|
Rules of Rogaining and Technical Regulations
Effective 1 August 2007
ARA Technical Regulations 2007.pdf [156kb] 
Rogaining is an amateur sport to be enjoyed by social and competitive
participants and event organisers. These technical regulations have
been drafted with simplicity and enjoyment as primary guides and govern
the conduct of all rogaining events organised by any rogaining
association affiliated with the Australian Rogaining Association (ARA).
The regulations are composed of four parts as follows:
Preamble: - P1
- The
Preamble, the Competition Rules and the Technical Standards apply to
all state championship rogaines as well as the Australian
Championships. The Australian Championship Requirements apply to that
event only.
- P2
- State Associations may adjust the technical
regulations for specific minor (ie non-championship) events, where they
consider this appropriate, by decision of their association management
committee. They may also adjust the technical regulations for a
specific state championship event where there are compelling reasons to
do so. Any adjustment proposed for an Australian Championship rogaine
requires the written approval of the ARA executive, acting on the
advice of the ARA Technical Subcommittee.
- P3
- The Technical Standards set out the minimum
requirements for championship rogaines. Improvements beyond these
minimum standards are encouraged. In this context the ARA reaffirms as
policy the “Guidelines for Organisers” published in the latest edition
of the manual “Organizing a Rogaine” published by the International
Rogaining Federation. The ARA recommends the techniques described in
that manual except where they are superseded by these Technical
Regulations.
- P4
- The ARA supports the policy promulgated by the
Australian Sports Commission (ASC) on the prohibition on the use of
performance enhancing substances by participants in sport.
- P5
- In interpretation and use of these technical
regulations, participants, organisers, committees and jury panel
members shall at all times be guided by a sense of fair play.
- P6
- Apart from the event specific adjustments set out
in P2. above, these technical regulations can only be altered by
decision of the ARA Council.
- P7
- For the majority of participants, rogaining is a
social and recreational activity. The purpose of these regulations is
to introduce a standard based on wide experience that will enhance the
sport in general and allow for a competitive element to the sport that
is based on fairness. Many of the competition rules relate to safety
and etiquette on which the reputation of rogaining with government and
landowners is founded and which, if contravened, will threaten the
survival of the sport. Organisers must pay particular attention to
ensuring that all participants in an event, irrespective of their
competitive status, are aware of the importance of abiding by the
regulations on which the sport’s reputation depends. In particular
competition rules: R1, R2, R5, R9, R10, R11, R12, R13, R14, R15, R16,
R20, R21, R22 R23, R24 & R29 are fundamental to the continued
survival of the sport. Participants who contravene these rules may be
banned from future rogaines.
Competition Rules:
Rogaining is the sport of long distance cross-country navigation for
teams travelling on foot. The object is to score points by finding
checkpoints located on the course within a specified time. Checkpoints
may be visited in any order.
Definition “The
course” means anywhere a team travels during the time of the rogaine
but specifically excludes the access road and areas in the proximity of
an administration area designated by the organisers for non-competition
use, for example for parking or camping. “Event site” includes the
course and any administration, access and non-competition areas.
Entries - R1
- A team shall consist of two, three, four or five members.
- R2
- A team that has a member under fourteen years of age shall also have a member eighteen years of age or over.
- R3
- Competition
placings are awarded in several sections based on the age and gender
composition of teams. Each team shall be deemed to be entered for all
sections of the competition for which it is eligible.
- R4
- No
member of a team shall have been involved with the organisation of the
rogaine so as to have a prior familiarity with the rogaine course or
the fieldwork of the rogaine map.
Respect for Land and Property - R5
- Competitors shall respect public and private property.
- Competitors
shall not cross newly sown ground or growing crops, except if
specifically permitted by the organisers, or any area deemed
out-of-bounds by the organisers, and shall keep a reasonable distance
from dwellings and stock with young.
- Competitors shall take due
care when crossing fences, crossing at corner posts, solid posts or
between wires wherever possible. Each team shall leave gates in the
same state as they were found.
- Competitors shall not discard litter, or light fires at the event site, nor smoke on the course.
