British Orienteering Federation Explained

Assocname:British Orienteering Federation Limited
Sport:Orienteering
Abbrev:BOF
Jurisdiction:United Kingdom
Aff:IOF
Region:Europe
Location:United Kingdom
President:Steve Cram[1] [2]
Chairman:Drew Vanbeck
Chiefexec:Peter Hart
Url:www.britishorienteering.org.uk
Countryflag:United Kingdom

The British Orienteering Federation Limited, generally known and branded as British Orienteering, is the national sports governing body for the sport of orienteering in the United Kingdom.[3]

The federation was founded in June 1967, and is a member of the IOF.[4]

History

History of Orienteering in UK before the BOF

Orienteering was introduced to the UK in the 1950s and was heavily supported by renowned Olympians including John Disley and Chris Brasher.[5] The early years were helped by orienteers from Sweden: in 1962 Baron 'Rak' Largerfelt of the Stockholm Orienteering Club came to Scotland to help develop the sport. This culminated in the first championship being held in May 1962 at Dunkeld, and the formation of the Scottish Orienteering Association.[6]

Later visitors from Sweden included Jan Kjellström, a son of Silva compass founder Alvar Kjellström. Kjellström played an important role in the development of the sport and helped to accelerate developments in orienteering competition, mapping and coaching. Kjellström died in a road accident early in the year of 1967.[7] 1967 saw the first Jan Kjellström International Festival of Orienteering or "JK", held in memory of Kjellström. Later that year the British Orienteering Federation was formed by the amalgamation of the English and Scottish Associations leading to the first British Orienteering Championships held at Hamsterley Forest.

After the Founding of BOF

With the growth of the sport BOF was founded in 1967, and continued to develop. There were 12 national and regional associations by 1972; the British Schools Orienteering Association joining in 1995 when it was formed to promote orienteering in schools.[8] The Federation's membership had reached around 10,000 by 1998 and the club membership had increased to more 150 clubs.

Structure

The federation is made up of thirteen constituent associations, one each for Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland; nine for the English regions; and the British Schools Orienteering Association. The nine English regions are also Members of the English Orienteering Council (EOC).

The associations are:[9]

AbbreviationFull nameWeb addressOther notes
BSOABritish Schools Orienteering Associationhttps://www.bsoa.org/
EAOAEast Anglian Orienteering Associationhttp://www.eaoa.org.uk/
EMOAEast Midlands Orienteering Associationhttp://www.emoa.org.uk/
NEOANorth East Orienteering Associationhttp://www.neorienteering.org.uk/
NIOANorthern Ireland Orienteering Associationhttp://niorienteering.org.uk/
NWOANorth West Orienteering Associationhttp://www.nwoa.org.uk/
SCOASouth Central Orienteering Associationhttp://www.scoa-orienteering.org.uk/
SEOASouth East Orienteering Associationhttp://www.seoa.org.uk/
SOAScottish Orienteering Associationhttp://www.scottish-orienteering.org/
SWOASouth West Orienteering Associationhttps://sworienteeringassociation.co.uk/
WMOAWest Midlands Orienteering Associationhttp://www.wmoa.org.uk/
WOAWelsh Orienteering Associationhttp://www.woa.org.uk/
YHOAYorkshire and Humberside Orienteering Associationhttp://www.yhoa.org.uk/

Funding

Funding is principally from three sources:

Former grant funding from UK Sport has ceased, in common with many other non-Olympic sports.

Governance

The British Orienteering Federation is governed by a board of directors, and through a number of steering groups[11] appointed by the Board, covering:

The board of directors is chaired by Drew Vanbeck. The chief executive is Peter Hart. The board meets about four or five times a year.[12]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Steve Cram CBE Elected as British Orienteering's Fifth President.
  2. Web site: Steve Cram CBE Elected as British Orienteering's Fifth President. 30 April 2021.
  3. Web site: British Orienteering Homepage. British Orienteering Federation. 9 January 2008.
  4. Web site: About British Orienteering . British Orienteering Federation . 9 January 2008 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080127105559/http://www.britishorienteering.org.uk/about/index.php . 27 January 2008 . dmy-all .
  5. Web site: British Orienteering Federation Record Files. archiveshub.ac.uk. 3 January 2009. dead. https://archive.today/20121222193905/http://www.archiveshub.ac.uk/news/0705bof.html. 22 December 2012. dmy-all.
  6. Book: Disley , John . Orienteering . Faber and Faber Limited . 1978 . London . 0-571-04930-3.
  7. Web site: How orienteering began. 14 October 2008. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20080703193552/http://www.athleticscholarships.net/other-sports-orienteering-3.htm. 3 July 2008. dmy-all.
  8. Web site: History and Objectives. BSOA. 9 January 2008. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110725104020/http://www.bsoa.org/default.aspx?plain=YY&PID=ABOUT. 25 July 2011. dmy-all.
  9. Web site: Find a Club. British Orienteering Federation. 9 January 2008.
  10. Web site: Membership Fees. 12 November 2011.
  11. Web site: Steering Groups. British Orienteering Federation. 22 Dec 2016.
  12. Web site: Board of Directors. British Orienteering Federation. 22 Dec 2016.