Thursday, 31 December 2015

Ryan's Twenty-fifteen experiences

Another adventurous year gone, and this time with more awesome experiences than ever!

Experience 1: The Oceania orienteering championships
And we were off to Australia, on another one of our orienteering adventures, this time to the Oceania Orienteering Championships in Tasmania. It was an orienteering festival week an a half, with 7 events over 10 days. It was a great series of events, and I got third place in one of the middle events!

Experience 2: My geocaching birthday
On the days leading up to my birthday, I spent ages thinking on what it was going to be this time. It had to be better than all my others, (ukulele festival, mountain-biking, secret code treasure hunt, action world) but I ouldn't think of anything. Then my dad came up with the idea of a geocaching weekend birthday party, which I thought sounded great! I had a great time, indeed better than all my other birthdays! You can read about it in more detail here.


Experience 3: Mathex 2015
At my school, since term 2, I had been chosen for the school Mathex team, along with thirty or so other people. Mathex is one of the only academic competitive sports in the world, a bit like sprinting crossed with puzzle solving. You are given a hard maths question. Once you solve it, someone on your team has to sprint 100 metres to the judges, who then give you the next question. Each question gives your team 5 points. First to 100 wins! Anyway, I made it into the team of 4 and on the night (with over 100 schools competing) our team came third, my school's first time to get a place in over 10 years!

Experience 4: The P6 adventure race
This year was my fifth P6, and my friend Cameron came with me to do it so we had a team of three. Of course it was better than all the other P6's I had done, because they just keep getting better. After 6 hours of hard work, plodding, pedalling, pushing, and tubing, we were rewarded with first place in our category and about 8th overall! Yahoo!

So overall, another great adventurous year, better than all the others before it!

-- Ryan

Thursday, 24 December 2015

Alan's highlights (& a lowlight) of 2015

The High 5-0 Challenge

In February-March "Chief Nutter" Mal Law spent 50 days running an off-road marathon and climbing a peak each day. My training included a multiple of ascents of Mt Wellington in Hobart, running the Mt Graham Circuit at Freycinet and completing the 75km Hillary Trail over 2 days. I was a support runner for the 2nd day of Mal's challenge, a 42km, 3000m of climbing, 12hr epic in the Kaimanawa ranges. One of the toughest days ever but for Mal just a stepping stone as he continued with 48 similar days. It was an incredible adventure to be a small part of and Mal's fundraising of over $505,050 for the mental health foundation is astounding.

The Crash

Back on the bike after all the running training was great until I managed a head-on collision with another bike. The resulting broken finger slowed my training somewhat and put me off the bike for six weeks. As this happened about 5 weeks before the Curekids Great Adventure Race, I had a problem. However some rapid recovery and and understanding specialist got me to the startline with the finger protected by a splint. Team Theta had a great race and managed to win the IT cup as well as raising $16,000 for this deserving charity.


The ups and downs of orienteering

A great year of orienteering in a variety of locations. The ups were the experience of running at Oceania in Tasmania, first M40 at two of the NWOC rogaines and managing to get round a whole week of events at the Australian Champs without being hideously lost. The downs came from being lost in the maze of rocks at the NZ champs and a DNF due to not being able to locate controls in the thick forest on the last day of the JAFA Queens birthday weekend.

10 Years of the P6!

It's now 10 years since I started in this mad crazy world of adventure racing. My first event was the P6 in 2005 with Julia; a memorable event involving gale force winds, hailstorms, riding the bike leg with no seat and a broken chain. I've been back every year since making 2015 my 11th event. Once more, Lactic Turkey Events put on a memorable event this time at Shakespear Regional Park. This year competing with Ryan and his friend Cameron, we were running, biking, climbing, shooting and swimming our way round the park. We celebrated the 10-year anniversary with custom-printed tshirts and presented shirts to the race organisers Shaun & Maddie as well.

kyla's highlights of 2015


by Kyla

Jafa

Jafa is a orienteering weekend with four days of orienteering Jafa is a highlight because I came first over the weekend.

My birthday

My birthday party it is a highlight because it is one of the most exiting things of the year this year it was a ice-skating birthday party.

P6

This is a highlight because our team The Two Elephants (my mum and me )won 2 person family prize.

Gymnastics

In October I started gymnastics at Waitakere gymnastics the first thing we did  was to do a backwards flip and it is my favourite thing to do right from the start I can also practice for gymnastics at home because I have a trapeze at home. 

School play


This years school play was called 'Disorder In Court'.I was one of the main characters alongside Goldilocks, the three bears, three little pigs and the Big Bad Wolf.
The reason why I put the school play on is because it was the end of school celebration and Christmas celebration.