- Competitors shall not unduly damage or disturb native flora or fauna.
- Dogs and weapons of any kind, including firearms, are prohibited at the event site.
Conduct of Competitors - R6
- Competitors shall not enter the course until the official start is signalled.
- R7
- The
only navigational aids that may be carried on the course are magnetic
compasses, watches and copies of the competition map. The possession of
other navigational aids, including pedometers, altimeters and GPS
receivers on the course is prohibited. The possession, at the event
site, of maps that provide additional information not shown on the
competition map is prohibited.
- R8
- The use of computers for course planning is prohibited.
- R9
- Competitors shall travel only on foot.
- R10
- Members
of a team shall remain within unaided verbal contact of one another at
all times whilst on the course. A team shall demonstrate compliance
with this requirement to any event official or other team on request.
- R11
- Organisers shall issue checkpoint recording
devices, which shall be a scorecard and/or an electronic recorder to
one or more members of each team. Electronic recoding devices shall be
attached to the competitors by a tamper-proof device, such as a wrist
band, before the commencement of the event. Tamper-proof devices shall
only be cut or removed by event officials.
- R12
- A team shall surrender its recording device(s) to
any event official, and shall advise their team number to any event
official or other team, on request.
- R13
- A team shall not accept assistance from, nor collaborate with, other people, nor deliberately follow another team.
- R14
- No
food nor equipment shall be left on the course before the event for a
team’s use, and no food or equipment shall be discarded on the course
unless retrieved by the team during the event and brought by the team
with them to the finish.
- R15
- Competitors shall carry
a whistle at all times whilst on the course. In an emergency a
competitor shall give a series of short blasts on their whistle.
Checkpoints - R16
- All team members shall simultaneously approach to within 5 metres of each checkpoint for which points are claimed.
- R17
- In order to gain points for a checkpoint teams
must record their visit to that checkpoint using the recording device
provided by the organisers in the correct square, where a scorecard is
used. If a team punches an incorrect square, they must notify the
organisers of the details of this immediately upon returning to the
administration to be eligible to be credited with that checkpoint.
- R18
- Where more than one electronic recording device
is provided to a team, all devices must record a visit to a checkpoint
to gain points for that checkpoint.
- R19
- Teams shall fill in any intention sheet at the
checkpoint with the time of arrival, the team number and the number of
the checkpoint that they intend to next visit.
- R20
- If a recording device is lost, a team may present
in its place a record of punch marks or a record of the electronic
“punch” human readable back-up codes. The organisers will accept this
single sheet from the team provided that the punch/record marks are
discernible, and the team can identify to the organisers the checkpoint
number for each of the marks.
- R21
- Competitors shall not deliberately rest within one hundred metres of a checkpoint unless the checkpoint is also a water drop.
- R22
- Competitors shall not adversely interfere with a
checkpoint, water drop, any other facility placed upon the course by
the organisers, or the equipment of any other team.
Administration Areas - R23
- Whenever
a team visits an administration area, all team members are required to
report together to the organisers and surrender their team’s scorecard
and/or “check-in” their electronic recording device(s). The team shall
only collect its scorecard and/or “check-out” their electronic
recording device(s) immediately prior to leaving that administration
area.
- R24
- A team shall finish by all of the members
reporting together to the designated finish administration area and
surrendering their recording device.
- R25
- If a competitor wishes to withdraw from a team
for any reason the entire team shall return to an administration area
and notify the organisers.
The original team shall be deemed to have finished the event. If a new
team is formed it may be admitted to the competition at the discretion
of the organisers but no points shall be credited for checkpoints
already visited.
Penalties and Protests - R26
- The
penalty for breaching these rules is disqualification except for rules
R16, R17, R18 and R19 for which the penalty is the loss of points for
the checkpoint under consideration. Any team disqualified under this
rule shall be recorded as DSQ.
- R27
- A team may voluntarily withdraw, by advising the
organisers immediately upon their finish, if they have breached any
rule for any reason and shall be recorded as W/D.
