Find your local club
Orienteering is an outdoor activity taking place in Scottish rural and urban areas and is a club-centred, for various reasons. Clubs map out courses for suitability, variety and safety, they set up control points, and teams of club volunteers run the events. You’re welcome to have a go at orienteering for a few times before joining a club.
Once you have decided you want to participate in orienteering we recommend you join a club, which gives you many benefits.
AUOC (Aberdeen University OC)
Aberdeen
AYROC (Ayrshire OC)
Ayrshire
BASOC (Badenoch & Strathspey OC)
Speyside (also extends to Fort William)
CLYDE (Clydeside Orienteers)
Glasgow, Renfrewshire & Dunbartonshire
ECKO (Loch Eck Orienteers, Argyll)
Argyll (Oban to Dunoon)
ELO (East Lothian Orienteers)
Edinburgh and the Lothians
ESOC (Edinburgh Southern OC)
Edinburgh and the Lothians
EUOC (Edinburgh University OC)
Edinburgh
FVO (Forth Valley Orienteers)
Stirling, Dunblane, Falkirk, Clackmannanshire, Linlithgow and Callander
GRAMP (Grampian Orienteers)
Aberdeen and surrounding area
GUOC (Glasgow University OC)
Glasgow
INT (Interløpers OC, Edinburgh & Lothians)
Edinburgh and the Lothians
INVOC (Inverness OC)
Inverness and surrounding area
MAROC (Mar OC, Deeside)
Deeside
Masterplan Adventure (Scotland-wide)
All across Scotland
MOR (Moravian Orienteers)
Morayshire, Elgin, Forres
RR (Roxburgh Reivers, Scottish Borders)
Borders, Peebles, Selkirk, Ettrick
SOLWAY (Solway Orienteers)
Dumfries & Galloway
STAG (St Andrew’s OC Glasgow)
Greater Glasgow and N & S Lanarkshire
STUOC (Stirling University Orienteering Club)
Stirling and surrounding area
TAY (Tayside Orienteers)
Perth, Kinross, Angus, Dundee
TINTO (Tinto OC, Lanarkshire)
Lanark, Biggar, Lanarkshire