Tuesday, 22 December 2015

Game-making

Throughout the year I have been making several mini-games on a programming website on scratch. I have devoted a lot of my time to making games this year, and you can view my profile on scratch here, or go to my games website here. I also spent 8 weeks programming a huge platformer-style game (called "simple") and you find a blog on me creating this game step by step here. You can veiw the final game as well, here.

           


Thursday, 16 July 2015

My 12th geobirthday

By Ryan

As a geocacher, I have always wanted to put out some geocaches - and wanted even more to get 100 of them! Well, that is exactly what my weekend birthday was planned to be. Celebrating 100 caches, 2 hides, and our first earthcache find, I couldn't wait! Our family, with a geocaching username of KKchickpea, had already put out one cache - Black Hole, a holey Karekare cache. However, it wasn't getting many finds, and I wanted another placement, preferably a placement which more people would go to than Karekare. I had 88 finds, and so all I needed was 12 finds to top them off at 100. We also hoped to find our first earthcache - but where could we find a good place to fill all of these requirements? We decided Whatipu was the place, after seeing available accommodation at Whatipu lodge.

The decision was made - we would start at our house in Karekare, walk to Whatipu, collecting 7 geocaches along the Muir Track, then stay overnight at the lodge after 3 night caches. The next day we would hopefully find another geocache, plus the local earthcache, then finish off the party with a (hopefully) superb placement. It was a good plan.

I woke up. This was it! Soon my local friends Moses, Erik and Leon were here, but my orienteering buddies Haydn and Cameron were almost half an hour late, as they came from the North Shore and underestimated time. Eventually we were all here - apart from Toby, another of my friends who was just recovering from a cough and was coming for the night, but not for the hike. Half an hour later we were all ready to go and our party of hikers set off the road, Erik, Leon, Cameron, Haydn, Moses, my sister Kyla and my dad Alan - not Julia, my mum, as she still had a bad knee and was driving bags to Whatipu.

Finally, we were off! Through the Karekare Glade we went, and soon we were on the black beach. We headed down the beach, and along the track to Tunnel Point. There we collected a cache that we had already found, but as all of my friends were 'muggles' (geocaching slang for non-geocachers), we needed to show them how to find a geocache and what it looked like. I stepped aside to let my friends find it, and eventually, they did, and we headed off to the Pararaha.

Here we were: Pararaha. Over the board walk, and through the river, and we were at the Pararaha Campsite where we stopped for a rest. This was where the real geocaching fun started.  7 geocaches, along the Muir Track, 3 on the way up, 4 on the way down.

At the summit of the Muir track, we needed to find the 3rd cache, which was right where we were, on the summit.and we found it within 2 minutes It was an amusing one about a dentist and a tree that looked like a gaping mouth! Then we stopped for a rest, having found 3 out of 3 geocaches. 4 to go!

Halfway down the Muir we stopped abruptly, to find another cache. We had found the two further up the track, which made 5 in total. The one we were about to find was our 6th. The location was an exposed cliff, with gorse everywhere. 20 minutes later, we gave up, scratched and cut by gorse. This was bad news, as I had hoped to find all of the caches on the Muir. Would we reach 100? We continued on down the hill.

After finding the last cache successfully, we finally saw a track junction up ahead. We ran down the track, turned left, and there it was: Whatipu Lodge. We settled in, and waited for Julia to get there. Then my friend Toby, as mentioned earlier, got here and I opened my presents, before we had a nice dinner, followed by... CAKE!! So delicious! Anyway, us kids played outside in the dark in some long grass as high as us for a bit, but then it was time to go night-caching!

We set up our torches, put on several layers of clothing, and set off, first along the road a couple of hundred metres. We found the cache within 30 seconds, and realised we had plenty of time to start another one, so we decided to climb 100 metres vertical up the Omanawanui track, in the dark! Eventually we made it, found the cache, and climbed all the 100 metres back down, to the warmth of the heater in the lodge. Then we grabbed our sleeping bags, and all slept as soon as our heads hit the pillow.

The second day already, and we needed to get 4 caches in one day, including an earthcache and a placement. Would we be able to do it? I doubted it. Soon we were walking along the beach to our first cache, called Burning Thighs. So true, as we felt our thighs burning as we scrabbled up a large sand dune. When we got to the top, we had to cimb up a jutting out piece of rock, but it was so windy on the sand dune that we decided not to even try and get the cache, as we thought you would practically get blown off the rock if you tried!

