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1362 lines
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Plaintext
1362 lines
71 KiB
Plaintext
SOURCE: /mnt/d/GoogleDrive/Cercetasi/carti-camp-jocuri/I Thought Scout Uniforms Were Fireproof! Putting Fun in Scouting - Shane Barker.pdf
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CONVERTED: 2025-01-11
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==================================================
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--- PAGE 3 ---
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Check out these other popular books for
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youth by Shane Barker!
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Youth Leading Youth
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Magnifying Your Aaronic Priesthood Calling
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Even the Prophet Started out as a Deacon
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Stepping Up, Taking Charge, and Leading the Way
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--- PAGE 5 ---
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© 2011 Shane Barker
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All rights reserved.
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No part of this book may be reproduced in any form whatsoever,
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whether by graphic, visual, electronic, film, microfilm, tape recording,
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or any other means, without prior written permission of the publisher,
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except in the case of brief passages embodied in critical reviews and
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articles.
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ISBN 13: 978-1-59955-524-9
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Published by Bonneville Books, an imprint of Cedar Fort, Inc., 2373
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W. 700 S.,
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Springville, UT 84663
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Distributed by Cedar Fort, Inc., www.cedarfort.com
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LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
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Barker, Shane R. author.
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I thought Scout uniforms were fireproof! : putting the fun in
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scouting Shane Barker.
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pages cm
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ISBN 978-1-59955-524-9
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1. Boy Scouts--Recreation. 2. Youth--Recreation. I. Title.
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HS3312.B348 2011
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369.430973--dc22
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2010050864
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Cover design by Danie Romrell
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Illustrated by Dave Bowman
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--- PAGE 6 ---
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Cover design © 2011 by Lyle Mortimer
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Edited and typeset by Megan E. Welton
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Printed in the United States of America
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10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
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Printed on acid-free paper
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--- PAGE 7 ---
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To Weston
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--- PAGE 8 ---
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CONTENTS
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INTRODUCTION: I THOUGHT SCOUT UNIFORMS WERE FIREPROOF!
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Putting the Fun in SCOUTING
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1. PANCAKES, GUMBO, AND DUTCH-OVEN PIZZA Putting the Fun in
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COOKING
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2. WHO FORGOT THEIR NECKERCHIEF? Putting the Fun in UNIFORMS
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3. THE PILOT LIGHT'S OUT ON THE NUCLEAR REACTOR! Putting the Fun in
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MEETINGS
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4. HOW TO PACK A BACKPACK: Putting the Fun into MERIT BADGES
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5. CAN ANYONE TIE A TIMBER HITCH? Putting the Fun in SCOUTCRAFT
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6. MOOSECAPADES AND PESKY MOSQUITOES: Putting the Fun in
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PATROLS
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7. CHASING THE ELUSIVE SASQUATCH: Putting the Fun in NOT
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ACTIVITIES
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8. EAGLE FEATHERS AND THE MACARONI MONSTER: Putting the Fun in
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SERVICE
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9. SNOWSHOES, SNOW CAVES, AND CARDBOARD CAMPOUTS: Putting the Fun
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in WINTER
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CONCLUSION: BOY SCOUTS TO THE RESCUE! Coming in from the Fog
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
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--- PAGE 9 ---
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K
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yle Rogers was puffing for breath as he charged through the
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brush toward a knotted Ponderosa Pine. He looked back over his
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shoulder as Michael Swenson and Jeff Anderson raced through the
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forest behind him.
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“Hurry!” he shouted. “We've almost got it!”
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Flicking on his flashlight, he began flashing the beam around in all
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directions.
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As soon as they arrived, Michael and Jeff did the same.
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“See ’em?”
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Kyle shook his head. “Not yet. There's too many trees … no, wait!
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Over there!”
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Off in the trees, about forty yards away, a pair of eyes reflected
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eerily in the beams of their flashlights. With whoops of excitement,
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the boys dashed toward them.
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A little out of breath myself (keeping up with twelve-and thirteen-
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year-old boys on a mission isn't a leisurely endeavor!) I followed
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them through the trees. This was our third night at Thunder Ridge
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Scout Camp, and the boys were racing through a course called the
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Wolf-eye Trail. Strips of reflective tape cut into the shapes of eyes
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had been placed throughout the forest, and the boys were being
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||
timed on how fast they could find them all. Spotting a pair of “eyes,”
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the boys would race toward them, flash their lights around until they
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spotted the next pair, then dash off again. Some of the eyes had
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been placed high in the trees, some low to the ground, and one pair
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had even been placed inside a hole in a rotting log.
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--- PAGE 10 ---
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It was an exciting, challenging event, and the only problem was
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that there was also an eerie quality in the air that night. The
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sensation of being watched—or followed—persisted as we raced
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along. It made the hair prickle on the back of my neck, and I had the
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disturbing sensation that something was stalking us. It didn't help
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that Kyle—the troop storyteller—had regaled us the night before with
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harrowing stories of Bigfoot, the legendary creature with whom he
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seemed to have a personal acquaintance.
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Kyle, Michael, and Jeff were each aware of the eerie atmosphere
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too, and despite their excitement, I occasionally caught them casting
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nervous glances over their shoulders as they raced through the
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forest.
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As we approached the halfway point, Michael spotted a pair of
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especially creepy-looking eyes. The boys were charging toward
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them when the eyes abruptly blinked … and then blinked again …
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and then disappeared as whatever they were attached to skulked
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away through the trees.
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The next instant, the three Scouts raced down the mountain like
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Olympic sprinters going for the gold—arms and legs spinning like
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windmills gone mad—leaving me completely alone in the forest and
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without a flashlight. Kyle later told everyone that he was going ninety
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miles an hour as he blazed down the mountain, but he was
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exaggerating. I know because I passed him, and I was only going
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eighty-five.
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I remember another time when our troop was camping along the
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shore of a small mountain lake. We had an adrenaline-charged boy
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in the troop named Coleman, who was a nonstop flurry of moving
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arms and legs. He had more energy than any boy I've ever known,
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as well as a warm, happy smile that never seemed to leave his face.
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Coleman was a human firecracker, and his zany, happy-go-lucky
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personality made every meeting, hike, and campout more exciting
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just because he was along. He had the ability to make people feel
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good just by being in the same room with them.
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--- PAGE 11 ---
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Coleman was also the troop's best fire builder. Even on wet, rainy
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days—even when the firewood was soaked to the core—he could
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coax a crackling, snapping fire into life faster than a gifted arsonist
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with a blowtorch. And he was never without a pocketful of wooden,
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strike-anywhere matches.
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At any rate, the boys were on their way to fish one afternoon, and
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Coleman was momentarily left behind. Gear flew through the air as
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he searched his tent for a pair of sunglasses, then he tore off after
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his friends.
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“Hey!” he called. “Wait for me!”
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With the frantic desperation of a boy fleeing Bigfoot, Coleman
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raced down the hill, abruptly tripping over the root of a tree. As he
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tumbled head-over-heels, a match head apparently ground against
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the lining of his pocket and flared to life. The burning match ignited
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another, and then the whole pocketful went up in a small fireball.
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Coleman leaped to his feet and began howling like a wildman,
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jumping and dancing and flapping his arms like a baby bird that's
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taken a premature step from the nest.
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It took several seconds for Coleman to get the fire out, and then
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he stopped and gaped at the scorched hole in his Scout shorts. He
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gawked incredulously for a moment, then looked up with an
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expression of disbelief.
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“Hey!” he said. “I thought Scout uniforms were supposed to be
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fireproof!”
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I've always loved those stories. Kyle, Michael, Jeff, and Coleman
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are four of the finest young men I've ever known, and remembering
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their adventures reminds me why I enjoy Scouting so much.
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More than that, it reminds me that Scouting is fun! It's exciting!
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And any leader called to serve as a Scoutmaster, den mother, or
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team committee chairman truly has one of the best jobs in the world.
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Now you're probably reading this book because you're a
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Scoutmaster. Or perhaps you're a Varsity team coach, an Explorer
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post advisor, or a den mother. If that's the case, then you have one
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of the most exciting leadership positions in the Church. You have the
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chance to work and spend time with some of the Lord's finest young
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people. You have the opportunity to work with young men at the age
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--- PAGE 12 ---
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when they're most impressionable … and you can have a great time
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while you're doing it.
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And make no mistake—you are in a position to make a
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tremendous difference in their lives.
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One of my favorite Old Testament stories is the tale of David and
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Goliath. As I'm sure you remember, Goliath was a giant who stood
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more than eight feet tall. Carrying enormous weapons and girded
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about with armor, he must have looked terrifying to young David—
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absolutely terrifying!
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Nevertheless, David went out to fight the giant alone and without
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armor or protection, taking nothing with him but a simple slingshot
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and a few small stones.
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You already know what happened: David faced the giant—and
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slew him.
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The scriptures don't tell us where David learned to use his
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slingshot. But today that's exactly the sort of thing a boy might learn
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in Scouting. As a Scout leader, you're teaching boys to use tools
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they need to face the Goliaths in their lives. And I just can't think of a
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more important job anywhere.
