There were two training exercises this morning as well. In the first, ten maps were placed on a picnic table, each marked with only the starting point and one control. The kids were allowed to study the maps as long as needed, but they had to leave the maps on the table and find the controls based on their memory. This reinforced last month's lesson on using catching features and handrails to hone in on the target area. Schnickelfritz found a few on his own and then asked me to accompany him as the controls were further away from our picnic table base. I wasn't much help in finding the day-glo colored pieces of tape. At one point we knew the control was located on a switchback on the trail but I started looking one whole turn too soon. Fritz kept going on the trail and found the control tied around a small sapling. He also spent the rest of the morning saying "I told you so," to his Mama.
The next exercise was a line course. The map had a very specific path drawn in red, but no contols were marked. If the path showed we were supposed to leave the trail and walk around a boulder then we might find a control that wasn't visible before. We weren't told where the controls were or how many to find. As we found them we had to remember the letter written on the tape and where they were located (I wished I had brought a pen with me). As it was we had to walk the path, watch for pink tape, and repeat over and over the letters from the controls we had found and a description of where they were located. Control M or W was on a boulder, control B was at the base of a impassible rock face, control T was near a man-made object, etc.
Then it was time to gather for the main event. The 70 degree weather had brought out a lot of new faces--there were at least two Boy Scout troops and members of the St. Louis Adventurers club. There were grandparents and families with toddlers in backpacks. Registration and marking controls on the maps took over an hour. There were five courses to choose from: white being the shortest and easiest and the others being longer, more change in elevation, more deviations from marked trails, etc. We chose the yellow level, still a beginner course but slightly longer.
Up til now all the events we had attended had a set time limit in which to find as many controls as possible. Today we only had nine controls to locate and the winner would be determined by the shortest time. The teams and individuals took off at two minute intervals from the starting point. Right away I knew we could gain on our competition because the Boy Scouts just in front of us veered way off course to the left and they were all walking. When Fritz and I got the signal we trotted (since this was one of the few areas of open ground) to the right and immediately found our first control. More importantly, we reached the trail head before the troop.
At control #3 we met three boys catching their breath--another group of scouts. These boys had to have left at least four minutes before us and as Fritz and I started down the trail, they realized we had passed them. One did ask politely if we were going to be walki
We continued together to the eighth control--at the mouth of a cave. Fritz wanted to explore the cave, but I pointed out this was a timed race. With one control to go, any alliance was broken. One Scout said he knew where the last control was and the three older
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