Chris Branford writes:

First off we must thank Hilary Pickering for making an excellent job of organising all our teams for the Relay Day at Graythwaite. 

We had six teams in the Relays on the last day with mixed results.  Our best team result was the the Womens Short, Sally Calland, Annie Crookshank and Jo Pickering, who came 11th and the best individual times were Annie Crookshank (7th), Paul Pickering (8th), Kirsty Staunton (12th) and Jo Pickering (14th) .  Also it was a fantastic sunny day which made for an excellent club get-together which everyone enjoyed.

On the Sprint Day at Lancaster top 20 results were Sue Hands (6th) Kirsty Staunton (12th) Karen French (17th) John Warren (10th) Martin Cross (19th) Simon Branford (17th) and Chris Branford (11th=)

For the Days 2/3 combined top 20 results were Simon Branford (5th) Noel Smith (13th) Fraser Smith (3rd) Keith Henderson (17th) John Warren (13th) Jo Pickering (12th) and Gillian Cross (20th). And the most important result - Hilary Pickering - winner of Days 2/3 at the JK. Well done Hilary!

Here is a selection of photographs by Chris Branford, Wendy Carlyle and ClarO Orienteer

      

      

      

   

      

See also Chris and Simon's Flickr album

 

JK 2015 – A Lakeland idyll - with a difference!

Orienteers should know what a visit to the Lake District means! Yes, there are 'a host of golden daffodils', magic sunsets over glittering lakes, but there are also steep craggy mountains that test your skills and morale to the limit. So it was with JK2015 – a glorious Easter weekend with mostly dry weather, but with the exception of the Sprint Race at Lancaster University on Good Friday, an awful lot of crags, boulders and tightly packed contours !

For many, Good Friday wasn't very good to start with because of traffic jams on the M6, but arriving at Lancaster University you were greeted with a colourful  animated cosmopolitan scene with competitors from many nations meeting friends, shopping  and socialising round the assembly area prior to the short sharp shock of sprint urban orienteering. Lose your concentration for a few seconds and you lose many places so it is a fine balance between speed and brain power to get a good result. A great spectator finish on the campus set the scene for a weekend of top quality venues and events in the southern part of the Lake District.

Day 2 in the Duddon Valley was approached by a gloriously sunny scenic drive across rolling farmland with distant views of  Morecambe Bay. Parking for most was the prelude to a 2k walk to assembly which was in a sheltered flat meadow with deciduous wooded hills rising all round. Above the tree line was open mountain and moorland and that's where most people were headed. The climb to most starts was long and hard  (400') and this ensured that you arrived thoroughly warmed up and/or totally exhausted!

It was a bit different from the New Forest and Dorset. Firstly, forget paths, tracks,thickets, veg. boundaries.. You'd be lucky to find a ruined wall here! Contours and crags were at times so packed together that it was difficult to make controlled progress up, down or sideways. The scenery was magnificent, but if you took your eye off the map you ran the risk of a costly error and major problems of re-location. The few marshes were familiar enough and shoes could be lost with ease!. Progress depends of age and fitness. Many top Juniors and fit young people seemed to 'float' over the ground at frightening speed, fearlessly leaping down precipitous slopes like mountain goats. For the more mature competitors there was a more realistic technique -stagger!

Day 3 at Bigland was probably one of the most technical areas in the country and the map extract shows the most challenging part of my course. You might like to look at the map extract of course 21 and try to work out your proposed route particularly for the first 4 controls. I have put my actual route on Route Gadget for entertainment purposes! Is it proof of the technical and physical challenge that on my course there were 16 people who finished on both days and 15 retirals? There must be a message in this!!

 

Day 3 Bigland

Course 21 controls 1 to 4 -

 

Hover your mouse over the map to see John Warren's route

Easter Monday saw the whole event re-locate to Graythwaite which borders the west side of Windermere and the contrasts could not have been greater. The sun shone (after 12.30pm), parking was only 5mins walk away and the assembly area was in a sheltered field with glorious view up into open deciduous woodland. This time the terrain was really attractive. Hilly,with a good scatter of crags, open deciduous woodland and above all runnable. Just what was needed for a relay. Fast and furious competition at all levels provided impressive entertainment including a developing morass in the run in! This was the sociable day with club tents and banners the focus for competitors discussing tactics, terrain and generally comparing notes.

You will have seen either from Chris Branford's summary or from the JK website that the WIMs who took part had a wide range of experiences but the outstanding results of the weekend must be Hilary Pickering winning the W60S and Fraser Smith being placed 3rd in M18L.

Many people made a holiday out of their visit and combined the O challenge with all sorts of activities for which the Lake District is famous. Our abiding memory was of eating fish and chips by the pier at Ambleside with the sun setting in a crystal clear sky behind the mountains of Langdale with a mirror calm Windermere in the foreground. A really world class view after a world class JK.  Our thanks and congratulations go to the whole team who put on such a memorable event. It's Yorkshire next year!

John Warren