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The only problem is that your program has to compete with sports,
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school, and—if you are an Explorer advisor— jobs and girls. It isn't
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always easy. But if you can create a program full of fun and
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adventure, if you can give the boys thrills and excitement to
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complement the time they spend in school, the battle's over.
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And that's what this book is about. It's about taking the meetings,
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merit badges, and skills that make up the Scouting program and
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pumping them full of fun. It's about making them exciting and
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compelling, giving you the chance to teach your boys to use their
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slingshots.
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Are you ready?
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Great! Then I have a few ideas to help you out. The list is by no
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means comprehensive, but it should give you enough ideas and
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insight to put you on a collision course with exciting Scouting
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adventures.
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So let's get going!
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I know you're going to have as much fun as I've had!
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--- PAGE 14 ---
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T
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hirteen-year-old David Hardman placed his hand over the grill to
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check the heat, then checked his stopwatch.
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“Are you ready?”
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Tyler Jellen took a moment to make certain he had everything
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positioned just where he wanted it, then nodded. “Ready.”
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“Okay, then. On your mark … get set … go! ”
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Tyler quickly poured circles of batter onto the grill as the troop
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cheered him on. He poured until the entire grill was covered, waited
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a brief moment, then grabbed a spatula and began flipping the
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golden pancakes.
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David looked up from his stopwatch.
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“A minute thirty, Tyler! Keep going! You're doing great!”
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Tyler tapped his foot impatiently as he waited for the pancakes to
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brown—he knew he'd lose points if they were too doughy—then he
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scooped the fluffy cakes off the grill and onto a waiting platter. The
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next instant, he was pouring more batter onto the grill.
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“All right, Tyler!” someone shouted. “You're doing great! Keep
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going!”
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With the intensity of a surgeon, Tyler again began flipping
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pancakes, letting them fry just long enough to turn a golden brown
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before scooping them from the grill. He was going so fast that once
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--- PAGE 15 ---
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—in his excitement—he missed the platter and sent a pancake flying
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into the dirt. He shook his head in frustration, prompting a chorus of
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support from his audience.
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“Don't worry about it, Tyler!”
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“You're doing great, Ty! Keep going!”
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“Come on, Tyler, you've almost got it!”
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Tyler flipped the last of the pancakes onto the platter and was
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working on his third batch when David looked up from his watch.
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“Ten more seconds, Tyler!” he shouted. “Five … four … three …
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two … one … STOP!”
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Tyler wiped his hands on his apron—which was patterned in
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camouflage with the words “Grill Sergeant” printed across the front—
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and looked around.
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“Who counted?” he asked. “How many did I get?”
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“Twenty-six,” someone answered. “You missed the record by four.”
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Tyler rolled his eyes. “That's all? Twenty-six? Man, I was sure I
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had it this time!”
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I grinned as I watched. And so did everyone else. On the troop's
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last campout, a Scout named Kevin set the troop record by cooking
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up thirty pancakes in ten minutes, and Tyler had vowed to beat him.
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He didn't quite make it, but his energetic attempt made almost
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enough pancakes to feed the entire troop, and he'd turned a
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normally dull chore into an adventure for the whole troop.
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Most Scouts don't list cooking among the activities they most look
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forward to when they go camping. After all, most boys go into the
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mountains to hike and swim and fish. And the more time they spend
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in their backcountry kitchens— building fires, preparing meals, or
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washing pots and pans— the less time they have for more
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adventurous activities.
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But cooking is a skill that Scouts can use every day of their lives.
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It's a skill that will serve them throughout their teenage years, on
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their missions, away at college, and all of their adult lives too. So a
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Scoutmaster who can bring out the adventure of cooking while
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developing the boys' skills will truly be doing his troop a service.
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Besides, cooking can be fun! And when spiced with a little
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mountain air and a touch of wood smoke flavoring, even the most
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--- PAGE 16 ---
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ordinary meals can turn a backcountry outing into a rousing
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adventure.
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When I was in college, I served as an assistant to a Scoutmaster
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named Roy Harris, who truly knew how to make Boy Scout cooking
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fun. On one campout he asked each Scout to bring one can of food
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—any kind of food at all—to contribute to the troop dinner. Upon
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arrival at the campsite, Roy collected these cans and divided them
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into two categories: fruit … and everything else. He assigned me to
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take the fruit and make two peach-pear-pineapple cobblers.
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Harris then asked his senior patrol leader to divide the remaining
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cans—chilies, stews, refried beans, corns, string beans, and other
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various items—equally between the troop's two patrols. He then took
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a large pot and announced, “You have been stranded in the
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mountains without knives, can openers, or tools of any kind. But you
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need to eat, so you need to get these cans opened. The first patrol
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to open its cans and get the contents into this pot will not have to
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wash any of the dinner dishes tonight. Everyone understand? Okay,
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then … ready … go! ”
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The Scouts stood uncertainly for a moment, then jumped as a boy
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named Jeff took a rock and smashed his can with enough force that
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green beans exploded through the air like shrapnel from a hand
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grenade.
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Scoutmaster Harris calmly pulled a bean from his hair and shook
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his head. “It goes without saying,” he said, “that the cans will be
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disqualified unless their contents are still edible.”
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With that, the rival patrols separated and began work on their
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cans. One boy opened his by hammering his belt buckle through the
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top. Another gave his can a hard wallop along the edge with a hard
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rock, splitting it neatly open.
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I never did see how the boys in the other patrol opened their cans
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—and they refused to tell, saying their secret would come in handy
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the next time we tried the activity— but they managed to win the
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contest by several minutes.
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--- PAGE 17 ---
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When the competition was over, the cans were all dumped into a
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single pot and stirred together over a snapping fire. The resulting
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conglomeration was ghastly to look at (I won't even attempt to
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describe it!), but it tasted great! More than that, the activity took the
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work out of making dinner and turned it into a game.
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Harris had other ideas for making cooking adventurous. He usually
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had each patrol plan and cook its own meals on campouts, but
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before anyone sat down to eat, he and his senior patrol leader
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judged each patrol's meal. They awarded points for originality,
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quality, and tastiness, and they ate with the patrol who prepared the
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best food.
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Harris explained that the Scouts considered it an honor to have
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the Scoutmaster to dinner, but that wasn't the only reason the
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competition was successful.
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“My senior patrol leader and I always made dessert for the winning
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patrol,” he said. “And the losing patrol was expected to clean up after
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the entire troop.”
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Harris said that the anticipation of cobbler alone was incentive
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enough to spur the most unmotivated Scouts into action. Campout
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meals immediately improved from hot dogs and tinfoil dinners to
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stroganoff and chicken gumbo. After a little experience, most of the
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Scouts learned that extravagant, almost exotic meals often required
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no more work than tinfoil dinners.
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On one campout, a Scout named Darren spent only a few minutes
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with his father in a local supermarket, then surprised the whole troop
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by transforming a few packages of dry ingredients into beef teriyaki
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with noodles.
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“No need to tell you which patrol I ate with that night,” Harris said.
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Contests have improved the cooking in other troops too. After
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several nights of Dutch-oven training, one Scoutmaster planned a
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cooking demonstration in the church parking lot. The Scouts divided
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themselves into pairs and drew slips of paper for their cooking
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assignments. Some drew main courses. Others drew vegetables.
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And some drew desserts.
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To make things even more interesting, the troop not only invited
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the Scouts' parents and bishopric to sample the results but invited
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--- PAGE 18 ---
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the ward Beehive class too.
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On the night of the exhibition, guests wandered around and
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||
watched the various groups in action. Then, when everything had
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been cooked, the meal was placed on picnic tables, and everyone
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was invited to dig in. The bishopric was given the chore of naming
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the best dish.
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||
Another Scoutmaster encouraged culinary creativity with themed
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meals. On one campout, he asked his Scouts to cook something
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western. The next time it was Italian. Then Mexican. On Hawaiian
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||
night, his chief chef—a Life Scout named Travis—organized a fun
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||
but simple Hawaiian dinner by wrapping chicken breasts in foil with
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pre-cooked rice and pineapple. He placed these in the glowing coals
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of the troop campfire for forty-five minutes, and while the chicken
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||
cooked, Travis had the Scouts wrap ears of corn in foil with dabs of
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butter. They cooked these for fifteen minutes. The meal was topped
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||
off by instant Hawaiian punch and pineapple pudding.
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The meal was no harder to make than tinfoil dinners, but it tasted
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much better. It was more creative. And it was a lot more fun.
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Now, it would be silly to believe that you could implement any of
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||
these ideas into your own troop program without a little instruction to
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||
the boys. After all, it's a good bet that many of your Scouts have
|
||
trouble making peanut-butter sandwiches without a little help.
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||
But if you need to teach basic cooking skills, don't lecture! Instead,
|
||
take the Scouts into the parking lot—or into the foothills—and let
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||
them cook! Let them learn firsthand how it's done! Let them
|
||
experience the fun! Let them discover for themselves the thrill that
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backcountry cooking can be.
|
||
One Scoutmaster took his troop to a local park to demonstrate the
|
||
differences between freeze-dried and dehydrated foods. Using
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||
borrowed propane stoves to cook over, the boys heated up one
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||
freeze-dried and one dehydrated meal. The freeze-dried meal was
|
||
ready to eat five minutes after the water boiled, while the dehydrated
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||
dinner required nearly twenty-five minutes of simmering.
|
||
After both meals were ready, the Scoutmaster had a few
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||
questions.
