Route Choice in Orienteering
Navigation in orienteering can be reduced to two factors:
- choosing one of the many possible routes to the control
- finding your way along that route
Once you have learned some basic techniques and rules of
navigation, it should always be possible to find the control - given that
the map is accurate. Therefore, much of the variation among individuals'
times may come from their choice of routes. This is particularly true when
speed through the terrain varies dramatically in different places, which
can occur for any number of reasons:
- a trail is faster than the woods
- vegetation mapped as green may be very slow going
- going uphill and then down may be slower than going the long way around
- a potentially faster route may offer no navigational aids, while a
longer/slower route provides a navigationally easy approach to the control
site.
Another factor is that each individual may have particular strengths;
one may run very fast on a trail, but slow down dramatically in the forest;
another may have no great turn of speed, but chug away steadily uphill;
still another may have no confidence in her ability to follow a compass
bearing, but may be able to read contours very well. The best route for
a beginner may not be the best route for an advanced orienteer.
Hence the choice of a route on a given leg between controls may have
many possible "best" solutions. But, in turn, the true best
solution may not be immediately apparent to orienteers who don't plan
carefully.
As an example, the map shown here gives the route choices and variations
taken by the top orienteers at the Swedish National Championships some
years ago (recall that there are about as many Swedish orienteers as all
other countries combined). Each orie nteer's route is shown as a single
red line, and at places where several individuals went the same way, red
numbers show how many orienteers followed that portion of the route. Some
fields (yellow) were out of bounds because crops were growing and are
ma rked with red cross-hatching.
Although this is perhaps an extreme example, it does show the variety
of routes (and combinations of subsets of routes) that may be possible
on a single leg.
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