- R28
- Within forty-five minutes of the nominated finish
time, a team may report in writing to the organisers about any team
thought to have breached these rules, or may protest in writing to the
organisers about any actions of the organisers that they consider made
the competition unfair.
Scoring - R29
- The
event shall end at precisely the set number of hours after the actual
starting time, both times as defined by the organisers’ clock. Where
multiple timing devices are in use, the organisers shall ensure all
clocks used to record finishing times are synchronized. Teams finishing
late will be penalised at the rate per minute or part thereof specified
in advance by the organisers. Teams finishing more than thirty minutes
late shall be deemed ineligible for a placing and their result shall be
recorded as LATE.
- R30
- A team’s score shall be the value of the
checkpoints visited and correctly verified in accordance with these
rules, less any penalties. The team with the greatest score, or in the
event of a tie the team that finished earlier, shall be awarded the
higher placing.
- R31
- In the event of a checkpoint being damaged or
deemed misplaced or missing by the organisers, teams shall be awarded
the checkpoint score:
- If the punch is missing or damaged but the team has a correct record on the intention sheet.
- If
the punch is missing and there is no intention sheet, but the team can
satisfy the organisers that they visited the correct site.
- If a checkpoint is missing or misplaced but the team can satisfy the organisers that they visited the correct site.
- For a correctly recorded visit to a misplaced checkpoint.
- If
an electronic “punch” fails but the team has either (where applicable)
a punch on a backup control card or record of the human readable
back-up code for that checkpoint.
General - R32
- Any
team hearing a distress signal must abandon their course and help in
any way needed. No team shall be penalised for any rule breached in the
course of giving such help.
Technical Standards: These Technical Standards apply to all championship rogaines held by ARA affiliated associations.
- T1
- All
championship rogaines shall be of 24 hours duration and shall start and
finish at 12 noon or such other time as may be agreed that will give
essentially equal duration of daylight both before and after the period
of darkness. State championship rogaines shall not be run in
competition with the Australian Rogaining Championships and state
associations shall notify the ARA of the proposed date for their
championships
by not later than the ARA AGM of the year prior to the event.
- T2
- The course shall be so designed that “finishing
the course” by visiting every checkpoint is unlikely, but that the
winning team is likely to visit a significant majority of the
checkpoints.
- T3
- The organising team shall include one or more
Course Vetters who are suitably experienced rogainers approved by the
organising association. The Vetters shall ensure the fairness of the
event and that the style, balance and length of the course are
appropriate to the event. The Vetters shall also inspect the course
looking for any unwanted problems that it could present to competitors,
including the location and number of water drops, any inaccuracies in
checkpoint placement or description, and potential safety hazards. The
Vetters, operating independently of the person who set that checkpoint,
shall check the location of each checkpoint. The Vetters shall check to
ensure the map, the checkpoint description, the terrain accuracy and
checkpoint locations are fair from all obvious attack points in all
reasonably expected light conditions. In the event of an unresolved
dispute, the Vetters shall refer the matter to the organising
association.
- T4
- Each competitor shall be provided with a copy of the event map. The map shall:
- Be at a scale between 1:24,000 and 1:64,000.
- Have a contour interval that is not more than 20 metres and is suitable for terrain legibility.
- Be clearly readable under natural and artificial light.
- Be pre-marked with grid or magnetic north lines, magnetic
- T5
- Advance information for the event sent
to each team shall state the map scale and shall give a brief
description of the terrain. It shall also state the starting and
finishing times, the time at which maps and checkpoint descriptions
become available and the points penalty for finishing after the
nominated finish time.
- T6
- A copy of the Competition Rules shall be included
with the pre-event information sent to competitors. In addition, a copy
of the Competition Rules shall be on display at the administration area
from the time that maps become available until the finish of the event.
- T7
- Each competitor shall be provided with a complete
list of checkpoint descriptions. Descriptions shall follow the
guidelines promulgated in the IRF “Organizing a Rogaine” manual, and in
particular the “the-a” convention whereby features explicitly shown on
the map are prefixed by “the” and those not so shown are prefixed by
“a”.