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||
“Which meal cooked fastest?”
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||
Everyone answered together. “Freeze-dried!”
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 19 ---
|
||
“Right. So, on a backpacking trip where you're cooking over
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||
stoves and you have to carry all of your fuel, which meal would be
|
||
better? “
|
||
“Freeze-dried!”
|
||
“Right again. But freeze-dried food is a lot more expensive than
|
||
dehydrated food. So if you're cooking over a wood fire and don't
|
||
need to buy or carry your fuel, which meal do you suppose would be
|
||
better? “
|
||
“Dehydrated!”
|
||
The boys not only learned firsthand how to cook the stuff, but they
|
||
learned valuable information too.
|
||
Matt Dixon, a Scoutmaster I met at summer camp, sparked his
|
||
troop's imagination when he showed them all the things they could
|
||
do with a Boy Scout mess kit.
|
||
“Almost everyone has an official Boy Scout mess kit,” he told me.
|
||
“The boys get them on their birthdays, and they get them for
|
||
Christmas. But I've only known a handful of Scouts who really knew
|
||
how to use them.”
|
||
So, taking his troop to a nearby park, Dixon opened up a mess kit
|
||
and laid out all the parts. He had a quart-sized pot with a lid, a
|
||
combination measuring drinking cup, and two frying pans that
|
||
doubled as plates. The boys then spent the next hour or so
|
||
experimenting with all the different things they could do with them.
|
||
Cooking over a couple of backpacking stoves, they fried, baked,
|
||
boiled, simmered, mixed, and finally washed their dishes … all with
|
||
nothing more than the equipment contained in their mess kits.
|
||
“Now,” he said after he'd finished. “We're going to meet here again
|
||
next week. And I'll give prizes to the Scouts who cook the tastiest,
|
||
most creative dishes with nothing but their mess kits.”
|
||
The next week, most of the boys cooked up desserts of one kind
|
||
or another. But the winning chef was a Scout who used his cook pot
|
||
as a Dutch oven—placing charcoal briquettes above and below—
|
||
and cooked a pizza in it.
|
||
No chapter on Boy Scout cooking would ever be complete without
|
||
a few words about primitive or utensil-less cooking—especially if
|
||
you're like the hundreds of Scouters who hate a lot of messy
|
||
preparation and cleanup!
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 20 ---
|
||
Primitive cooking is a fantastic way to interject adventure into a
|
||
backcountry dinner. It's different enough that most Scouts enjoy it.
|
||
And the nice thing is that entire meals—including soups, drinks, main
|
||
courses, and desserts—can be made without using a single utensil.
|
||
During a Boy Leader Training Course (called “Tim-berline” in my
|
||
council), an assistant Scoutmaster named Jameson conducted one
|
||
of the most fascinating primitive cooking demonstrations I have ever
|
||
witnessed. He took the Scouts deep into the woods to a primitive
|
||
campsite he had constructed to resemble something out of The
|
||
Swiss Family Robinson. Near the trees, he had a chair made out of
|
||
rope. In the clearing, he had a sundial made out of short sticks. And
|
||
near his fireplace, he had a table and benches made out of logs.
|
||
After taking the Scouts on a quick tour of his campsite, Jameson
|
||
began cooking his primitive dinner. He slapped hamburger patties
|
||
onto flat rocks near the fire, tossed pork chops directly onto the bed
|
||
of glowing coals, boiled soup in a paper cup, cooked bacon in a
|
||
paper bag, fried an egg on a stick, and baked a cake in an orange
|
||
peel.
|
||
Later on, back in camp, the Scouts were given the same foods
|
||
Jameson had used in his demonstration but no utensils. But that
|
||
didn't matter. Jameson had taught his lesson well enough that the
|
||
hungry Scouts were all anxious to give it a try.
|
||
On a campout in the red rock country of Southern Utah, a
|
||
Scoutmaster named Nick Anderson made primitive cooking
|
||
adventurous by organizing a “caveman” dinner.
|
||
His Scouts all wrinkled their noses when they heard about it.
|
||
“What's a 'caveman' dinner?” someone asked.
|
||
“Just an ordinary meal,” Anderson said. “Except that you have to
|
||
make all of your own utensils.”
|
||
The Scouts were instantly enthusiastic. They quickly set about
|
||
carving their own forks, spoons, plates, and bowls. One Scout
|
||
whittled a fork large enough to pitch hay, and another carved an
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 21 ---
|
||
elegant piece that had a fork on one end and a spoon on the other.
|
||
The troop's favorite, though, was a bowl that looked wonderful but
|
||
leaked all over its owner's lap, delighting everyone.
|
||
During another Timberline course, Scoutmaster Rick Harward put
|
||
fun into breakfast one morning with a treasure hunt. He gave each
|
||
patrol a card with directions to “check beneath the camp flagpole,” or
|
||
“look behind your patrol leader's tent,” and so on. In each spot, he
|
||
had placed an ingredient or utensil necessary for cooking French
|
||
toast.
|
||
Within minutes, Scouts were dashing around the camp, collecting
|
||
materials. And the first patrol to actually finish their breakfast was
|
||
given bowls of strawberries for dessert.
|
||
I've always liked pancakes on campouts because there are so
|
||
many fun things you can do with them. One Scoutmaster—giving his
|
||
Scouts a couple of days' notice before the campout and assigning
|
||
them to cook in pairs—gave awards to the boys who cooked their
|
||
pancakes with the most original filling. One pair used fresh
|
||
strawberries. Another used bananas and a third pair used peaches.
|
||
One team even used peanut butter and ice cream.
|
||
The Scoutmaster ensured good cooking by awarding extra points
|
||
for taste, appearance, and quality.
|
||
The nice thing about activities like these is that they make cooking
|
||
fun and adventurous. Instead of being a chore that no one wants to
|
||
volunteer for, cooking suddenly becomes a game that everyone
|
||
wants to join in.
|
||
Moreover, games help to stir the boys' imaginations. They improve
|
||
the Scouts' skill and confidence around the kitchen.
|
||
Cooking is one of the most practical skills many boys ever learn in
|
||
Scouting. It's one of the few skills they can put into use every day.
|
||
And if you can teach your Scouts the simple skills they need to
|
||
prepare a good meal, you will have truly done them a valuable
|
||
service.
|
||
So make cooking a vital part of your troop program. Encourage
|
||
creativity and originality, and give the boys the opportunity to
|
||
experiment. Get ready to have fun … and probably gain a few
|
||
pounds along the way!
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 23 ---
|
||
N
|
||
athan Brooks, the thirteen-year-old senior patrol leader, grinned
|
||
mischievously. Standing in front of the troop, he held a clipboard,
|
||
preparing to conduct uniform inspection. His grin widened a fraction.
|
||
The interesting thing was that everyone else was grinning too. The
|
||
Scouts all knew that Nathan was about to inspect their uniforms, but
|
||
in this troop, uniform inspection was something everyone looked
|
||
forward to.
|
||
Nathan, meanwhile, was drawing out the suspense, hoping to
|
||
make things as dramatic as possible. He hummed and hawed over
|
||
trivial business until he knew the troop couldn't stand it anymore,
|
||
then finally cleared his throat.
|
||
“All right, you all look sharp tonight,” he said, looking everyone up
|
||
and down. “So let's get down to business.”
|
||
He reached into an envelope, drew out a slip of paper, and grinned
|
||
again.
|
||
“Tonight we're going to award patrol points”—he paused to
|
||
heighten the effect—”to everyone … wearing … Scout socks!”
|
||
The Scouts immediately began checking one another's legs.
|
||
Almost everyone was wearing Scout shorts that night, and most of
|
||
the boys were wearing official Scout socks. Two boys, though, were
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 24 ---
|
||
wearing white athletic socks, and one Scout wasn't wearing any
|
||
socks at all.
|
||
“I knew it was going to be socks!” the last Scout wailed. “I couldn't
|
||
find mine tonight!”
|
||
Nathan took a few minutes to count and record the results of his
|
||
inspection on his clipboard.
|
||
“Okay,” he said finally. “The Frogs have four guys with official
|
||
socks, and the Seals have three. The Frogs win the spirit stick for
|
||
the week.”
|
||
The Frogs cheered and took possession of an old broomstick
|
||
decorated to look like an Indian spear. They looked as excited as
|
||
boys who had just won the Little League World Series.
|
||
“Winning that old stick is a mark of honor in my troop,” said Roy
|
||
Harris, the troop Scoutmaster. “And it all revolves around Nathan's
|
||
inspections.”
|
||
Harris said that uniform inspection was one of the most popular
|
||
elements of his weekly troop meetings, and he explained how it
|
||
worked.
