okansas.blogspot.com Occassional thoughts about orienteering |
Monday, February 21, 2005 First report from TexasI'll probably post some clips of the map a bit later today. For now, here is my first quick report:1. Yuck. The terrain in Texas is thorny. The course setters didn't seem to cut us any slack -- if the trade off was technical difficulty versus pleasant, they picked technical difficulty. 2. Good pizza. We ate at the Hideaway Pizza in Tulsa on the way to Texas and the Hideway Pizza in Oklahoma City on the way home. I like the place. Good pizza. 3. Pre-running. The start list for Blue was short (maybe 12 people of so), and widely spaced (ten minutes between starts). My start on day two was near 11 a.m. Given that the first start was 9 a.m. and we had a good 8+ hours to drive home, we asked for earlier start times. "No changes, no exceptions." Well, Tom helped us out and arranged that we could run as pre-runners about 7:30 a.m. Thanks, Tom. That really helped us out. 4. DNF. On the first day I did not finish. I stopped after about 3/4 of the course. I wasn't have a great race. It wasn't terrible either. But, I wasn't having fun. As I approached the 16th control, I looked at the map and wondered, "why did they pick that spot for a control?" It was a very low broad spur in solid green forest. "I don't want to go there." So, I didn't. I stopped and jogged back to the finish. I felt a little bad to give up. But, I wasn't having fun. The second day was better. I had a decent race and a lot more fun. 5. NASCAR. I assumed that we'd be able to listen to the radio coverage of the Daytona 500 on the drive home. Driving through Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas, you'd have no trouble finding NASCAR on the radio, right? Wrong. I didn't find any radio coverage until the last 7 laps of the race. Bummer. posted by Michael | 10:28 AM
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