Advanced Skills: Pace Counting
9/15/2024
At the end of a recent expedition race I participated in, there was a very challenging rogaine course (an orienteering course where you could get points in any order). This course threw teams for a serious loop - there was variable terrain, giant lava fields, tough vegetation, and a lot of smaller land features that did not show up on the 1:24000 maps we were provided. This all combines to make a course that is easy to get turned around on. For example, if you're going uphill looking for a checkpoint right at the top, any downhills that aren't bigger than the contour interval (in this case, 40ft) and more than 50m wide, just will not show up on the map at all. This means that you have to have a good sense of how far you've come, and what elevation you're at. Having an altimeter helps with elevation, and a stopwatch can help with the distance one, but the gold standard is pace counting.
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