|
||
“Every night, Nathan selects one part of the Scout uniform and
|
||
gives points for every Scout who is wearing it correctly. The winning
|
||
patrol wins the spirit stick for the week, and as soon as a patrol wins
|
||
it a total of six times, they earn a movie night.”
|
||
Harris explained that what made Nathan's inspections so
|
||
successful was that no one ever knew exactly what part of the
|
||
uniform he was going to choose. One night it was neckerchiefs.
|
||
Another time it was patrol patches. Other times it's been belts,
|
||
epaulets, troop numerals, or hats. And—because this was a by-the-
|
||
book troop—he once even gave points to every Scout who had a
|
||
quarter for emergency phone calls in his pocket.
|
||
“One night he even checked for official buttons on everyone's
|
||
shirts,” Harris said.
|
||
Wearing a uniform was such fun in Harris's troop that Scouts not
|
||
only wore them to troop meetings but on hikes and campouts too.
|
||
More than that, neither Harris nor his assistants ever had to remind
|
||
anyone. They had developed such a keen, productive rivalry
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 25 ---
|
||
between the troop's patrols that the Scouts wouldn't have dreamed
|
||
of attending a troop activity without their uniforms.
|
||
Many boys don't like wearing Scout uniforms. They often feel self-
|
||
conscious about wearing them in public, and it's often difficult to get
|
||
them to wear uniforms to meetings, let alone on hikes and campouts.
|
||
And many boys lack the money or motivation to buy uniforms.
|
||
But uniforming is one of the eight methods used by the Boy
|
||
Scouts of America to promote character, citizenship, and personal
|
||
fitness. That's because uniforms not only instill a sense of pride and
|
||
belonging within the boys who wear them, but they help to build
|
||
troop spirit too. They help you to achieve your goals as Scoutmaster.
|
||
Uniforms can also do wonderful things for the pride of the troop
|
||
and the self-esteem of the boys. That's because when they are all
|
||
clad in identical uniforms, they look sharp. And that sets them apart
|
||
from other units. It makes them feel good.
|
||
At summer camp one year, I worked with a troop that showed up
|
||
to flag ceremony each morning in flawless uniforms. Not only that,
|
||
but the boys stood in sharp, straight lines, complete with troop and
|
||
patrol flags. And even those boys who had to be goaded into
|
||
wearing their uniforms loved the attention they received. The camp
|
||
staff oohed and aahed over them. And other troops watched them
|
||
enviously through the corners of their eyes.
|
||
“We looked so good!” one of the boys told me. “I felt sorry for
|
||
those troops that didn't have uniforms.”
|
||
There's no question that uniforms can spark magic and excitement
|
||
in your troop program. They can be the catalyst that transforms an
|
||
ordinary, run-of-the-mill troop into a compelling, spirited unit.
|
||
The biggest problem is just getting started.
|
||
One troop solved the problem with a bead program. Each Scout
|
||
was given a leather cord that he wore looped around his collar.
|
||
Then, he was given beads as recognition for participating in hikes,
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 26 ---
|
||
campouts, and other activities. Different colors of beads represented
|
||
different activities.
|
||
“The Scouts were constantly trying to earn more beads,”
|
||
Scoutmaster Robert Walker explained. “Especially the younger ones.
|
||
They saw the older boys with twenty or thirty beads and were
|
||
anxious to catch up. So when we had trouble getting the boys out in
|
||
uniform, we added that to our program.”
|
||
Walker explained that after wearing a complete uniform to four
|
||
consecutive meetings, the boys were given a red bead. In addition, a
|
||
bronze bead was awarded for wearing the uniform on a hike or
|
||
campout.
|
||
Scoutmaster Alex Marshall put excitement into uniforming with the
|
||
help of Marty, his senior patrol leader, who came to each troop
|
||
meeting with one part of his uniform on incorrectly. He sometimes
|
||
wore an ordinary belt, for instance, or white socks. Some nights he
|
||
placed patches on the wrong pockets or wore his neckerchief inside
|
||
out. He gave a candy bar to the first Scout to identify what was
|
||
wrong.
|
||
Another Scoutmaster had a similar idea. To help his Scouts better
|
||
understand proper uniforming, he occasionally dressed up one of the
|
||
Scouts as improperly as possible. He sewed patches on the wrong
|
||
sleeves, tucked pant legs inside socks, unbuttoned buttons, and so
|
||
on. And he often included many subtle mistakes such as skipping
|
||
loops with the belt.
|
||
Then, during troop meeting, he had “Tommy Tenderfoot” give a
|
||
short speech in front of the troop and then leave the room. Each
|
||
patrol then tried to identify from memory as many uniform mistakes
|
||
as possible. This not only created a fun competition, but it also
|
||
generated several interesting discussions.
|
||
“Sometimes the boys disagreed over some point, such as whether
|
||
a certain patch or badge was being worn correctly,” the leader told
|
||
me. “So we'd talk about it for a few minutes and then look it up in the
|
||
Scout Handbook.”
|
||
Many troops put fun into their uniforms by personalizing them.
|
||
Some, for instance, make their own neckerchiefs. This gives the
|
||
boys a sense of ownership, makes the neckerchiefs more fun to
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 27 ---
|
||
wear, and sets the troop apart at camporees and other events where
|
||
other troops are present.
|
||
Having custom-made patrol patches is a similar idea. When I was
|
||
an assistant Scoutmaster, we had a group of Scouts who called
|
||
themselves the Frog Patrol. The only problem was that they didn't
|
||
like the frog patrol patch offered by the BSA. So with the help of their
|
||
mothers, they bought blank patches and sewed their own frogs on.
|
||
The patches were so striking that people noticed them everywhere
|
||
they went. And the boys loved it. People were constantly asking
|
||
where they'd gotten their patches. That attention alone was enough
|
||
motivation that the boys were certain to wear their uniforms
|
||
everywhere they went.
|
||
Many troops identify themselves with distinctive “Class B”
|
||
uniforms, which generally consist of custom-made T-shirts worn over
|
||
official Scout shorts or pants. Modern silk-screening techniques
|
||
allow troops to inexpensively design and create their own T-shirts,
|
||
which the boys are likely to wear even when they're not involved in
|
||
Scout activities.
|
||
(While you're being creative, remember to stay within official
|
||
guidelines. One time a group of volunteers inappropriately voted to
|
||
make Scout shirts and blue jeans the official uniform of their entire
|
||
district.)
|
||
One troop managed to get all the boys in uniform but then had
|
||
trouble getting them excited about wearing neckerchiefs. So once a
|
||
month, as part of their opening ceremony, they began giving awards
|
||
for the most original neckerchief slides. (It's funny, but many Scouts
|
||
who don't like neckerchiefs do like the slides!)
|
||
At any rate, neckerchiefs ceased being a problem. Scouts soon
|
||
wore them every week. Not only that, but they also wore them with
|
||
the most outlandish slides ever created. Some boys wore slides they
|
||
made with plaster or carved out of wood. (One Scout carved an
|
||
intricate pair of hiking boots, then cut a notch into them every time he
|
||
went on a hike.) It made the whole experience more fun.
|
||
Once uniforms become a tradition in your troop, the hard part is
|
||
over. New Scouts coming into the troop will want to look like their
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 28 ---
|
||
older friends. But establishing that tradition continues to be one of
|
||
the toughest things in any troop.
|
||
One Scoutmaster, on his first night with a new troop, showed up to
|
||
Scout meeting dressed in full uniform. He had enough patches,
|
||
beads, and badges that he looked like an admiral with seventy years'
|
||
experience.
|
||
His Scouts—most of them dressed in T-shirts and blue jeans—
|
||
looked at him in awe. He noticed their wonder and said, “I will never
|
||
tell you that you have to wear your uniforms. But if you really want to
|
||
look sharp, if you really want to have fun in Scouting, you'll start
|
||
wearing them.”
|
||
And it worked. Little by little—and one by one—the boys began
|
||
showing up in uniform.
|
||
If you want the magic of uniforms sparking life into your troop, be
|
||
sure that you set the proper example. Make certain that you have a
|
||
full uniform with all of the correct insignia. Moreover, make sure that
|
||
your assistants are similarly prepared.
|
||
Next, work on your senior patrol leader. After all, he's the one the
|
||
boys should be following. Get him on board, and half the battle will
|
||
be over. Then go to work on your patrol leaders. With this core of
|
||
adult and boy leaders coming to meetings in uniform, it will be
|
||
difficult for the rest of the troop not to follow suit.
|
||
It also helps to start a “storehouse” of used uniform parts. When a
|
||
Scout grows out of a shirt or pair of pants— or when he leaves the
|
||
troop—ask him to donate his used uniform to the troop. These
|
||
“experienced” uniforms can then be given to Scouts who may not be
|
||
able to afford one. (Some troops even buy uniforms from graduating
|
||
Scouts, selling them to younger boys at reduced prices.)
|
||
By wearing their uniforms, your Scouts will feel a healthy sense of
|
||
belonging. And that's good for them. They'll feel pride that many of
|
||
them can't get anywhere else. They'll develop a better self-image. In
|
||
addition, they'll be constantly reminded of the principles they stand
|
||
for as Boy Scouts.
|
||
Uniforms themselves will not automatically turn your boys into
|
||
fantastic Scouts. But once you establish a tradition of uniforming in
|
||
your troop, you'll find the Scouts more eager to attend meetings.
