Sports
Grown-up scavenger hunt
Local orienteering club welcomes all

Sara Lemanski caught the orienteering bug after watching her wife compete. (Photo public domain)
Earlier this year, the Washington Blade spotlighted noncompetitive sports clubs in the area. One of the sports profiled, orienteering, also has a competitive side.
Orienteering is an outdoor sport suitable for all ages and fitness levels and Quantico Orienteering Club is the largest and most active orienteering club in the nation. Orienteering is similar to a scavenger hunt in which you use a compass and a detailed map to find checkpoints (controls) that have been placed at locations marked on the map.
The club is primarily straight but is becoming wildly popular with the LGBT community. Last weekend, the orienteers hosted the Patapsco Granite meet at Patapsco State Park which offered advanced courses and a special granite sprint course. Upcoming events are online at qocweb.org.
Immediately following the event, LGBT participants posted their appreciation on social media: “Awesome time orienteering this morning at Patapsco State Park!” (Steve Marker); “Orienteering!?? Love it!” (Matt Mitchell); and “Great job guys!!! We escaped mostly unharmed.” (Jared Silk).
Orienteering offers participants the option to just walk along at a leisurely pace or race against other competitors. Quantico uses an electronic timing system called an epunch that records your start, control check-ins and finish. After the results are posted, you can log-in and check your times compared to others who competed that day.
The group has established sites throughout the Maryland and Virginia region and operates primarily from September to June with events on three weekends per month. The cost is inexpensive and there is no pre-registration. Along with standard orienteering, Quantico offers night orienteering, ski orienteering and mountain bike orienteering.
The group suggests that participants leave their phones in their cars and club member Sara Lemanski can attest to that being a good idea.
“When I first started I walked a lot because trying to read the maps was giving me fits,” Lemanski says. “Now that it is easier for me, I am moving faster and one flying jump over a stream ended with me in the water and a dead phone.”
Lemanski’s partner Amber is a world-class orienteering athlete and they traveled together to the North American Orienteering Championships in 2012 where Lemanski watched as a spectator.
Once she tried it herself in 2013, Lemanski was hooked and enjoys the way the sport challenges her both physically and mentally. In an effort to reach out to more people, Lemanski suggested that the orienteers join the LGBT-based Team D.C. list of sports.
“The members of Quantico Orienteering are very welcoming and don’t care if you are LGBT,” Lemanski says. “When Amber and I got married in March of 2015, they were so happy for us.”
Her wife may be the world-class athlete in the family, but Lemanski has an impressive sports background herself.
Originally from Michigan, Lemanski grew up on military bases including Fort Sumter and played any sport she could get her hands on including softball, basketball and soccer. While she was attending University of Texas at San Antonio she played club lacrosse and soccer.
She moved to D.C. in 2008 and is now working as a program analyst for the Asia Bureau of USAID. She has played softball with Chesapeake and Potomac Softball, soccer with the Federal Triangles and went to nationals with the D.C. Diplomats Team Handball Club.
Lemanski says her main sport is ice hockey and she plays in a Laurel adult rec league which she refers to as the “beer league.” She will attend an adult hockey camp near Niagara Falls for a weekend of camping with friends and playing hockey.
As for orienteering, Lemanski is continuing to hone her skills with Quantico Orienteering and has traveled with her wife to compete in places such as West Point, N.Y.; Kentucky, Georgia and the Czech Republic.
“When I am orienteering during the day, I try to run through the entire course,” Lemanski says. “At night though, I walk because it is so peaceful and there are stars and different noises. It can be a Zen experience.”
Sports
New IOC policy bans trans women from Olympics
New regulation to be in effect at 2028 summer games in Los Angeles
The International Olympic Committee on Thursday announced it will not allow transgender women from competing in female events at the Olympics.
“For all disciplines on the Sports Program of an IOC event, including individual and team sports, eligibility for any Female Category is limited to biological females,” reads the new policy.
The policy states “eligibility for the Female Category is to be determined in the first instance by SRY Gene screening to detect the absence or presence of the SRY Gene.”
