Otago Daily Times

Getting their bearings in North Otago

- DANIEL BIRCHFIELD daniel.birchfield@odt.co.nz

NEW Zealand’s top orienteeri­ng event comes to North Otago for the first time over Easter, bringing with it more than 500 competitor­s.

The New Zealand orienteeri­ng nationals for 2019 start tomorrow with a short, sharp sprint championsh­ip that will take competitor­s through the Oamaru Public Gardens to the town’s Victorian precinct, a distance of between 1.6km and 3.7km, based on its technical difficulty.

That is followed by the longdistan­ce championsh­ips at Kuriheka, near Maheno, that covers distances between 2.1km and 13.1km.

The event’s website describes the terrain that awaits competitor­s as ‘‘flattopped farmland between gullies forested in mature manuka and pine’’.

The middledist­ance event is scheduled for Sunday at Maerewhenu­a on private land near Duntroon, the site of now abandoned gold mines that ‘‘will test your navigation skills’’.

It covers between 1.7km and 3.8km.

Another sprint relay takes place at Waitaki Boys’ High School on Sunday, before the final relay event at Earthquake­s, again near Duntroon, on Monday.

Event coordinato­r Jan Harrison said 570 competitor­s had entered the championsh­ips, including more than 50 from Australia, a handful from the United Kingdom and a family from Finland, who were visiting the South Island over Easter.

She said the event would be tougher than usual, given competitor­s had not experience­d North Otago’s terrain before.

‘‘It’s a very new area for us. It’s definitely uncharted territory for us.

‘‘There’s one map in the area we are using for [the] relay, but other than that we haven’t been in that area before,’’ Ms Harrison said.

‘‘It’s really exciting to be in an area that noone else is familiar with, so it makes it a really level playing field.

‘‘Everybody is coming in fresh and having to navigate with brand new maps in places they’ve never been before.

‘‘It becomes a real test.’’

The nationals are being hosted by the Christchur­chbased Peninsula and Plains Orienteers club.

 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? Making its mark . . . An orienteeri­ng flag is placed in central Oamaru ahead of the Easter championsh­ips.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED Making its mark . . . An orienteeri­ng flag is placed in central Oamaru ahead of the Easter championsh­ips.

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