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 29 ---
|
||
They'll feel more purpose and spirit as a team. They'll feel better
|
||
about themselves.
|
||
And all those things together add up to one thing: fun!
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 30 ---
|
||
C
|
||
ade Wilson speared a hotdog with a green willow branch. “So let
|
||
me get this straight,” he said, furrowing his brow like a
|
||
mathematician fretting over a knotty equation. “You get your
|
||
paycheck, but you don't get all of the money?”
|
||
“Not all of it, no,” Scoutmaster Will Wright said. “Your employer will
|
||
automatically deduct state and federal taxes—”
|
||
“No way! ”
|
||
“—not to mention Social Security, retirement, union dues, possibly
|
||
—”
|
||
“You're kidding!” a boy named Ben said, talking through a mouthful
|
||
of roasted hotdog. “How much does that all come to?”
|
||
“Well, it differs from person to person,” Wright said casually. “But in
|
||
my case, it usually comes to about thirty percent.”
|
||
“Thirty percent?! I don't believe it!”
|
||
“Believe it. For every hundred dollars I earn, I only get about—”
|
||
“Seventy?”
|
||
Wright nodded again. “About that.”
|
||
Cade shook his head. “But that's not fair! It's your money!”
|
||
“Well, yes … but without taxes, how do you think the government
|
||
could pay for highways? Or policemen? Or firemen?”
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 31 ---
|
||
The Scouts were all quiet as they pondered Wright's question.
|
||
They'd all heard about taxes in general terms before, but until now—
|
||
as they roasted hotdogs in the glow of a bright, snapping campfire—
|
||
taxes had never been anything more than a remote, obscure
|
||
concept that might or might not someday actually affect them.
|
||
The troop was working on the Citizenship in the World Merit
|
||
Badge. Scoutmaster Wright had wanted to lead a discussion on the
|
||
rights and duties of citizens and had begun a discussion on taxes,
|
||
knowing that it would generate a lively debate.
|
||
But wanting to avoid a classroom-like atmosphere, he also
|
||
decided to conduct the meeting in the local foothills, around a
|
||
campfire, as the boys roasted hotdogs.
|
||
And it worked. The wilderness setting diminished the school-like
|
||
atmosphere the meeting normally would have had. And by the time
|
||
they returned home, the boys felt that they'd had an adventure rather
|
||
than a lesson on citizenship.
|
||
The problem with Scout meetings is that they have to compete
|
||
with so many other activities. Little League, for instance, as well as
|
||
soccer, football, and lacrosse. And that's on top of all the school
|
||
plays, band concerts, parties, movies, family outings, and other
|
||
activities that young men are expected to take part in. So unless you
|
||
have an exciting, compelling program working for you, attending a
|
||
troop meeting is likely to be low on your Scouts' priority list.
|
||
Moreover, when troop meetings become mundane, routine, and
|
||
(shudder) predictable, many boys don't think twice about missing
|
||
them since they can tell you minute-by-minute what's likely to be
|
||
happening anyway.
|
||
The good news is that it's not hard to run an exciting troop
|
||
meeting. As a matter of fact, you can develop a program that's
|
||
consistently fun and exciting just by implementing three ingredients:
|
||
action, variety, and purpose.
|
||
How do you do that?
|
||
Let's take a look.
|
||
ACTION
|
||
If you want your Scouts coming out week after week, don't plan on
|
||
having them sit and listen to talks and lectures. They get enough of
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 32 ---
|
||
that at school. And the only reason many boys are in Scouts anyway
|
||
is that it's supposed to be fun.
|
||
This doesn't mean that you can't ever have a sit-in-a-circle, take-
|
||
notes-while-I-write-on-the-blackboard-kind-of lesson. After all, you've
|
||
got to plan the next campout sometime. But if that's all the boys
|
||
come to expect—if that's all they have to look forward to week after
|
||
week—they'll go back to playing baseball.
|
||
So sandwich your sit-down, please-be-quiet-and-pay-attention-
|
||
while-I-talk lessons between get-up-and-go-andmake-all-the-noise-
|
||
you-want activities.
|
||
One of the best, most versatile ideas I ever saw for putting action
|
||
into a troop meeting was a game called Get Out of That. I've seen a
|
||
couple of troops use it, and it's never failed to inject action and
|
||
excitement into a meeting while giving the boys the chance to learn
|
||
or practice good, old-fashioned Scouting skills at the same time.
|
||
The game is simple. Divide the troop into patrols, which rotate
|
||
through the parking lot (or through the Scout room, depending upon
|
||
the nature of your challenges) to different stations.
|
||
Each station then presents some challenge that the patrol has
|
||
fifteen minutes to solve.
|
||
One time, for example, a patrol leader named Scott placed a rope
|
||
in a corner of the church parking lot so that it made an eight-foot
|
||
circle. In the center he placed a candle. And to the side he had
|
||
several poles, various lengths of rope, and a handful of matches.
|
||
“This is a nuclear reactor, and the pilot light's gone out,” he said,
|
||
pointing to the candle when the first patrol approached. “You need to
|
||
light it as fast as you can without stepping inside the circle. And”—he
|
||
pointed to the ropes and poles—”this is all you have to do it with.
|
||
Now get out of that!”
|
||
After a quick discussion, the Scouts lashed sticks together until
|
||
they had a single pole long enough to extend a burning match to the
|
||
candle.
|
||
Scott jotted their time on a scorecard as the boys dashed off to the
|
||
next station.
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 33 ---
|
||
The nice thing about Get Out of That is that it's so versatile. You
|
||
can dream up challenges to cover first aid, knots, cooking, or any
|
||
skill you might want to review. It allows boys opportunities to think, to
|
||
be creative, and to come up with innovative solutions to problems.
|
||
And it helps the boys learn to work together, which develops
|
||
teamwork.
|
||
More to the point, the game is fun because it involves action. And
|
||
the more lively your troop meetings are, the more fun they'll be, and
|
||
the more success you'll have with them.
|
||
I once watched a troop practicing first aid. Small groups of Scouts
|
||
sat in different corners of the room, the boys taking turns playing the
|
||
part of the patient.
|
||
The Scoutmaster, meanwhile, stood in the center of the room,
|
||
reading the signs and symptoms of different medical emergencies
|
||
and watching as each group treated its “patient.”
|
||
The Scoutmaster and his assistants supervised the action, giving
|
||
each patrol points according to the quality of their work, then offering
|
||
feedback and suggestions before going on to the next situation.
|
||
What made the activity so compelling was that the boys were all
|
||
involved—either as patients or rescuers. And rather than lecture the
|
||
boys on first aid, the Scoutmaster found ways to make his lesson
|
||
come to life.
|
||
You can do the same thing.
|
||
VARIETY
|
||
If every football game ended the same way, you'd soon grow tired of
|
||
watching. You wouldn't need to watch because you'd already know
|
||
what was going to happen.
|
||
But athletic events are exciting because you never know what's
|
||
going to happen next. Everyone knows the team will try to move the
|
||
ball, but no one knows exactly how it's going to happen.
|
||
And that's the way your troop meetings should be. It's okay if the
|
||
Scouts know they're going to be working on the Nature Merit Badge
|
||
Wednesday night, but you should be unpredictable enough that they
|
||
don't know exactly how they're going to go about it.
|
||
A couple of years ago, I was invited to watch a troop that was
|
||
working on first aid and emergency preparedness. A couple of days
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 34 ---
|
||
before the meeting, each Scout received a note in the mail that
|
||
simply read, “Bloody Wednesday's coming … be sure you come to
|
||
Scout meeting!”
|
||
A day or two later, bits of cardboard cut into the shape of sabers
|
||
were delivered to each Scout. On these was an invitation: “Want to
|
||
see a real cut up? Come to Scout meeting Wednesday night!”
|
||
By the night of the meeting, everyone's anticipation level was so
|
||
high that Scouts wouldn't have dreamed of skipping out. And they
|
||
weren't disappointed. The Scoutmaster had planned exciting
|
||
activities that involved both first aid and preparedness skills. And to
|
||
cap things off—and to meet a merit badge requirement—the boys
|
||
finished the meeting by taking turns lowering one another off the roof
|
||
of the church.
|
||
But that's not all. Inside the Scout room were signs and posters
|
||
designed to spark interest in the next week's meeting. One said, “If
|
||
you think things were hot tonight, you won't believe what's going to
|
||
happen next week!” Another read: “What do broken bones and Jell-
|
||
O have in common? Be here next week to find out!”
|
||
The posters not only generated interest, but they raised the boys'
|
||
anticipation level. They aroused everyone's curiosity, and that alone
|
||
was enough to have the boys counting the minutes to the next
|
||
meeting.
|
||
While we're talking about variety, remember that you don't have to
|
||
meet the same night and in the same place week after week. Sure,
|
||
it's easier to remember if you do, but if you have a good phone-
|
||
calling system, you can get the word out if you ever need to make a
|
||
change.
