. It’s also covered in little chapels from the 17th Century, which have been beautifully restored recently. It’s a shame none were unlocked, but they probably didn’t expect tourists in late winter. The morning training was a course practising long and short legs planned by Nick, with the added challenge of running on an 18 year-old map. The afternoon session followed rapidly on (it was freezing!) giving us all the chance to attempt part of the JWOC Middle Distance course. We spent the evening in Sopot, a coastal town with an exciting Aquapark (it’s got slides and a very violent rapid/river/whirlpool thing), and a windswept and desolate ice-covered beach for those who didn’t fancy swimming. After a quick race along the length of the pier we found a cheap restaurant and ordered a couple of meals each (it was cold and we were hungry!).

Day 3: In and around Gdańsk

The weather turned during the night and it snowed heavily the entire day. Undeterred, we trudged 4km across Gdansk to Ronald Reagan Park for a training exercise planned by Harriet. This was cold, but the course was good and had some tricky route choices to consider. Afterwards we caught the tram into the city centre to warm up and see the sights. After a little disappointment that the Torture Tower had been converted into a museum dedicated to all things Amber, Harriet led us on an…interesting…guided tour based on the tourist information office’s suggestions for students with two hours and “absolutely no money”. But after an amazing hot chocolate in a café on the city’s “most romantic” street (complete with mathematical graffiti and several very romantic cannons), we carried on to the afternoon area for an urban training session around the Politechnika Gdańska university. And we definitely didn’t get any funny looks from the students. Not at all.

Day 4: Szwedzka Grobla (again) and back home

Most of the group on Sopot pier

Our flight back wasn’t until 6pm, so there was plenty of time for Zuzka to plan a tricky score course and some fiendish head-to-head map memory races. The snow had stopped by the time we started training, but we soon found that 25cm of snow can significantly reduce your running speed so the 40 minute time limit became more of a target than a deadline. We finished our four days of training with head-to-head races – pairs of similar ability are given a map to look at, memorise the course and then run it using only your memory. Each opponent went opposite directions around the short courses, adding a competitive element to the already challenging task of visualising the whole course and memorising your attack points! But all too soon it was time to return to the hostel, eat some lunch and then trek the 8km back to the airport. This felt like a long way without the distraction of controls to find! But we got there eventually and after a delay while a truck that looked a little too much like a fire engine squirted water at our wing (it actually de-icing the plane, apparently) we headed back to Luton and (eventually) Cambridge.

Thank you to Ben for making the trip happen, and to Andrea for being our interpreter!



Varsity 2013 - LET'S DO THIS.
Varsity Banner

Highlights from Orienteering Varsity

Women's A: Cambridge win by 66 minutes 42 seconds
Men's B: Cambridge win by 97 minutes 49 seconds.
Women's B: Cambridge win
Men's A: Cambridge lose, but only by 9 minutes 41 seconds.
Boat Race: Cambridge win

Team ResultsCourse ResultsSplitsWinsplitsSplitsbrowser

PhotosMore Photos

TCS Newspaper Report

Orienteering on the radio

While we were merrily having the Boat Race before dinner on Saturday, CamFM (the student FM radio station for Cambridge) were telling everyone who had tuned in or loaded up their browser for the last race of the last day of Lent Bumps about how we fared at Varsity. You can listen to the whole programme online at CamFM.co.uk (we're at about 21 minutes into the 7th hour of Bumps coverage), or click the clip to the right to skip straight to the good bit.

As It Happened



Coe Fen Street-O Results
Results from the Coe Fen & surrounding area Street-O at are now available:

Results

Mini Sprint Winsplits
Mini Sprint Splitsbrowser

23-24 February 2013: BUCS, Sheffield!
BUCS banner image
CUOC Team!

Day One - Individual Race

Update 20.00: Matthew's calculations suggest CUOC may be in 4th overall overnight...
Update 20.45: CUOC are indeed in 4th overall overnight.

