Lesson 2: Find Your Way Home
"Can you find your way back?"
| Time | 45-60 minutes |
| Space | Schoolyard, local park, or camp area |
| Materials | Orienteering maps or simple maps of the area (1 per pair), A "home base" marker (flag or cone), Checkpoints (optional, for added challenge) |
| Setup | Identify home base and several starting locations at varying distances and complexity |
| Vocabulary | Orient the map, Feature, Home base |
Activities
core
Find Your Way Home
Navigate back to home base from an unfamiliar starting point.
Goals
Orienteering Goals
- Orient the map to match the real world
- Use visible features to determine your location on the map
- Navigate from an unfamiliar location back to a known destination
- Build confidence navigating independently
Delivery
- Safety briefing (5 min): review boundaries and gathering signal. Emphasize: if you are ever truly unsure where you are, stop and wait. A leader will find you.
- Introduce the map (5 min): hand out maps. Orient the maps together at home base. Point out home base on the map. Identify visible features and find them on the map.
- Guided walk-out (10 min): walk the group to a nearby location. Stop and ask: "Where are we on the map? Which way is home base?" Have them orient the map and point toward home base. Walk back together.
- Find Your Way Home (20-30 min): a leader walks each pair to a starting location. The pair uses the map to navigate back to home base on their own. Start with easy locations (short distance, on a path) and progress to harder ones (farther away, off-trail, or with turns).
- When a pair arrives at home base, walk them to a new starting point
- Increase difficulty each round
- Wrap-up (5 min): gather at home base. What features helped you find your way back? Was any starting point especially tricky?
Reflection
- What features on the map helped you find your way back?
- How did you know which direction to go?
- Was it harder from farther away? What made it harder?
- How did you orient the map?
Extensions
- Add checkpoints along the route that pairs must visit on their way home
- Time each return trip and see if pairs can improve
- Have campers write directions for someone else to follow