Halfway up the beach, we were loooking at our placement location: Ninepin Rock. This is a small rock, 20 metres wide and 20 metres high, with a small lighthouse on top. Soon we found the perfect spot, and we snuggled the geocache into it. Scrambling back down the rock, someone pointed out an even better place to hide it, when I saw a container, not ours, in that exact spot! There were no geocaches shown on the online map, but then I realized. This was a premium cache! (You have to pay to be a premium member, but then you get to see and find caches that basic members - like us - cannot see) Oh well. I climbed back up the rock, and grabbed my cache.

The next cache was at the Whatipu caves - the earthcache. We spent half an hour having great fun exploring the caves, and wading in the water thigh-high in some of them, before sucessfully answering all the questions for the earthcache. At last! A find! One placement to go, and...3 caches!

Back at the lodge, we looked at the other caches in Whatipu. There was one on top of a bush covered 200 metre high hill, with no track going up to it. Getting it would be crazy, we thought, but not as crazy as my idea was just then! I looked out the window and saw another bush covered 200 metre high hill, next to the other one. I said that if we placed a cache on top of the other one, now that would be cool. And so, unexpectedly, me and my friends set off. We reached the summit and boy. what a veiw! You could see for miles and miles! Now this, this was a superb placement. In fact, I decided to name the hill Mt Ryan. I raced down the hill, very happy about our placement. I couldn't think of anything better!

However, one worry remained: I neededs to get 3 more caches! Within the next 10 minutes, all the parents came to pick up my friends, and I said my goodbyes. However, I had a plan, and I was determined to get 100 caches. My dad and I would run up the Omanuanui Track, collecting the 5 geocaches on the way - more than enough.

We were at our 100th cache location. This was it. We found it within 30 seconds, but as I finished signing the log, I jumped in the air. This was it! My 100th cache! I had placed a cache in an awesome spot, found my first earthcache, and reached 100 caches!

The next cache was at the summit, and as I trudged up the hill, I began to wonder whether I should have skipped the last cache to make my 100th the summit. However, my wonder was settled, as when we reached the top, we soon discovered the cache had been lost for half a year. Soon we started our way down, collecting on last cache one the way. I have to say, when we got into the car and drove back to Karekare, as soon as we hit 100 caches, we were no longer a beginner, but now we are at 101, and...well...I feel novice again!

And that was my best birthday party ever. Period.

Thursday, 9 July 2015

Kyla in the paper

By Kyla Moore
This is me in the paper. Click here to see me and Grace orienteering with maps in the first and third picture.




Sunday, 28 June 2015

My Birthday By Kyla

*1.MY BIRTHDAY PARTY
**2.MY BIRTHDAY


*1. 6 OF JUNE MY PARTY



I had a really cool Birthday party I went ice-skating :) and I went with
BEBE LILY GABI AMBER and me after the ice-skating we went to the park and then went to a pizza place it was so fun





**2. MY BIRTHDAY


My birthday was orienteering and parakai hot springs then a curry at curry leaf with my friend called Grace we were in the paper about orienteering for the weekend paper.
by kyla

Tuesday, 9 June 2015

JAFA orienteering weekend

Queen's birthday this weekend this year was very unusual for us; a weekend of orienteering in Auckland kept us home instead of the traditional weekend away. Four races over the 3 days and being members of the organizing club kept us busy, but we also managed a birthday dinner for Julia on Sunday evening. A quick review of the races:

Dad (M40A): Sat am. Couldn't find the first control; finished an hour behind the winner in last place. Sun am. Miles better, a great run to come 5th. What's more, as the 4 in front were foreigners, was awarded 1st place in the Auckland champs! Sun pm. Mostly walked due to injury from the morning. Mon am. Dreadful! Couldn't find control 7 after three tries in the low visibility forest. gave up and went back to the finish for a bacon sandwich.

Mum (W40B): Sat am. Not meant to run due to knee injury - 2nd place. Sun am. 2nd again. Sun pm. 1st place! Are you sure you're not running on that knee? Well done birthday girl. Mon am. Slipped to 5th. At the final JAFA presentation Julia was awarded 2nd over the whole weekend.

Ryan (Junior boys): Sat am. Suffering from a bad cold, not able to run, placed well down the field. Sun. Cold worse & unable to speak, should be at home in bed, instead spent the day hanging about in the forest with orienteering mates. Mon am. Feeling better, walked a couple of controls, jogged a couple & ran the rest. Finished in the middle of the field in a class with boys up 5 years his senior.