After an early start from snow-sprinkled Cambrige, 11 CUOC runners made it to Burbage Moor for Day 1 of BUCS, the British Championships for universities, colleges and combined services. (It is not called BUC's. Just saying.). Burbage is a tough, rough open moorland covered either with heather or boulders, some of which are so large that 2m high boulders can be too small to be mapped... they were also quite confusing! CUOC's best result came from Jess Mason who stormed in to 14th place on the Women's A course - and she's only a first year! Carrie Beadle wasn't far behind, coming in 21st and less than 4 minutes down on Jess. Zuzka and Andrea managed a CUOC formation finish in 27th and 28th, separated by a mere 27 seconds.

Over on the Men's A, Captain Vokesy placed 16th (of 92) and was only a few minutes off the top ten. Rob Campbell followed in 27th, followed by James Hoad (39th), Ben Windsor (44th), David Maliphant (48th), Tom Dobra (54th) and Dan Safka (56th).

Results
Routegadget - draw your route!

Day Two - Relay Race

The controls were still being put out as CUOC arrived at Greno Woods for the relay competition, indeed the last few controls were put out just minutes before the leading runners arrived at them! Greno provided a physical challenge, with marshes and brambles making the going tough underfoot in places.
In the Men's race, Ben Windsor surprised everyone, not only by coming in just a few seconds down on the leaders (he would have been first had he managed to correctly follow the tapes from the last control...), but also having punched EVERY control! Rob Campbell & Matthew Vokes both had slower, slightly scrappy runs, but still brought the team into a very respectable 6th position.
The women's team of Carrie Beadle, Andrea Stefkova & Jess Mason were almost as successful finishing in 7th position

Relay Results
Relay Routegadget - draw your route!

Overall, CUOC finished in 4th position, behind Edinburgh & Sheffield who continued their dominance of university orienteering, but most importantly ahead of Oxford, which bodes well for next weekend - bring on Varsity!! We'll just have to try harder to beat Durham next year though.....

Overall Results

If you want to know how things went for your university last year, you should click on Results from Orienteering BUCS 2012.

Or maybe you'd like to read the CUOC Race Report from last year instead if you prefer words to results tables.


Girton Training 20.02.13 - Results
Results from tonight's training at Girton are now available:

Results and Splits
Winsplits
Splitsbrowser

Thetford Thrash Weekend, 9-10th February 2013 - RESULTS
Cambridge University Orienteering Club proudly present the 2013 Icenian Cup, an orienteering race in Bromehill, Thetford Forest

Bring glory to your club and support student orienteering
Join us for Day 1 of the Thetford Thrash weekend of orienteering this February

View Results & Splits (at 21:30)

Winsplits, Splitsbrowser, Routegadget

Icenian Trophy Results

String Course Results

Live Blog

More Details

Results are now published (21:30). Any queries, please email the Organiser.


Midland Championships, Sherwood Forest 3.2.12

Eight CUOC athletes made their way to Robin Hood's county for the Midland Championships, a race that was the very first taste of top-flight, Level A orienteering for some. Guys, if you're wondering, Level A races like this usually have a little more atmosphere, and some spectators...

Oops, I've digressed. Anyway, there were some excellent results for CUOC. Recent recruits Alice Gibb and James Rickards won their classes in times of 114:54 and 118:35 respectively, while Zuzka Strakova was narrowly pipped in to second place on W21L. Tom Dobra managed a top-3 position on M21L, a mere 4:30 behind second place, and Fiona Love came in 13th on the Light Green. Meanwhile on the very scary M21 Elite course (the longest possible course!) Captain Matthew Vokes had a good run and cruised into the top 8 with a time of 110:48, and ex-Captain David Maliphant finished. Ex-ex-Captain Ben Windsor unfortunately encountered another arithmetic progression sequencing error, but was on track for a good time.

Full results, splits, Routegadget and splits analysis stuff here. There are also some photos on flickr by Brian Ward.

Role on next week's race and the Icenian Trophy!

Training Night 30.01.13 - Results
Results from the training held on the Sidgwick site on 30th January can be found here.

Well done to all those who coped with the unusual butterfly and clam loops!

Archive News
For older news items, see the archive news page.
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