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Rogaining Tasmania - February 2025 Newsletter

Rogaining Tasmania - February 2025 Newsletter

‍ROGAINING TASMANIA NEWSLETTER

From the Prez - February 2025

Welcome to the 2025 season of rogaining in Tasmania. Buckle up, because we’ve got an exciting calendar of events lined up for this year!

  • Following the success of the GorgeUs Metrogaine last year, we are running another on-foot event in Launceston on Sunday, May 18th. Christine Brown will take us to a different map area and apparently all the questions will be coffee-flavoured.
  • To be held on Sunday, August 24th, Jaymee Knoll and Rowan Tilley are organising a Metrogaine exploring the Tangara Trails in the Lauderdale and Sandford areas of Hobart. This is an event for those on foot or on mountain bikes.
  • Bernard Walker and Darryl Smith are at the early stages of organising this year’s bush event. This will be in the Midlands region on December 6th and 7th and will likely be a 24-hr event, with a shorter option.

Rogaining Tasmania’s AGM will be held on Friday, February 28th. This is a low-key affair, and there is a free catered social event for which you should RSVP. See the notices below. Most of the committee have indicated that they are willing to continue but there are certainly opportunities for you to join the RT committee and help our sport.

The Australasian Champs in 2025 will be hosted by the ACT Rogaining Association and held in Kosciuszko National Park on March 15th and 16th. Entries are now open and the website is worth a look. Tasmania are the current holders of the Interstate and Trans-Tasman Challenge, and we’ll need your help to retain the trophy on ACTRA’s home ground.

The Australian Intervarsity Champs for 2025 will not be held with the Australasian Champs. This year it will be in conjunction with the NSW State Champs on the weekend of the 9th and 10th of August. Nigel Aylott Memorial Sports Foundation funding will be available for a Tasmanian Team to travel to this event. 

RT is currently surveying members as we are looking for extra volunteers to help out. Some roles are a major task, like setting and vetting, but others require less commitment. Many of the things that need to be done don’t prevent you from also competing. Regardless, we need volunteers for these roles to be filled or we can’t run successful events. Please have a look at the survey here and let us know where you can chip in.

RT’s event entry system has been modified to comply with Australian Rogaining Association standards. Anyone who identifies as non-binary may now enter as other (neither man nor woman) and their team will be assigned to the mixed category.

See you at an event!

Gary Carroll (RT Prez)


2025 RT Annual General Meeting

Notice of Annual General Meeting

The Annual General Meeting of Rogaining Tasmania Inc. will be held at the Waterworks Reserve, site 9, on Friday 28th February 2025 at 6pm. Entry to the reserve is off Waterworks Road, Ridgeway. Site 9 is at the far end of the reserve's internal road.

AGENDA

1.     Attendance and apologies
2.     Minutes of previous Annual General Meeting
3.     President’s Report
4.     Treasurer’s Report
5.     Election of Office Bearers


  • President
  • Vice President
  • Secretary
  • Treasurer
  • Committee (up to six)

6.     Other business

Ross Kelly

Public Officer

(10th December 2024)


Social Event - 2025 AGM

In conjunction with the 2025 Annual General Meeting to held on Friday 28th of February, RT will be hosting a social event at the Waterworks Reserve site 9. This is the shelter at the end of the internal Waterworks Reserve road. Come for a chat about the Deddington Dilemma event or any of the other events held by RT during 2024.

Start arriving at 5:30pm for a 6pm AGM start. The AGM will be brief.

RT will provide nibbles, pizzas and salads, as well as juice, wine and beer. For catering purposes, please rsvp to   by Tuesday 25th February. In accordance with rogaining tradition please bring your own plates, cups and cutlery.

The notice for the Annual General Meeting can be viewed here.


Australasian Rogaining Championships 15-16 March 2025

Experience the open plains and high-country bush of Northern Kosciuszko National Park on 15-16 March 2025. The ACT Rogaining Association is hosting the event and have 24 hours of fun organised for you and your friends. The course is around the headwaters of the Murrumbidgee River. You don't need to be an elite competitor or highly skilled at navigation to enter. It is open to anyone who would like to explore this beautiful area and compete in a national championship.

Information you need to know:

  • Early-bird entries until 11:59 pm Sunday 16 February 2025. Regular entries until 11:59 pm Sunday 9 March 2025. There will be NO late entries accepted after entries close on 9 March.
  • Full entry fee: Early bird $150, Regular $165 (after 16 Feb). Concession entry fee: Early bird $120, Regular $135 (after 16 Feb)
  • Event bus leaving Canberra 2 pm Friday afternoon returning Sunday afternoon for $50.
  • A carpooling service is also available on the website. 
  • You can order an event t-shirts in a technical fabric in bright blue with the event logo for a bargain $30 each. Limited stock.
  • We have a partner finder service if you are looking for a partner.


Visit the website at https://arc2025.rogaining.au/


An interview with Nick Bowden

RT editor, Lucy Hawthorne, interviewed Veteran rogainer, Nick Bowden, who is a long-term committee member and former president of Rogaining Tasmania.