Kyla (W10A): Sat am. A good run for 3rd place. Sun am. A great run 2nd place. Sun pm. Another greate run and another 2nd. Mon am. Back to 3rd place. No firsts but the great consistency gave Kyla 1st overall for the weekend!

So for a change to Ryan on the podium, we have pictures of the other 3 of us with certificates.

by Alan

Tuesday, 28 April 2015

the Whangamata adventure race

The big race 

By Kyla Moore.....


The horn blared mum and I set off, the race had started.  "Good luck me" I said to myself. The race started on foot and then on bike at the start of the race we went up the hill heading towards the beach the waves were huge. In the bike section we biked on the beach and then we got off  our bikes and waded  to a little island there was treasure, the   treasure was a delicious  ice block. At the end of the race we had popcorn and it was good the popcorn was covered in salt and sugar...

Thursday, 23 April 2015

Easter Holidays - part 2

A few photos of the other activities at Easter when not orienteering or looking for chocolate eggs.

Easter pancakes on the deck at Port Waikato with Warwick, Margaret and Eleanor

Exploring the Nikau Caves. These caves are on a private farm so it's only possible to visit on a guided trip. But the caves are unmodified so require wading and crawling to get though. Fantastic stalagmites and stalactites through the length of the caves and the highlight was traversing one section with torches off lit only by glow-worms. 

 
Climbing Mt Karioi near Raglan. Ropes, ladders and several geocaches on the way up. Cold and drizzly on the way down.

Sunday, 5 April 2015

Easter holiday


BY KYLA

We had an orienteering Easter because the nationals was on.

The Nationals is an orienteering event. We stayed at a rented house in Port Waikato with my friend Eleanor.

Easter DAY...

In the morning Eleanor and I got up quietly WE HAD A PLAN...

We snuck out the door with our plan - map in our hands and looked in the places we thought the Easter eggs were.

We looked one way around the house then the other way round -we couldn't find any.

Next we went inside.

Later on my brother-Ryan had an orienteering Easter hunt when we finished we had found lots of Easter eggs not like when we did the quick check we didn't find any.

We got to eat them in our room...



Friday, 3 April 2015

CureKids 2015

Julia and Alan raced the CureKids Great Adventure Race with team Theta for the fourth year. The build-up this year was far from ideal with Julia's knee injury and Alan's broken finger. So our race plan was to take it easy and enjoy the day. Navigating down the wrong stream in the first part of the race put us well in the mid-pack, but a solid MTB and final trek bought us over the line happily in 12th place - good enough to win the IT cup once more. The most important result of course was exceeding all previous year's fundraising totals with $16,000 raised for CureKids to take our total over $55,000 since 2012.
Race report by team member Adrian is here on the Theta website.

By Alan

Monday, 30 March 2015

AKSS Sprint Series

By Ryan


Day 4: AKSS Sprint 4 - Avondale College, Monday 16 March


We were in the car and driving to Avondale College, the location of the last Auckland Secondary Schools Sprint Series (AKSSSS) and I was so far in fourth position, my average from the previous four events. I needed to get 3rd or higher on average to be in the finals. I’d be fine as long as I got on the podium for this event. I slipped my comp
ass and SI chip on. I got into my grade lane and soon had the map in my hands. GO! I reached out, ‘punched’ the start box with my SI, flipped my map and launched off. I slowed to find the start on my map. I found it and ran - around the wrong building. When I reached the control, I was already starting to think this would not be a good run. Then I made similar mistakes on two more controls, spending a whole minute trying to find one when I saw my rival sprint past me. When I got to the last few legs I was almost walking, knowing that this was the worst run I had done in the whole series. I jogged into the finish and punched it. Afterwards, I hang around for a bit until someone announced that the results were being printed. They taped them up to a wall and I barged into the semicircular crowd of people… and ran out laughing! Yes! Yes! I had still come third! I was into the finals!


Day 5: AKSS Sprint Final 1 - Aorangi School, Saturday 28 March
Day 5: AKSS Sprint Final 2 - Carrington Unitec Saturday 28 March