“On the basis of the scientific evidence, the IOC considers that the SRY (sex-determining Region Y) Gene is fixed throughout life and represents highly accurate evidence that an athlete has experienced or will experience male sex development,” it reads. “Furthermore, the IOC considers that SRY Gene screening via saliva, cheek swab or blood sample is unintrusive compared to other possible methods. Athletes who screen negative for the SRY gene permanently satisfy this policy’s eligibility criteria for competition in the Female Category.”
The policy states the test “will be a once-in-a-lifetime test” unless “there is reason to believe a negative reading is in error.”
The new regulation will be in place for the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.
“I understand that this a very sensitive topic,” said IOC President Kirsty Coventry on Thursday in a video. “As a former athlete, I passionately believe in the rights of all Olympians to take part in fair competition.”
“The policy that we have announced is based on science and it has been led by medical experts with the best interests of athletes at its heart. The scientific evidence is very clear: male chromosomes give performance advances in sport that rely on strength, power, or endurance,” she added. “At the Olympic Games, even the smallest margins can be the difference between victory and defeat. So, it is absolutely clear that it would not be fair for biological males to compete in the female category. In addition, in some sports it would simply not be safe.”
(Video courtesy of the IOC)
Laurel Hubbard, a weightlifter from New Zealand, in 2021 became the first trans woman to compete at the Olympics.
Imane Khelif, an Algerian boxer, won a gold medal at the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris. Khelif later sued JK Rowling and Elon Musk for cyberstalking after they questioned her gender identity.
Ellis Lundholm, a mogul skier from Sweden, this year became the first openly trans athlete to compete in any Winter Olympics when he participated in Milan Cortina Winter Olympics in Italy.
President Donald Trump in February 2025 issued an executive order that bans trans women and girls from female sports teams in the U.S.
The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee last July banned trans women from competing in female sporting events. Republican lawmakers have demanded the IOC ban trans athletes from women’s athletic competitions.
“I’m grateful the Olympics finally embraced the common sense policy that women’s sports are for women, not for men,” said U.S. Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) on X.
An IOC spokesperson on Thursday referred the Washington Blade to the press release that announced the new policy.
More than a dozen LGBTQ athletes won medals at the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics that ended on Sunday.
Cayla Barnes, Hilary Knight, and Alex Carpenter are LGBTQ members of the U.S. women’s hockey team that won a gold medal after they defeated Canada in overtime. Knight the day before the Feb. 19 match proposed to her girlfriend, Brittany Bowe, an Olympic speed skater.
French ice dancer Guillaume Cizeron, who is gay, and his partner Laurence Fournier Beaudry won gold. American alpine skier Breezy Johnson, who is bisexual, won gold in the women’s downhill. Amber Glenn, who identifies as bisexual and pansexual, was part of the American figure skating team that won gold in the team event.
Swiss freestyle skier Mathilde Gremaud, who is in a relationship with Vali Höll, an Austrian mountain biker, won gold in women’s freeski slopestyle.
Bruce Mouat, who is the captain of the British curling team that won a silver medal, is gay. Six members of the Canadian women’s hockey team — Emily Clark, Erin Ambrose, Emerance Maschmeyer, Brianne Jenner, Laura Stacey, and Marie-Philip Poulin — that won silver are LGBTQ.
Swedish freestyle skier Sandra Naeslund, who is a lesbian, won a bronze medal in ski cross.
Belgian speed skater Tineke den Dulk, who is bisexual, was part of her country’s mixed 2000-meter relay that won bronze. Canadian ice dancer Paul Poirier, who is gay, and his partner, Piper Gilles, won bronze.
Laura Zimmermann, who is queer, is a member of the Swiss women’s hockey team that won bronze when they defeated Sweden.
Outsports.com notes all of the LGBTQ Olympians who competed at the games and who medaled.
Sports
US wins Olympic gold medal in women’s hockey
Team captain Hilary Knight proposed to girlfriend on Wednesday
The U.S. women’s hockey team on Thursday won a gold medal at the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics.
Team USA defeated Canada 2-1 in overtime. The game took place a day after Team USA captain Hilary Knight proposed to her girlfriend, Brittany Bowe, an Olympic speed skater.
Cayla Barnes and Alex Carpenter — Knight’s teammates — are also LGBTQ. They are among the more than 40 openly LGBTQ athletes who are competing in the games.
The Olympics will end on Sunday.
