Rogaining

If you want to compete in a world championship athletic event, but you are not an elite athlete, there are really only two options. First, you could compete for a very small country. This has its limitations, though, because few of us are from a very small country, and in most sports there are rigorous qualifying levels guaranteed to knock you out long before you reach the championship level. The only exceptions I can think are very small countries that want to field a team in the Olympics. I think there must be a rule that says if a country like Tuvalu wants to field a team, they're allowed to have one person doing judo or race walking or something equally obscure.
The second way is to pick an obscure sport. This, too, is harder than it sounds. The most obscure sports (and games) you can think of still have state and regional and national qualifiers. Or so I thought, until I learned about rogaining. Rogaining is a sport where, using a map and compass and competing as a team, you try to visit as many checkpoints as possible in a 24 hour period. The 8th World Rogaining Championships are being held in Estonia next September, and as of this writing I am one of five North Americans entered (for a while I was the only one. That was definitely a weird feeling). I think will make a nice book, and I'm working on a proposal, but my most pressing need at the moment is a teammate.
http://8wrc2008.rogain.ee/index.php

7 Comments:
I'm terribly interested; but sadly, I'm quite sure I'd make a terrible teammate. That reminds me: the other day I saw an orienteering race in Topanga State Park with Isa and I tried to get her excited about it. I think I failed.
i'd be a much worse teammate than bernie. when things go wrong, i have a tendency to complain.
also i blame my teammate. that's a bad quality in a teammate.
plus i have to say that, unless at least three of the checkpoints are sparkling clean private bathrooms, i'm probably not your man. so there's another reason.
My only problem is I'm slow and out of shape.
Wouldn't finding/visiting checkpoints in Estonia give a huge advantage to any participating Estonians?
There is a rule that teammates must remain in visual contact. That means a team is only as good as its weakest member, which I think is a pretty clever innovation.
As for native Estonians having an insider advantage, that is definitely true. There is a rule that a rogaine site is "embargoed" (meaning you're not allowed to got there) once an event is announced, but of course it is unenforceable. And even someone honoring the embargo might have a lifetime of prior familiarity with the area.
The maps and instructions are entirely in symbolic language, so no one gets an advantage in that respect.
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