- T8
- Maps and checkpoint descriptions, together with
any known map changes and other essential information, shall be
available as written handouts at least two, and not more than four,
hours before the start time.
Every reasonable effort shall be made to ensure that any necessary last minute changes are communicated to all teams.
- T9
- The identifying numbers allocated to checkpoints
shall be allocated in ascending order of points value in order to
facilitate route planning. It is preferred that the first digit of the
checkpoint number reflects its points value.
- T10
- Each checkpoint shall be allocated a single points value that shall not change during the competition.
Additional points shall not be available to competitors for visiting
specific combinations of checkpoints or specific checkpoints at
specific times.
- T11
- Markers used at checkpoints shall be:
- three-dimensional with a minimum of three vertical faces,
- a minimum 800 cm2 on each face,
- of bright colours, preferably orange and white,
so as to be clearly visible in the open in daylight from at least 50 metres.
- T12
- Each marker shall be placed in such a manner that
competitors who successfully navigate to the correct position have
little or no trouble finding the marker. Unless located on a
specifically defined point feature or otherwise indicated on the
checkpoint description sheet the marker shall be generally visible from
at least
25 metres in most directions in clear daylight and shall be between 0.5
and 2 metres above the ground (preferably near eye level) and easily
reached. Markers shall be as close as possible to the checkpoint
feature. Where it is necessary to place a marker in a position which is
either more than 10 metres, or not obviously visible, from the feature
then a magnetic bearing and distance to the marker from the feature
shall be included in the checkpoint description.
- T13
- Where electronic checkpoint visit recording
devices are used the organisers shall establish a procedure for fairly
dealing with a failure of such devices and/or the enabling software and
shall advise competitors of this procedure in the pre-event information.
- T14
- During the event, the organisers shall not release
any information relating to provisional results, the progress of any
team, or the route chosen by any team.
- T15
- Competitors shall be able to obtain suitable food
and drinks at one or more “hash houses” at all times not later than six
hours after the start until at least one hour after the finish of an
event. If there is more than one hash house it is not necessary that
all remain open for the full time, but when maps are distributed
competitors shall be informed of the hours between which food is
available at each one.
- T16
- In the event of there being inadequate sources of
naturally occurring drinking quality water on the course, organisers
shall provide sufficient water drops that competitors do not have to
carry an excessive quantity of water. Organisers shall ensure that
water is available at these water drops for the duration of the event.
Water drops shall be placed on obvious navigational features and
described on the checkpoint description sheet. Their locations shall be
vetted in the same way as checkpoints. Water drops may be at
checkpoints.
Organisers may provide fruit or other food on the course at either
water drops or checkpoints for the use of participants. Any such food
points, including the times of food availability at the point, shall be
so noted on the checkpoint description sheet.
- T17
- Competition categories shall be provided as follows:
- There shall be three gender classes of competition:
- Men (all team members must be male)
- Women (all team members must be female)
- Mixed (teams must contain at least one female and one male)
- There shall be three age categories of competition within each gender class:
- Open (no age restriction)
- Veteran (all team members must be 40 years of age or over on the first day of competition)
- Super Veteran (all team members must be 55 years of age or over on the first day of competition)
- At
the discretion of the organising association, there may be additional
age categories, for example Junior (under 18 years), Under 23,
Ultra-veteran (65 years and over). See Clause C6 for Australian
Championship categories.
- Teams are deemed to compete in every category for which they are eligible.
- T18
- The full results of the event shall be
published and distributed to all competitors as soon as reasonably
practical after the event. These results shall show the team members’
names, team number and points score for every team, together with their
overall placing and their placing in every class for which they are
eligible. Withdrawn, late and disqualified teams shall also be shown.
- T19
- Any report of an alleged rule breach by a team, or
protest by a team against the organisation of an event shall be
considered and determined by a three person jury prior to the
announcement of the results for that event. The jury shall be drawn
from a panel of suitably qualified and experienced rogainers nominated
by the organising association. The names of panel members shall be made
known to the association members either by publishing at least annually
in the association newsletter or website, or by setting out in the
pre-event information distributed to participants. For the Australian
Rogaining Championships, the panel shall be as specified in Clause C8.
