Orienteering courses (original) (raw)

Point-to-point orienteering (also called Cross-country orienteering)

In cross-country orienteering the controls (checkpoints) must be taken in numerical order. If the competitor does not find all his checkpoints, he is disqualified. There is usually a 3-hour time limit.

The following courses are usually available at PTOC events:

(Regional and national orienteering events may also include the Brown and Blue expert courses. The Brown is shorter in length than Green; Blue is considered the Elite course and is longer than Red.)

Score orienteering

Score orienteering courseAnother form of orienteering is Score Orienteering. Many controls are placed throughout the area, each having a point value determined by its distance from the start/finish or its technical difficulty. Participants have a set time to find as many controls as they can and earn as large a point value as possible. There is a large point penalty for being over-time. Highest score wins!

Other forms of orienteering

There are many forms of orienteering besides the most common: cross-country and score O. There are: relays, night orienteering, cross-country ski orienteering, mountain bike orienteering, horseback orienteering, handicap orienteering (Trail O), long-course, short-course, and sprint orienteering.