|
||
So meet outside once in a while! Even if you're simply planning a
|
||
campout or learning about citizenship, try holding your meeting in a
|
||
park, up the canyon, or in someone's backyard. (One troop I used to
|
||
work with met outside all summer long, so when we needed a
|
||
change of pace we went inside!)
|
||
Another troop I was part of only met as a troop on the first and
|
||
third Wednesdays of the month. On the second and fourth
|
||
Wednesdays, the Scouts met as patrols under the supervision of
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 35 ---
|
||
assistant Scoutmasters. And whenever the month had a fifth
|
||
Wednesday, the troop met for games or movie parties.
|
||
This simple formula was successful for a couple of reasons. First,
|
||
alternating troop and patrol nights created a healthy diversity. The
|
||
troop was able to accomplish its objectives while the boys—who
|
||
organized and conducted their individual patrol meetings—were able
|
||
to keep their own projects and programs rolling along as well.
|
||
And the movie parties, which occurred two or three times a year,
|
||
provided a healthy change of pace, as well as something more to
|
||
look forward to.
|
||
There are other things you should consider too. The
|
||
Scoutmaster's Handbook, for instance, suggests that you have an
|
||
activity—as opposed to a meeting—once a week. This means that if
|
||
you have a campout or hike one weekend, you shouldn't feel
|
||
obligated to have a regular troop meeting too. (Giving the Scouts a
|
||
night off once in a while creates variety too!)
|
||
Finally, if you find a good, fun activity that the boys enjoy, be
|
||
careful not to wear it out. Even the most exciting games can become
|
||
old after awhile, so don't overuse your best ones. Find new and
|
||
different ways to keep things lively.
|
||
PURPOSE
|
||
Unless your meetings have specific goals and objectives, your
|
||
Scouts really have no reason to attend. And even twelve- and
|
||
thirteen-year-olds are perceptive enough to know when their time is
|
||
being wasted. So by the time they leave troop meeting, every Scout
|
||
should believe that he's become more skilled, more knowledgeable,
|
||
or more prepared in some aspect of his life.
|
||
When you begin planning any meeting, the first thing you should
|
||
do is decide exactly what you want to accomplish. This objective
|
||
should be real and concrete. You might decide, for instance, that
|
||
every Scout will pass off requirements five and six of a particular
|
||
merit badge, or that they will tie the bowline and the timber hitch.
|
||
Then, once you know exactly what you need to accomplish, you can
|
||
begin designing activities to get you there.
|
||
If your Scouts truly believe that your meetings are helpful, they'll
|
||
not only be more willing to come, they'll actually be eager for more.
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 36 ---
|
||
They'll realize that Scout meetings are not just another draw on their
|
||
time. So let them see and chart their own progress.
|
||
When my troop signed up for rifle shooting at Thunder Ridge
|
||
Scout Camp, the instructor put the boys on the rifle range the first
|
||
day of class and had them shoot a couple of targets. He kept these,
|
||
and then on the last day of class, he had everyone shoot again.
|
||
Then he took both targets, stapled them together, and handed them
|
||
back to the Scouts.
|
||
The results were amazing. Targets from the first day displayed
|
||
random groups and scattered shots. Targets from the last day had
|
||
tight, accurate groups and good scores. Whether they actually
|
||
earned that difficult merit badge or not, every boy had concrete
|
||
evidence that he had improved his marksmanship.
|
||
Another Scoutmaster—before his troop began working on
|
||
personal fitness—had each Scout record his best number of push-
|
||
ups, sit-ups, and so on. Then, after each Scout had completed the
|
||
training and conditioning required by the merit badge, they checked
|
||
again. Without exception, every Scout had increased his strength,
|
||
speed, and agility. Each boy had tangible proof that he had improved
|
||
himself. And even boys who were already accomplished athletes
|
||
were convinced that troop meetings had helped them to become
|
||
even stronger and faster.
|
||
Don't ever waste your boys' time. Make sure that every time they
|
||
meet with you they go home better and richer for the experience.
|
||
And give them chances to measure their progress. If they believe
|
||
that they're succeeding, they'll not only develop a better self image,
|
||
but they'll also be coming back for more.
|
||
Troop meetings are where you'll spend most of your time with your
|
||
Scouts. So make them fun and interesting. Find ways to fill your
|
||
meetings with action and excitement. Fill them with enough variety to
|
||
keep them fresh and lively. And make certain that every meeting
|
||
fulfills some purpose and sends the boys away better for having
|
||
been there.
|
||
Your Scouts will not only have more fun, but you'll be surprised at
|
||
how much fun you'll be having too.
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 38 ---
|
||
T
|
||
odd Rainer pulled a face as he read the card.
|
||
“Go directly to jail,” he read. “Do not pass Go. Do not collect $200.”
|
||
The thirteen-year-old Scout mumbled something regrettable
|
||
beneath his breath, then took the small racecar that marked his spot
|
||
on the game board and placed it in jail.
|
||
“This is my second time!” he complained. “I'm like a jail magnet …
|
||
I never get a break!”
|
||
Marty Gates laughed as he rolled the dice. “Five,” he said,
|
||
counting out spaces on the game board with his thimble. “Reading
|
||
Railroad… . Yes! I'll buy it!”
|
||
He quickly shelled out the money to the Scout who was acting as
|
||
game banker.
|
||
In other corners of the Scout room, other boys were also playing
|
||
the popular board game. Cheers and jeers alternated with moans
|
||
and groans as the games progressed.
|
||
After about twenty minutes of play, Scoutmaster Steve Marshall
|
||
walked to the middle of the room and cleared his throat.
|
||
“I need everyone to listen for a minute,” he said. “We're going to
|
||
change a few rules before we continue. First of all, how many of you
|
||
own railroads or utilities?”
|
||
He looked around as four or five Scouts raised their hands. He
|
||
nodded.
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 39 ---
|
||
“Okay,” he said. “You boys need to sell those properties back to
|
||
the bank. The bankers will give you $200 apiece for them. And from
|
||
now on, the bank owns all railroads and utilities … no one can buy
|
||
them, and rent to the bank is whatever you're normally required to
|
||
pay.”
|
||
He held up a restraining hand as shouts of protest filled the room.
|
||
“I'm sorry,” he said, though he really didn't sound sorry at all. “But
|
||
those are the rules. And”—he looked directly at a Scout who was
|
||
particularly vocal—”I don't want to hear any more whining about it.”
|
||
He waited until the moaning had died to a few murmurs before
|
||
continuing.
|
||
“And here's another rule,” he said. “No matter what it says on the
|
||
card, rent on all personal properties is $200. And whenever you
|
||
collect rent from another player, you must give half of it to the bank.”
|
||
He paused as another chorus of protests filled the room. One
|
||
Scout had even leaped to his feet.
|
||
“Does that include Boardwalk and Park Place?” he asked. “I've got
|
||
hotels on them!”
|
||
Marshall nodded. “It includes everything. Now, I'll give you another
|
||
fifteen or twenty minutes to play.”
|
||
The boys returned to their games, but with considerably less
|
||
enthusiasm than before. They played mechanically until Marshall
|
||
finally directed them to stop. Then, after the games had been put
|
||
away, the Scoutmaster began a discussion.
|
||
“How many of you enjoyed my new rules tonight?” he asked.
|
||
No one responded.
|
||
Marshall smiled. “I didn't think you would. But in a very basic way,
|
||
that's the way life would be if you lived in some other countries. The
|
||
state often owns all of the utilities and takes a good share of
|
||
whatever profits you earn in business. It controls prices. It reduces
|
||
your control over your own property.”
|
||
Though the boys weren't initially excited by the prospect of a
|
||
lecture, they were all listening. Marshall had captured their attention
|
||
and piqued their interest. More important, he had discovered a way
|
||
to help them understand the points he was making.
|
||
Marshall wasn't trying to impugn foreign governments that night.
|
||
He wasn't promoting democracy. Instead, he was helping his troop to
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 40 ---
|
||
understand some of the differences between constitutional and non-
|
||
constitutional forms of government so they could pass off
|
||
Requirement Number Five of the Citizenship in the World Merit
|
||
Badge.
|
||
The Boy Scout merit badge program was designed to lead boys
|
||
through a series of learning experiences that promote citizenship,
|
||
character, and personal fitness. It encourages them to sharpen their
|
||
skills in things they like to do, and it challenges them to expand their
|
||
horizons by exploring new activities. It gives Scouts opportunities to
|
||
measure their accomplishments and to be rewarded for their efforts.
|
||
And because they are required for advancement, merit badges are
|
||
an essential part of every boy's progress in Scouting.
|
||
Unfortunately, merit badge work can often become dull and
|
||
tedious. Worse than that, because some badges require reports,
|
||
research, and other sorts of paper work, working on them often isn't
|
||
much different from being in school. So when you can find ways to
|
||
inject a little life into merit badge work, you'll not only be making
|
||
Scouting more fun, but you'll be making your own troop meetings
|
||
more exciting too. And you'll be doing a great service to your boys.
|
||
Let's look at a few ways to do that.
