SI Vault
 
Babes in The Swedish Woods
June 17, 1974
In 1918 a Swede invented a game he called orienteering. It made pathfinders out of cross-country runners, and his energetic countrymen took to it like aquavit. With a compass in one hand and a topographical map in the other, they race against time through unfamiliar forests in search of a series of control points marked with small red banners. In recent years the craze has spread, and next month zealots from 20 countries will gather near Malm� for a five-day meet, like the one shown here, in which 10,000 orienteers divided into 40 classes by age, sex and expertise take to the woods. Says Catarina Bergstr�m of Gothenburg (right), a former champion, "Even the best can run north instead of south."
Decrease font Decrease font
Enlarge font Enlarge font
June 17, 1974

Babes In The Swedish Woods

View CoverRead All Articles View This Issue

In 1918 a Swede invented a game he called orienteering. It made pathfinders out of cross-country runners, and his energetic countrymen took to it like aquavit. With a compass in one hand and a topographical map in the other, they race against time through unfamiliar forests in search of a series of control points marked with small red banners. In recent years the craze has spread, and next month zealots from 20 countries will gather near Malm� for a five-day meet, like the one shown here, in which 10,000 orienteers divided into 40 classes by age, sex and expertise take to the woods. Says Catarina Bergstr�m of Gothenburg (right), a former champion, "Even the best can run north instead of south."

A blonde Hungarian champion gives U.S. Marine competitors some basic training, but the advice sought by elderly contestants at a control point is considered poor form. On the last day, with all times computed, a winner gets a lift and a choir consoles the losers with a song.

1