Lucy: How did you first get involved in rogaining, and what attracted you to the activity in particular?

Nick: As a keen orienteer, I had heard about rogaining and thought it would be a combination of that sport and bushwalking, two of my favourite outdoor activities. This certainly proved to be the case. My first event was the Bangor Picnic in 1998. I teamed up with Geoff Baxter and Rod Bilson, also both new to the sport. We knew so little about what was involved that we did not allow enough time for course planning, and had to plan “on the run” after the start. My next event was the Bay of Fires in 1999. I loved the steep(ish) terrain because it makes navigation relatively easy. At the finish of this event Liz Canning had a sign asking if anyone was interested in making up a team to organise the next one. This resulted in Liz, Hugh Fitzgerald, Barry Windridge and me setting the Rheban event later the same year. I discovered setting an event is just as enjoyable as competing in one. The same team, with the addition of Jeff Butt and Sarah Boyle, organised the Midland Manoeuvres, which was the 2003 Australian Championship event.

Lucy: Rogaining is known for its blend of physical endurance and mental strategy. What do you think are the main attractions of the sport?

Nick: Rogaining can be enjoyed by people competing at many different levels: from elite athletes who can travel 100 km during a 24-hour event, to families taking their children on a bush walk. We hold a variety of different events: metrogaines, paddlegaines and mountain bike events. Who could ever forget the metrobusgaine? Because bush events are usually held on private property, you get to enjoy areas you would not normally have access to. Having events fully catered is popular. The events are well organised, and while there are minor hiccoughs, most competitors would not be aware of them.

Lucy: What has changed since you first started participating, and how has the community of rogainers changed over the years?

Nick: The number of competitors coming to an event has more than doubled. Thanks to LIDAR the quality of the maps has improved out of sight. The community used to be mostly orienteers, but it has now widened a lot, helped by a greater variety of events, mountain biking in particular.

Lucy: Can you share a particularly memorable or challenging rogaining experience, and what did you learn from it?

Nick: Rod Bilson and I competed in the 2006 Australian Championship held in the Warrumbungle National Park in NSW. The weather was unseasonably hot, so we did not push ourselves too hard and treated ourselves to a good sleep at night time. The memorable experience was getting up at first light, walking along a valley floor and watching the early morning sun shining on the tops of the enormous sandstone cliffs that surrounded us. Our score suffered from the amount of time we spent sleeping, but we did win the trivia competition that was held in the bus during the trip from Sydney!

Lucy: Are there specific opportunities or events that newcomers should be aware of if they want to get involved?

Nick: It’s best to start by competing in a metrogaine, but not essential. Learn how to use a compass and read a map and have a go. Navigate within your level of comfort and extend yourself as your confidence increases. Careful planning is essential: estimate how far you can travel in the given time and plan a route that can be shortened if necessary or lengthened if things go better than expected. Calculate the times you expect to reach to reach each check point, or at the very least, the half-way point. Finishing late will cause you to lose hard earned points and be a worry for the event organisers. Once you have competed in a couple of events, don’t be backwards in coming forward to assist experienced members organise one. I guarantee you will enjoy it, and it will help you improve your navigation. There are many tasks you can help with and compete as well.

Lucy: What's your favourite rogaining map of all time, and why is it so memorable?

Nick: My favourite was the Highland Fling, the 2006 Tasmanian Championship organised by Bernard Walker. I competed with Barry Abbott, my long-term rogaining partner. It was memorable because of the beautiful undulating central highland terrain, with light forest and areas of open button grass. It was also one of the few events where were we were able to extend our planned course because we were ahead of our anticipated time.

If you'd like to get involved as an organiser based on Nick's positive experience course setting, get in contact with the RT committee. Mentoring and mapping assistance is available. 


Upcoming Events

2025 Australasian Rogaining Championships "Murrumbidgee Wayfaring"

15-16 March 2025

Experience the open plains and high country bush of northern Kosciuszko National Park. Situated at the northern end of Long Plain, this area features long unburnt tall forest with grassy plains. Expect lots of variety in this course, where the setters are wanting to show you it all. Hosted by the ACT Rogaining Association and set by champion rogainers David Baldwin and Julie Quinn. 

Bus transport from Canberra is available, leaving Canberra airport on the Friday and returning Sunday afternoon.

Entries are open now.

 

Save the dates in 2025:

Coffee Bean Metrogaine

18 May 2025

Follow the waft of coffee around Launceston. All checkpoints in this 4-hour on-foot metrogaine relate to coffee in one way or another. Set by legendary rogainer Christine Brown. 

 

Roche's Rumble

24 August 2025

Return to the Tangara Trails on-foot or bike for this 4-hour event set by Jaymee Knoll and Rowan Tilley.

 

Midlands Bush event [name TBC]

6-7 December 2025

A 12- or 24-hour bush rogaine, location to be confirmed.

 

For a full list of rogaines in other states, visit the Australian Rogaining Association calendar.


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