mylovelyhorse
Registered user
And so the Welsh National Rally is done for another year. Thinking back on it, even at the short distance of a week seems slightly dreamlike - I always miss it after it's gone and immediately look forward to the next one.
The way the rally works is simple - a couple of weeks before the start you get a hand drawn map of Wales with 40 checkpoints listed down the side, each marked with a dot in roughly the right place on the map. There are a fair number of repeated place names in Wales and this helps determine which you're looking for. For the rally you have to visit a number of these and one or more of specified manned checkpoints. There are five awards: Bronze (easiest - 5 checkpoints and 1 manned check), Silver, Gold and Platinum plus the special themed Dragon award. Previous years' Dragon themes have been light railways, abbeys, all sorts of things. This year was war memorials.
You decide the award you're going for and work out a route. I like to have my options open in case of bad weather and so I always do two routes for each award - one in the North and one in the South of Wales.
On the day of the rally you get a list of questions, one per check, such as "at the garage in Trefor, what is the red box for?" Simple proof you've actually been there, really. Can be fun hunting down the right answer
The way the rally works is simple - a couple of weeks before the start you get a hand drawn map of Wales with 40 checkpoints listed down the side, each marked with a dot in roughly the right place on the map. There are a fair number of repeated place names in Wales and this helps determine which you're looking for. For the rally you have to visit a number of these and one or more of specified manned checkpoints. There are five awards: Bronze (easiest - 5 checkpoints and 1 manned check), Silver, Gold and Platinum plus the special themed Dragon award. Previous years' Dragon themes have been light railways, abbeys, all sorts of things. This year was war memorials.
You decide the award you're going for and work out a route. I like to have my options open in case of bad weather and so I always do two routes for each award - one in the North and one in the South of Wales.
On the day of the rally you get a list of questions, one per check, such as "at the garage in Trefor, what is the red box for?" Simple proof you've actually been there, really. Can be fun hunting down the right answer