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Measurer's contact details (for measurer ID NO=33)

Grade 2. Qualified to measure all events except National Championships.

Measurement Area:
Oxon, & within 50 miles of Witney

The most recent courses measured by Steve Hopkins in the South are:

certno course_name distance datemeasured
2008084  Hanney 5  5 miles  2008-06-28 
2008041  Town & Gown 10k  10 km  2008-05-01 
2007037  Oxford Town & Gown 10k  10 km  2007-03-11 
2007009  Devizes 10k  10 km  2007-01-13 
2007008  Goring 10k (Primary School)  10 km  2007-01-28 
2006132  Bromham 10k  10 km  2006-11-18 
2006127  Eynsham 10k  10 km  2006-11-04 
2006120  Abingdon Marathon  26m 385y  2006-09-13 
2006083  Yarnton 5  5 miles  2006-06-17 
2006046  Goring 10k  10 km  2006-02-13 
2006032  Great Bedwyn 10k  10 km  2006-03-11 
2006028  Lethbridge 10K  10 km  2006-04-08 
2006016  Charndon 5k  5 km  2006-03-17 
2006015  Carterton 10k  10 km  2006-02-01 
2005136  Bromham 10k (Devizes)  10 km  2005-11-20 
2005131  Abingdon Marathon -No High St  26m 385y  2005-10-12 
2005119  Pinewood 10k  10 km  2005-05-06 
2005092  Witney 10  10 miles  2005-08-04 
2005082  Swindon Half Marathon  13m 193y  2005-07-23 
2005066  Lethbridge 10K  10 km  2005-05-01 

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Records 81 to 91 of 91

TO OBTAIN A CERTIFICATE OF COURSE ACCURACY:

  1. Select a safe course and measure it as accurately as you can. (Use an OS 1:25000 map, a bike, a GPS, or, worst, a car)
  2. Prepare a course map
  3. Notify the police and follow any safety recommendations
  4. Only after 1, 2 &3 are you ready to contact an accredited measurer and make an appointment for an accurate measurement. The measurer will make a charge (see guidelines) and you should ask for an estimate.
  5. Supply the measurer with the following:
  6. On the agreed day meet the measurer and show him the course. It is usually best to accompany him on a bike. But a car may also be suitable. On busy roads the measurer may need someone behind him to 'protect' him from the traffic as he concentrates on an accurate measurement. Busy courses may need to be measured at a quiet time, e.g. early on Sunday morning. You may find it worthwhile to consult the Safety Code for Course Measurement so that you have an appreciation of the procedures the course measurer uses to make the measurement safe. The course measurer will seek your help to ensure his safety while riding, and he might not be able to complete the measurement at a single visit if he discovers hazrds which he has not planned for.
  7. After the measurement the measurer writes a report and sends copies to the race organiser and to the area measurement secretary, who issues the Certificate of Course Accuracy. Without a valid certificate or a renewal for subsequent races, any permit issued for a race advertising a specific distance would be invalid.