The winner of the sprint final is chosen by their total time of two events taken place on the same day. Sprint final 1 had taken place in the morning. I had ended up with first place on a clean run - but first only by 6 seconds with my rival - Cameron. That almost meant that whoever won the next race won the finals. We arrived early. It was raining and wet. My friend Ryan came over and slapped me over the back. “Come on ,Ryan,” he said, “you’ll win it, for sure! These other people aren't used to this terrain! This is technical stuff.” I smiled. “I hope you win too, Ryan.” Soon afterwards the weather cleared up, so we walked to the start chutes. I wanted to start behind Cameron but he was nowhere in sight, so I started soon afterwards. I flipped the map but it took me about 20 seconds to find the start and where I was supposed to be heading. I was running okay after that but then I made a 30 second mistake. Finally I was running down the finish chute but then a feeling of dread washed over me as I stared at the map one last time - there was a control I didn't think I had punched. It was too late now, I had punched the finish. I covered my face when I downloaded my stick. When I finally opened my eyes, I looked at the splits. Yes! Yes! No dash = No mispunch! Although I still didn't think I was going to win. I had made up to 1 minute of mistakes. Next I had to wait for Cameron to come in. The suspense was unbearable. The sun came out and everyone - including us, used the umbrellas that we had originally brung for rain as shade. Finally, Cameron came in. I asked him how he went. “Not very well,” was the reply. The odds were with me. I walked with him to the download. He received his times and groaned. We compared splits. Yes! Yes! I was faster by two minutes! I … had… WON! I whooped with joy. 15 minutes later, they taped up the results, and yes, my winning was official. Ryan congratulated me. Later I was standing on the top of the podium (but Cameron and the other kid were still both taller than me) and I received my medal. Then we packed up and drove home. With a brand new gold medal.

Sunday, 22 February 2015

Sailing in the Bay of Islands




by Julia


Heading north for for a naughty nautical adventure. 260 kms later we meet the yacht in Russell, unload, park the car, and sail away. Thanks to Claire, Kev & Matt for sailing to Russell to meet us. It’s a tight fit, but we manage to stuff our our gear on. We managed to do some proper sailing in our race to get away from touristy Russell. The maritime environment is something our kids have not experienced in a great deal, we have only had the occasional kayak trip, managing Abel Tasman by kayak well over two years ago when we all fitted in one kayak. This is a change of scene, for us, being surrounded by water - luckily with some great friendly co-sailers. There was lots for us to learn, especially how to operate the toilet and make a bed from the dining room seats, let alone the unfurling of sails and jibing. The highlight was waking up early and photographing the sunrise on mirror calm water two steps away from my bed in the morning. The first full day we headed out to the end of Cape Brett to see the hole in the rock up-close and to try our luck at fishing. We caught marine life and put it all back, they were too small or entirely inedibleh. We had a sailing lesson with skipper Kev detailing how to stop the boat from plain sailing to standstill with a steering technique, and it was fairly effective. Being map geeks, we tried to follow the land from the maritime map, but we’re still working on our maritime orienteering techniques. The evening came around, and still no fish on a line appeared in time for dinner …Julia brought out her spare fridge supply.





The next morning we hoisted ourselves around the boat hanging from an umbilical line exploring the outer edges of the boat on the Sunday, and for extra adventure,  Ryan & Matt went up near the top of the mast for a good photo op. After working off our feast breakfast of blueberry impregnated pancakes, we headed to Robertson Island to walk up to the summit for a view and snorkel in the rock pools. Do try this this at high tide, as the pools were less that knee deep as the tide went out, but perfectly still water for the children. We discovered, it is still possible to cruise around on the outer edge of touristy Paihia and Russell and to have the experience of a remote place. We forgot about phones and shops, read and talked, and focused purely on the patch of water just around us. Fantastic weather, great company, overall a very mellow and rewarding weekend.



Tuesday, 10 February 2015

Thunderbolt and the High-5-0

By Alan

For the High-5-0 challenge, Mal Law was spending 50 days running 50 offroad marathons including 50 mountains. Every day different support runners ran with him as well as raising money for the Mental Health Foundation. I'd signed on for running day 2 of the challenge in the Kaimanawa ranges. The Hillary Weekend had raised the funds and given me plenty of hill training but was it enough?

An early start and initial steep climb through beech forest led to the tops with spectacular views across to the volcanoes of Tongariro in the early morning light. Once on the Umukarikari ridge we there was great running along the good track then down to Waipakihi Hut.


After the hut we climbed into the trackless Middle Range. Very happy to have a bluebird day to navigate through the open tops. A stark contrast to the last time I was in the area in a whiteout when tramping with Joolz. The open tops had everything from great scree running to nasty slow vegetation fighting ascents. After about 8hrs we were on the summit of Thunderbolt, great name for a bland flat-topped mountain with amazing views.
But there was more. To get home we had a 600m descent followed by 500m climb & descent over Urchin. That climb was one of the hardest I've done with over 10 hours of hills already in my legs. Finally we reached the finish after 12hrs, 42km and 3000m of climbing. I was done for, but for Mal this was just day-2 with 48 more to complete his challenge! Read Mal's blog of the day here.