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Hal_Crawford

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Everything posted by Hal_Crawford

  1. I'm sure that Campmor is great but I would recommend buying packs at a local store where they can fit it and show you the correct way to wear it. You pay a bit more but I believe that the help and advice from a knowledgeable salesperson is a worthwhile investment We have a locally owned outfitter (Casual Adventure, Arlington, VA) that offers a 10% discount to scouts and scouters. Their manager even came to one of our meetings to help scouts going on a high adventure trek to properly pack and adjust their packs (no matter where the packs came from). Personally I want to support business
  2. Does anyone have a link for the on-line Den Chief training mentioned in the above posts? I would love to make this resource available to our scouts but I cannot find it on-line. Thanks, Hal
  3. They have tomahawk and axe throwing at Lenhok'sin High Adventure as part of the Mountain Man and Lumberjack outposts. Tomahawk throwing will be an activity at our district Mountain Man camporee next weekend.
  4. I did as a scout and it was a blast but that was 1965. Stayed in barracks, ate at the galley, got to sit in the cockpits of A-4s, F-4s and A-6s... the planes that were going to win that war in Vietnam. There wasn't a boy in our troop that didn't want to be a navy aviator after that. At least one actually did. (Not me). Would love to see what others have to say as the boys in my troop would probably love it as much as I did.
  5. Oh now I get it! One hour per week per scout. Goshen is even better now. Climbing tower, COPE course. It is truly a gem. For those who don't know it is the NCAC council camp located near Lexington, VA. There are actually 5 resident camps around Lake Meeriweather: Bowman, Olmstead and Marriott are for boy scouts and Ross and PMI are for Cubs. In addition there is Camp Baird, the Lenhok'sin High Adventure base camp. LHA is a 5 day trek in and around the reservation. There are various "outposts" with themes like "mountain man", climbing and "civil war". It has been described
  6. Speaking of which Arness was Peter Graves (Good evening Mr Brigs) from Mission Impossible's older brother. WAS? IS! Thankfully, James and Peter are still among the living. So few of that generation of TV stars are.
  7. Like Packhound, I have been lurking for a while, I've weighed in a couple of times but I haven't introduced myself. I am an ASM for a troop in Arlington, VA, just across the river from our nation's capital. Arlington is the smallest county in the US and is home to the Pentagon and Arlington National Cemetery and 208,000 citizens. I grew up for the most part in Arlington as an Army brat. Went through Cubs and made it to 2nd class before we moved overseas. I missed scouts but sort of got over it as I was a teenager living on a beach in Rio. After college I bounced around from place t
  8. Turnaround in in our council (National Capital Area) is usually 2 weeks. If I recall the kit comes to the Scout Service Center which then sends a postcard to the SM telling him that it is ready for pickup. Postcards sometimes get lost so it wouldn't hurt for the SM to call the SSC; the kit might be sitting there. Congrats to you and your Eagle.
  9. Beavah: We'll just have to disagree. With this I believe there is a good chance that things will start to get better in a matter of months; without it it could be a long hard recession. It passed the Senate tonight 74-25. I'm guessing Kennedy is probably the missing vote since it would have been big news if he had come in for it. Here's a dilemma for you: Both presidential candidates just voted for the rescue. Unless you want to vote for one of the Senators who voted for this bill you are left with Nader, Barr or just staying home.
  10. ScoutMomSD: I couldn't have said it better that their is no time for moralizing. The solution is being debated in Congress as we speak. It's not perfect and no one is happy that we are at this point but we are and this isn't just a bailout for the bankers or the Congressmen; it's a bailout (the preferred term is "Rescue", whatever) for all of us. It doesn't matter as much who put a hole in the boat as it does that the boat is sinking and we are ALL in it. The bill before the Senate today is much better than the one originally proposed by Sec. Paulson and with an increase in the FDI
  11. I live in the DC area and this evening I spoke to someone well connected to what is happening on the hill. Phones are ringing and it isn't the same message that Representatives were getting before Monday's vote. Congressmen are listening. A Rescue Bill will pass House this week. Senate was already on board so things should move pretty quickly. I doubt that we will be out of the woods but we should be in a lot better shape.
  12. In Portuguese and Spanish: Estados (States) Unidos (United) da America (of America). It is similar in French. GW picked up on the irony about Canadians and Mexicans. When Brazilians are talking about them they call them Canadians (I forget the Portuguese word, Canadianos?) and Mexicanos. They might refer to the three countries together as North Americans but they usually just mean us. To be fair, most Norte Americanos think that 187 million Brasileiros speak Spanish. To give an example of the difference, if you order a glass of beer in Spanish it is almost right in Portuguese except that t
  13. As someone who lived in Brazil I can tell you that from their perspective, "American" (Americano) describes anyone who lives in the Western Hemisphere, including Brasileiros. They usually refer to those of us from the "EUA" (Estados Unidos da America also abbreviated EEUU) as "Norte Americanos" (North Americans). As to why the flag was added to the uniform. I don't know what actually prompted the BSA decision but I do remember that in the early seventies there was a push back against the protest movement and suddenly flags started showing up on police and fire uniforms. Some (includi
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