Chris Curtis Web Site

Saturday 19 November 2005

SOG Local Event – Tilgate North

Filed under: Orienteering and Running — Chris Curtis @ 19:22

It was decidely frosty this morning. I went into school to collect a couple of keen lads and headed to Tilgate Country Park, just south of Crawley. We arrived very early for the event – there was no traffic on the road. The car park was at the top of a steep grassy slope, pure white with hoar frost but as the sun rose everything was soon dripping as the frost thawed. It was calm so not too cold as we made our way to the start.

This was very much an event of two halves for me. I could not believe how fast I was over the first four controls. I felt fit and comfortable, and seemed to have a clear mental image of the terrain every time I glanced at the map. By control 7, I was an astonishing 7th in the field and had aced one or two legs – running really fast and nailing the controls first time. I was loving the terrain – perfect runnable forest, fairly flat and open and just making sense to me.

The inevitable disaster came on the way to control 8. I was heading down a very obvious path looking for an indistinct path curving away to the left. At about the right point, there was an indistinct path, the direction was right and off I went – suddenly, the terrain no longer made perfect sense, but was close enough to keep me trying. Minutes passed until I hit a control – number 9: well away from where I should be. I used it as an attack point to head back to 8, but then hit the obvious path again and convinced myself I had gone off-line. It was only in discussion with other lost orienteers also looking for 8 that I finally twigged that the obvious path was in fact the indistinct one I had been looking for – I soon found 8, but then had forgotten where 9 should be. A loss of 20 minutes over the two controls and worse, a loss of the sharp concentration I had enjoyed to that point so that the second half, though generally not losing much time, was less precise – though my running was fast enough. I obviously run better when refrigerated.

So some very good things to take away – I really can orienteer well sometimes – and a hard lesson. I did not cope well when making a mistake, did not think flexibly enough and made it much worse, and then did not put it aside and get back to the task in hand – making it even worse still.

I liked the courses very much – the variety of controls and challenges was exceptional. I loved being out on a crisp and sunny morning and am just annoyed with myself that I let it all go wrong half way round.

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