The panel members selected for any specific jury shall be selected by
the organisers and shall meet the following criteria:
- Members of the team protesting, reporting or being reported against shall not be on the jury.
- Members of the organising team shall not be on the jury.
- No
member of the jury shall have a vested interest in the jury’s
determination to the extent that disqualification of any team, who is
the subject of the jury’s determination, would move that member’s
team’s placing into or within the first three placings in any
age/gender category.
The event organiser and Course Vetter
shall assist the jury in hearing any report or protest as required, but
shall not have a vote in the determination. In hearing any protest or
report, the jury shall use all reasonable means to gather as much data
as is reasonably necessary, and shall give a fair hearing to both the
team making the report/protest, and the party being reported/protested
against. - T20
- Organisers may charge a fee of up to
$20- for the submission of a protest, provided that this is stated in
the pre-event information distributed to participants. This fee shall
be refunded if the protest is upheld, or if the protest is dismissed,
but the jury considers that the protest was well intentioned. No fee
shall be charged for teams making a report pursuant to rule R26.
Australian Championship Requirements: These Australian Championship Requirements apply to all Australian Championship rogaines.
- C1
- Australian Rogaining
Championships (Championships) are the Championships of the ARA and are
conducted annually, but their organisation is the responsibility of the
designated ARA affiliated state association. Each ARA affiliated state
association will be required to conduct the Championships in turn on a
rotation basis. Some flexibility is permitted to allow associations to
exchange their allocated years by mutual agreement with one another to
suit their specific requirements. The “roster” of states allocated the
Championships for at least the following five years shall be notified
to the ARA Annual General Meeting, with confirmation of the state to
hold any specific Championships and the dates upon which it will be
held similarly notified at least two years in advance. There shall be
at least six months between consecutive Championships.
- C2
- The Course Vetter for the Championships shall be
an experienced rogainer who has participated in at least three prior
state or Australian championship rogaines and is approved by the ARA.
The organising association shall advise the ARA of the names and
experience of all key technical organisers of the Championships,
including the Course Vetter, not less than one year prior to the date
of the event. Any changes to the Course Vetter following their approval
by ARA shall be notified to the ARA as soon as practical.
- C3
- A perpetual trophy is awarded to the winning team
in each age and gender category as defined in Clause T16 and Clause C6
of the ARA Technical Standards (ie a total of 12 trophies). These
trophies are to be held by that winning team until the following year’s
Championships. Six months prior to each Championships, the ARA
Secretary shall contact each holder of a Championships perpetual trophy
and agree how these trophies are to be transported to the
Championships. Every effort shall be made to transport all trophies
with Championships participants, but where this is not possible the
cost of the transport shall be borne by the ARA. It is recommended that
the Championships organisers contact the ARA Secretary six months prior
to the event to confirm the status of the perpetual trophies.
Immediately following the Championships, the organisers shall notify
the names and contact details of the holders of all perpetual trophies,
in writing, to both the ARA Secretary and the organisers of the
following year’s Championships.
- C4
- The map to be used for the Championships shall meet the following additional requirements:
- Be at a scale in the range 1:25,000 to 1:50,000.
- Be printed in at least four colours.
- C5
- The use of reflectors or reflective material to enhance checkpoint visibility is not permitted.
- C6
- The following age categories shall apply for the Australian Rogaining Championships:
- Open (no age restriction)
- U23 (all team members must be under 23 years of age on the first day of competition)
- Veteran (all team members must be 40 years of age or over on the first day of competition)
- Super Veteran (all team members must be 55 years of age or over on the first day of competition)
- C7
- The team with the highest score in the
Championships in each gender class shall be the Australian Rogaining
Champions, irrespective of which age category they are entered in.
- C8
- The jury of three persons for the Championships
shall be drawn from a panel consisting of the President, Secretary,
Treasurer and Technical Subcommittee Chair of the ARA plus all members
of state association committees and all state representatives on the
ARA technical subcommittee.
|