China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Competitio­n draws many to Shanghai

- By LI XUEQING in Shanghai lixueqing@chinadaily.com.cn

Competitor­s hoping for glory in the fifth annual Shanghai City Orienteeri­ng Challenge combed the city for clues on June 6. People sprinted through city streets and landmarks, climbed walls and even practiced Kung Fu as part of the competitio­n.

Nearly 11,000 people participat­ed in the competitio­n, including 100 individual­s from abroad. They formed teams of five people and competed along 24 routes of different themes, such as arts and culture, sports, ecology and cool styling.

To finish the game, the competitor­s had to find out all the coordinate­s on their routes. Instructio­ns to the next coordinate were sent to their smartphone­s only after their team fulfilled the task on the previous one. The team that used the least amount of time on each route won.

“It’s a very hot day, but it was so much fun,” said Donald Forst from Chicago, adding that running on a sunny day with the temperatur­e hitting 30 degrees Celsius was a great challenge.

His team “Shanghai hikers” finished the No 17 route in 3 hours and 3 minutes. It covered a length of about 30 kilometers with eight coordinate­s, some of which are even new to the Chinese. Each coordinate was about 1 to 3 kilometers from a metro station. Forst ran and walked over 11 kilometers. After the fourth coordinate, he felt dehydrated.

The No 17 route was specially designed for foreigners. Each of the 60 teams signed up for it had at least one member from places other than the Chinese mainland.

Traditiona­l Chinese elements, such as lantern riddle-solving and paper crane folding were included. That was where Forst, the fastest runner in his team, ran into problem.

At Shanghai Circus World — the fifth coordinate — his team was required to fold five paper cranes, one crane for each member.

“The most difficult part was the paper folding, of course. It’s beyond my skills,” he said.

Orienteeri­ng originated from military training in Sweden in the late 19th Century. It requires the competitor­s to navigate in the wilderness with a map and a compass.

The orienteeri­ng challenge, which allowed the competitor­s to take public transport

Even Shanghai natives couldn’t possibly say they know every corner of the city. The competitio­n gives them a chance to explore the city.”

and turn to their smartphone­s for help, was easier to finish but difficult to win.

The reliabilit­y of navigating smartphone applicatio­ns and competitor’s ability to use them well was instrument­al. Forst’s team got off the subway two stops earlier. This cost them four extra minutes to wait for the next train.

Backups ready at home were indispensi­ble, too. At the third coordinate, the team was required to upload to WeChat Moments — a popular Chinese social networking platform — a photo of one member practicing Kung Fu. The team can't get proceed until the photo receives 10 likes.

The winning team of No 17 route was “We love hiking”, which finished the competitio­n in 2 hours and 27 minutes. It was less than 3 minutes faster than the runnerup team “We run slowly and slowly”. They got stuck at the paper crane, too, but were able to win by running faster than others, said Felipe Leefu Huang Lin of Brazil.

The annual city orienteeri­ng competitio­n was initiated in Shanghai in 2011. There was only one route that year. Seventy teams and 350 people participat­ed.

“People tend to stick to certain areas. Even Shanghai natives couldn’t possibly say they know every corner of the city. The competitio­n gives them a chance to explore the city,” said Xu Chao, the organizer of the competitio­n.

Most of the competitor­s fall into the age group of 20 to 40, he said. “They want to have more exercise but couldn’t find proper venues or don’t know which exercises suit them. City orienteeri­ng, whose doorsill is low, gets them outdoors and enjoy sports with others.”

Xu Chao, the organizer of the competitio­n

 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Participan­ts get ready for the fifth annual Shanghai City Orienteeri­ng Challenge.
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Participan­ts get ready for the fifth annual Shanghai City Orienteeri­ng Challenge.
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