|
||
ELIMINATE THE CLASSROOM ATMOSPHERE
|
||
During the fall and winter months, teenage boys spend about six
|
||
hours a day—five days a week—in school. And after they get home,
|
||
they might have another hour or two of homework. So by the time
|
||
they get to a troop meeting, sitting quietly in a chair and listening to a
|
||
lecture will seem about as appealing as a trip to a drill-happy dentist.
|
||
The boys want action. They want fun! They want excitement.
|
||
So if you want to enhance your merit badge program, your first
|
||
challenge is to put away the chairs and the chalkboard and put as
|
||
much life and energy into your lessons as possible. You need to
|
||
convince the boys that they're not in school.
|
||
When Scoutmaster Allen Hillman's troop was earning the
|
||
Backpacking Merit Badge, he wanted to emphasize the importance
|
||
of loading backpacks in a neat and orderly manner. And he wanted
|
||
his Scouts to understand the importance of packing certain items
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 41 ---
|
||
such as first-aid kits, ponchos, matches, and water bottles where
|
||
they could be retrieved in a hurry.
|
||
He knew that he could have explained all of this in troop meeting.
|
||
But he wanted a more effective way to drive the point home.
|
||
So Hillman had the boys load their packs—tents, sleeping bags,
|
||
and all—and took them on a hike through the neighborhood. After
|
||
ten or fifteen minutes, he called for a short break.
|
||
“I think I'm getting a blister,” he said. “I'll give a bag of raisins to the
|
||
first Scout to give me a bandage.”
|
||
Gear flew as Scouts dug into their packs. Then, a minute or so
|
||
later—after he'd received a bandage and given away a bag of raisins
|
||
—he said: “You never know when you're going to get a blister or
|
||
some other injury while you're out hiking. So it's a good idea to keep
|
||
your first-aid supplies where you can get them without a lot of fuss.”
|
||
Another block or two down the road, he stopped again, saying,
|
||
“I've got a bag of raisins for the first Scout to hand me his poncho.”
|
||
The next instant everyone was again digging frantically through
|
||
their packs. After Hillman had rewarded the winning Scout, he said,
|
||
“You know, if it suddenly started raining in the middle of hike, you
|
||
wouldn't want to waste a lot of time looking for your rain gear. So it's
|
||
a good idea to keep it close, too. Now, what other items do you think
|
||
you ought to keep handy?”
|
||
“Matches!” someone said.
|
||
Hillman nodded. “Matches, good,” he said. “I've got a bag of
|
||
raisins for the first Scout to hand me his matches.”
|
||
Hillman didn't teach the boys anything that he couldn't have taught
|
||
them back in the Scout room. But because he conducted his lesson
|
||
out on the road, he made it more compelling and meaningful. He
|
||
brought the concept to life.
|
||
But Hillman wasn't finished. When the boys reached the halfway
|
||
point, he told everyone to stop and remove their packs.
|
||
“Who's tired?” he asked.
|
||
Several hands went up.
|
||
“Did you know that the way you pack your gear can actually make
|
||
it easier to carry? Did you know there are tricks for making your pack
|
||
feel lighter? ” He looked at each of the boys. “Would you like me to
|
||
show you? ”
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 42 ---
|
||
Did they ever!
|
||
Hillman then demonstrated how to raise a backpack's center of
|
||
gravity by packing tents and other heavy gear on top. He showed the
|
||
boys how to place hard items toward the outside of the bag where
|
||
they wouldn't dig into the hiker's back, as well as other important
|
||
tips. The boys spent several minutes repacking their gear before
|
||
hiking back to the church, many of them exclaiming that their packs
|
||
did feel better! And that they were easier to carry!
|
||
Again, Hillman didn't do anything that he couldn't have done back
|
||
in the Scout room. But by waiting until the boys saw a need for his
|
||
lesson, he made his instructions more effective.
|
||
There are many lessons that you can teach effectively on the
|
||
chalkboard back in the Scout room. And there are probably some
|
||
that you wouldn't want to teach any other way. But any time you can
|
||
eliminate a school-like atmosphere, you'll not only be adding variety
|
||
to your Scouts' experience, but you'll be making your lessons more
|
||
interesting too.
|
||
GO BEYOND THE REQUIREMENTS
|
||
When a Scout is being tested by a qualified merit badge counselor,
|
||
he must be tested exactly as the requirements specify. He cannot be
|
||
asked to do any more or any less than required by the official merit
|
||
badge pamphlet.
|
||
But while you're teaching a particular skill or concept— while
|
||
you're preparing your Scouts to pass off the require-ments—you are
|
||
free to embellish all you want.
|
||
When my troop went to Thunder Ridge Boy Scout Camp, most of
|
||
the boys signed up for rifle shooting, which turned out to be one of
|
||
the most interesting classes of the week. The reason was that the
|
||
instructor knew his subject so well that he went far beyond the nuts
|
||
and bolts of the merit badge, keeping the boys spellbound with facts
|
||
and anecdotes that kept the boys glued to their seats. At the end of
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 43 ---
|
||
each session, he practically had to shoo all the boys away to their
|
||
next classes.
|
||
Richard Marks, a Scoutmaster I met at summer camp, once
|
||
helped his troop earn the Swimming Merit Badge at a neighborhood
|
||
pool. One requirement called for each Scout to swim fifty yards using
|
||
inflated clothing for support. But Marks went a step further and
|
||
organized a game of water polo with each boy inflating his pants and
|
||
using them to float on as they played.
|
||
The activity not only built the boys' confidence in this life-saving
|
||
technique, but it gave them considerable practice at it. Besides that,
|
||
the boys had a lot of fun.
|
||
And when his troop was earning Lifesaving, Marks noticed that
|
||
Scouts were required to demonstrate their ability to tow a tired
|
||
swimmer.
|
||
“I saw that and knew we had to make a game of it,” he said. “So
|
||
we put together an obstacle course in the swimming pool and ran
|
||
relays.”
|
||
Besides turning lifesaving into an exciting adventure, Marks taught
|
||
his boys skills in a way they weren't likely to forget.
|
||
Merit badge requirements are designed so that Scouts can
|
||
demonstrate the proficiency of their skills. But they are not
|
||
comprehensive. By teaching beyond the requirements, you can get
|
||
beyond the nitty-gritty nuts and bolts of the coursework and explore
|
||
the excitement. You can help your Scouts to become even more
|
||
proficient than the badge requires.
|
||
And you can make it a lot of fun in the process.
|
||
TEACH YOUR SCOUTS THE IMPORTANCE OF THE
|
||
SKILLS THEY'RE LEARNING
|
||
Most Scouts have little interest in skills that they see no reason for.
|
||
But if they truly believe that a certain skill might one day come in
|
||
handy, they'll be more eager to become even better at it.
|
||
To earn the Lifesaving Merit Badge, Scouts are required to show
|
||
that they can remove their street clothes on shore in less than twenty
|
||
seconds. And though most Scouts wear their swimming suits
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 44 ---
|
||
beneath their clothes as they do this, many of them nevertheless feel
|
||
silly doing it.
|
||
“The boys think it's a silly requirement,” said Ryan Dixon, a long-
|
||
time aquatics director. “And a lot of kids don't think it's important. The
|
||
problem is that when someone's really in trouble, many people jump
|
||
into the water fully clothed when they go to help. They don't
|
||
understand how dangerous that can be.”
|
||
So to drive the point home, Dixon has his lifesaving classes swim
|
||
relays fully clothed. “We swim laps, retrieve objects from underwater,
|
||
and have races wearing normal street clothes,” he said. “Then we
|
||
put on our swimming suits and do it all again. The boys learn
|
||
firsthand how difficult— and dangerous—it is to attempt a rescue
|
||
fully clothed.”
|
||
When I was the program director at Camp Maple Dell, we were
|
||
required to conduct an emergency fire drill every week. That always
|
||
annoyed me because the drills cut into our time and interrupted the
|
||
flow of our camp program.
|
||
But one week, just before dinner, we spotted black smoke
|
||
billowing above the trees up the canyon. There was a fire, and it was
|
||
headed our way.
|
||
It turned out the fire wasn't serious, and it wasn't long before the
|
||
Forest Service had it under control. But in those first, anxious
|
||
moments, I was overwhelmed with gratitude that we had an
|
||
evacuation plan and that we had practiced it. And I never again
|
||
complained or hesitated when it came time to schedule a drill.
|
||
Your boys will be the same way. When they know why certain
|
||
things have to be done, when they know why certain skills and tasks
|
||
are required, they'll be more patient about doing them.
|
||
A Scoutmaster named Derek Wiscombe told me how an unusually
|
||
strong windstorm once wreaked havoc in his neighborhood. It
|
||
knocked down trees and power lines and caused thousands of
|
||
dollars of damage to people's homes. Power was expected to be off
|
||
for at least one day, and possibly two or three more.
|
||
“People were panicking,” Wiscombe told me, “because many of
|
||
them simply weren't prepared. So we began working on Emergency
|
||
Preparedness that very week, beginning with the requirement to
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 45 ---
|
||
create personal emergency packs. Many of the boys had been
|
||
without power that week— some of them for a whole day or two—
|
||
and they understood. They knew why it was important and they were
|
||
even more anxious than usual to participate.”
|
||
PROVIDE INSTANT RECOGNITION
|
||
When a boy has successfully completed all of the requirements for a
|
||
merit badge, he should receive it at the very next meeting. You can
|
||
present it in a small ceremony at the beginning or close of the
|
||
meeting, but be sure to do it. This is the method described in the
|
||
Scoutmaster's Handbook, and it is more effective than making a boy
|
||
wait several weeks until the next court of honor.
|
||
Besides that—since he may be the only Scout receiving a badge
|
||
that particular night—it may give him the chance to stand in the
|
||
spotlight all by himself for a few moments. That alone is often
|
||
motivation enough to have him out working hard on the next one.
|
||
Then, at the next court of honor, you can recognize him again by
|
||
mentioning all of the badges he has earned since the last ceremony.
|
||
Advancement is one of the key methods of achieving citizenship,
|
||
character, and personal fitness in the Boy Scout program. And
|
||
because merit badges are such a crucial part of that, they are vital to
|
||
your boys' progress within the Boy Scout program.
|
||
So make merit badges exciting to work on. Make them fun to earn.
|
||
And your boys will not only be having fun in Scouting, but you'll be
|
||
having the time of your life too.
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 47 ---
|
||
F
|
||
ourteen-year-old Javin Carter burst into the Scout room with a
|
||
look of horror on his face.
|
||
“Quick!” he shouted. “Sam's burned himself in the kitchen! You've
|
||
got to come quick!”
|
||
In an instant, the entire troop was thundering toward the kitchen.
|
||
Sam, one of the troop's patrol leaders, was lying on the floor writhing
|
||
in pain.
|
||
“Help me!” he screamed. “Please help me! It hurts!”
|
||
The Scouts gasped as Sam squirmed on the floor. The boy's shirt
|
||
had been badly scorched and the flesh was peeling away from third-
|
||
degree burns on his arm.
|
||
A Scout named Aaron was the first to respond.
|
||
“Jordan!” he yelled to a nearby Scout as he knelt beside his
|
||
injured friend. “We need bandages! Lots of them!”
|
||
“And a sheet,” a boy named Steve yelled, kneeling opposite
|
||
Aaron. “Hurry! ”
|
||
Robert Janke, the troop Scoutmaster, stood out of the way as the
|
||
boys treated the injured Scout. After all, as terrible as Sam looked,
|
||
he wasn't really hurt. Before the meeting, Janke had covered the
|
||
boy's arm with a mixture of petroleum jelly and red food dye, dabbing
|
||
in a few strips of toilet paper to simulate peeling flesh and sprinkling
|
||
on ground-up charcoal to create the appearance of charred skin.
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 48 ---
|
||
The resulting “burn” looked horrifyingly real.
|
||
More than that, it brought life to the troop's first-aid practice.
|
||
By the time most boys have been Scouts for a couple of years,
|
||
they've tied hundreds of knots, treated dozens of imaginary wounds,
|
||
and built countless fires. And while these are important skills that
|
||
need to be reviewed and practiced often, they sometimes become so
|
||
repetitious and ordinary that many boys begin losing interest in them.
|
||
Worse than that, many boys are never actually taught the
|
||
importance of Scoutcraft. They never learn the practical value of the
|
||
skills they spend so much time learning and passing off. They learn
|
||
how to tie the timber hitch, for instance, but they never learn why
|
||
they'd ever need to. (Think quick … when do you need a timber
|
||
hitch? When do you use a sheet bend? Don't know? If your Scouts
|
||
don't know, there's no way they can ever possibly put their skills to
|
||
use.)
|
||
The challenge, then, is to teach Scoutcraft in a way that makes it
|
||
fun and exciting, making certain the boys know how to apply the
|
||
skills once they've mastered them.
|
||
I used to work at Boy Scout Camp Maple Dell with an eighteen-
|
||
year-old boy named Tucker. He was the camp nature director and
|
||
one of the most creative Scouters I've ever known. He could take the
|
||
most ordinary lesson and turn it into a remarkable adventure. Scouts
|
||
who had already earned Nature and Environmental Science often
|
||
signed up for those classes anyway because Tucker made them so
|
||
much fun.
|
||
Each Friday afternoon, for instance, Maple Dell conducted camp-
|
||
wide Scoutcraft competitions, and one week Tucker was assigned
|
||
the knot-tying relays.
|
||
He was aghast.
|
||
“Knot tying?” he protested. “Why do we have to have knot tying?”
|
||
Jack Brown, the camp program director, spread his hands. “We
|
||
always have knot tying.”
|
||
“That's my point,” Tucker said. “Scouts tie knots everywhere they
|
||
go. They tie them in troop meetings, they tie them for merit badges,
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 49 ---
|
||
and they tie them on campouts. By the time they come to Scout
|
||
camp they're sick of them!”
|
||
Jack just shrugged. “Well, then this ought to be a good chance to
|
||
find a way to make them fun.”
|
||
Tucker opened his mouth to protest further, then stopped. And I
|
||
knew him well enough to know what he was thinking—he could find
|
||
a way to make them fun.
|
||
To make the effect as dramatic as possible, Tucker refused to tell
|
||
anyone what he had in mind, but he made certain everyone knew it
|
||
was going to be spectacular … and that this week, knot tying would
|
||
be conducted at the swimming pool!
|
||
I was so curious that wild horses couldn't have kept me away from
|
||
the swimming pool that Friday afternoon. And Tucker didn't
|
||
disappoint me.
|
||
Tucker had the boys tying knots, all right. But he had the Scouts
|
||
tying them around poles, tubes, and buoys floating in the middle of
|
||
the pool. He had taken a zany idea, thrown in a dash of crazy, stirred
|
||
in a little goofiness, and then cranked up the ridiculous. The result
|
||
was a relay that had boys clamoring for more, and when the Scouts
|
||
listed their favorite activities of the week, most of them ranked knot
|
||
tying— knot tying! —right up there with canoe swamping.
|
||
If you're going to spend much time as a Scoutmaster, then
|
||
Scoutcraft is certain to be an important part of your program. And if
|
||
you really want the boys to listen—if you really want them to learn
|
||
important Scout skills—you'll need to capture their interest and hold
|
||
their attention.
|
||
Here are a couple of ideas:
|
||
TEACH SKILLS IN WAYS THE BOYS HAVE NEVER SEEN
|
||
BEFORE
|
||
Every boy has tied knots, for instance, so find ways for them to have
|
||
fun while they're doing it. Every boy has built fires, so create new
|
||
pyrotechnic challenges for them to conquer.
|
||
Ben Jackson, a Scoutmaster I met at Maple Dell, shared with me a
|
||
method for combining Scoutcraft skills with bad-weather training.
|
||
“We take the troop down to the park and have the boys pitch tents
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 50 ---
|
||
and build fires,” he told me. “But we spray them with garden hoses
|
||
while they do it.”
|
||
Jackson said that any Scout who can start a fire in those
|
||
conditions certainly has the skill to build one during a mountain
|
||
rainstorm. “And how else are they going to learn to pitch a tent in the
|
||
rain and keep all of their gear dry while they do it?” he asked.
|
||
“Besides, you've never seen boys have more fun… . We invite their
|
||
parents come out to watch, and before it's all over we generally end
|
||
up having a spectacular water fight.”
|
||
Another Scoutmaster, looking for ways to liven up ordinary
|
||
compass work, took his troop out at night. A few nights earlier, his
|
||
patrol leaders hiked into the local foothills and secured bits of
|
||
reflective tape to branches, rocks, and brush, creating a fun,
|
||
challenging course. Then the Scouts, using compasses and
|
||
flashlights, raced to find their way from one marker to the next,
|
||
knowing when they spotted the bits of reflecting tape that they'd
|
||
identified the correct course.
|
||
Tucker, the boy I introduced earlier in this chapter, used to take
|
||
Scouts on a unique nature hike. Most boys, he knew, had been on
|
||
ordinary, run-of-the-mill nature hikes before, so he began by
|
||
promising that this one would be different. “We're not going to
|
||
identify plants and animals like you usually do on nature hikes,” he
|
||
said. “Instead, we're going to use our senses. We're going to go out
|
||
and taste things… . We're going to go out and smell things, hear
|
||
things, see things, and touch things.”
|
||
Just that fast, Tucker had the undivided attention of every Scout in
|
||
the class. And he lived up to his promise. As the boys followed him
|
||
through the forest, they tasted wild strawberries, smelled the
|
||
cinnamon-scented bark of Pon-derosa Pines, listened to the wind in
|
||
the canyon, examined and discussed the red rocks of the cliffs, and
|
||
felt the sharp cutting edges of flint and obsidian pieces.
|
||
It was unlike any nature hike the boys had ever experienced.
|
||
If you want to bring out the true fun of Scoutcraft, get away from
|
||
traditional activities. Find ways to make them different.
|
||
FIND WAYS TO MAKE SCOUTCRAFT SKILLS COME TO
|
||
LIFE
|