Jump to content

SSScout

Members
  • Posts

    5680
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    88

Everything posted by SSScout

  1. If you please, What is the "Rule of 25"? twenty five what?
  2. Smoke sifters, camp edges and snipes My friend had lots of these types Of pranks at his hand. Though renowned thru the land, He succumbed from Scouts' sour gripes.
  3. Frederick, Maryland Tue, March 27, 2007 Frederick News-Post Home > Local News ""Working for a common goal"" Troop helps fellow scout become Eagle Originally published March 27, 2007 By Pamela Rigaux News-Post Staff Photo by Travis Pratt ((Boy Scout Matthew Acosta leads Troop 1023 installing benches along neighborhood trails in Urbana as part of his scout project)). IJAMSVILLE, MD -- Rain didn't stop Boy Scout Troop 1023 of Kemptown from helping their fellow scout, Matthew Acosta, become an Eagle Scout. A dozen scouts took turns digging holes deep enough to set four handmade benches alongside walking trails in the Windsor Knolls subdivision Saturday morning. "An Eagle is one of the highest ranks you can achieve," Acosta said. "When you go to college, people will look at whether you're an Eagle Scout or not." The rank doesn't come easy. It requires a project. Not just any project will do. "For an Eagle project, you have to have a beneficiary to benefit from the project," Acosta said. "A lot of people walk these trails." The pine wood benches took a long time to make, he said. First he had to find a model. He did that via the Internet. Then he had to make the benches using a chop saw. "We cut all the pieces, put them together," he said. Digging 33-inch holes into the ground to place the benches next to the trails took endurance. Scouts used a regular shovel, and a few extras such as a post hole digger. The tool looked like it had a pair of blades fastened to the end of a long handle. Acosta kept checking the hole's depth with a measuring tape. At one point, he picked up a rather longish looking pole called a digging bar, and jammed it into the hole. The pole jammed against a rock. "It sounds hollow," Bill Hagen, an adult supervisor said. Acosta repeatedly jammed the rock, then let another scout take over. "It's shale," he said of the piece scouts eventually broke through. The benches are designed to stand 15 inches up from the ground. Originally, Acosta had made the seats 18 inches high, but learned it would not be as comfortable for women and kids, he said. He will help his friends achieve their Eagle projects, he said. Chris Cervenka said he is going to make a sand volleyball court for Urbana High School. Joe Abretski said he is building storage cabinets for The Hartley House.
  4. Gern: So, the "Adult Protection Guidlines" require: 1) Scoutmaster conferences in the corner of the meeting room, one on one, with lots of other eyes around. 2)Always have a buddy. Either another adult or two or more boys around. One adult driver and two or more boys in the car. One adult takes the injured boy to the hospital with THREE boys or one other adult(?). 3) "You have a pet wolf, a chicken and a bag of grain and must cross the river in a boat that is very small..." 4) BoRs are multi adults and one boy. 5) Our meeting place put windows in ALL the doors in the place (even the janitor closet and furnace room). 6) Can one adult take multiple boys on the hike? No. Can Two adults take multiple boys on a hike? Maybe but... Need three for good procedure. 7) Maybe we should encourage boy only (patrol) hikes... 8) etc. usw. It's still worth it.... YiS
  5. Very neat. I will pass this on to our Council and my District...
  6. SSScout

    Belt Loops

    Yes and no. A belt loop may be earned more then once, frinstance, each time a Cub attends the CSDC here (once a year!), he qualifies for the Archery BL. If our Pack went skating each year, the boys could earn another skating BL. Same knowledge and skill demonstration. But Webelos requirements are a seperate thing, and must be earned seperately, not by being given credit for past activities. After all, it's all good!(This message has been edited by SSScout)
  7. Yes, when I signed on this evening. First time.
  8. Omnes Philimontes est in tres partes divisibus...
  9. As the past CM of a very successful (on paper) Pack*, and now a ASM and District Officer (Camp Chair and CSDC Asst.) I will offer the following: You are not alone in wanting the "Pack to help the CS grow". What hurts is when the parents WON'T "help the Pack GO". It boils down to the idea that BSA does not stand for Baby Sitters of America. It is very unfortunate, but if the parents can't be convinced that their 7, 8, 9, year old boy will only be 7, 8, 9 years old ONCE and this is the only time they can be with/affect/teach/ their 7, 8, 9, year old boy then there is nothing you can do except concentrate on YOUR boy's Scouting time. Soon, the boy will be 12, 13, 14, and the time to connect with them, to affect their mind set, is past. Set the example. Get involved. Get trained. Make friends with a couple of other parents and drag them to training. Drink inordinate amounts of coffe, but get them to go. Make offers, keep everyone included, if they choose not to participate, don't you feel guilty but try not to lay into them too hard either. I have a feeling that they know. The non-participating parents set their own priorities, same as you and me. And they will gain or lose accordingly. Sometimes you can get to the parents thru the boys, but again, balance concern with possibilities. Does that make sense? * About the "on paper" comment. Our Pack was very active, many things to do and have fun at. A supportive Committee. We had good membership numbers right up until one year that we had a recruiting drive, garnered 14 interested Tiger families, and dispite our best effort, had NONE of them sign up. "Oh, I could never do that", "This is going to be too much time". " I have to stay with him? The Karate coach doesn't require that". "Jimmy doesn't like doing that" (not what jimmy said to me). So from that year on, we had no new Cubs and the parents still involved saw the hand writing on the wall. I made sure that at least a few "younger" parents had the training, had one dad shadow me for the last 6 months of my tenure (actually had a dad ask if he could PAY me to stay on as CM!), and altho the Pack had plenty of notice that I was moving on to BS with my son, (the last meeting/picnic was in June) the Pack folded. No one was willing to pick up the reins. The dad who shadowed me: I gave him most of my books and materials. When I checked back in September, he and his family had moved. No one knew where. When the assumed CM didn't take the lead, the lady who had said that she would be PCChair declined. No one would come forward. With out the central influence of a concerned CM, the other families scattered to other Packs and Scout Troops. Our CO could not stop the hemmorhage. Neither could the DE or the UCommish. But don't let my horror story dissuade you. It is worth it. I see my use-ta-be Cubs all the time, both in other Scout events and in passing in the community. Go to your District Exec, your Unit Commish, your Charter Org Rep. If you don't recognize those titles, dig alittle and find out who they are. They are there to help. Ask for help. Even if it is only a sympathetic ear to listen, you can make a difference. Go to Bob the Tomatoe, he'll tell you: "It's for the kids". YiS KiS MiF
  10. Ladies and gentlemen, I would ask that someone, after they read the following ramble, will respond and tell me what it is I am trying to get at. The DRP is just that. If you can agree to it in good faith, you sign it. If you can't, you find a way to rationalize your fudging and sign it. If you REALLY can't, then you don't become a Scout/er. We had a wonderful lady sign up her son as a Cub and throw herself whole heartedly into the CS Day Camp. She was the best Nature person we ever had. After the camp, she came to me (wife is CD) and asked about the form she signed. What exactly was expected of her by her signing? She explained that she really wasn't religious, in fact they were careful not to teach their son about any religion. She said they found religion to be a real stumbling block in their teaching their son about the world and how it worked. And what about this "duty to God" in the CS promise? I had to say it was what it was. Scouting expected the parents to work with their son about their faith, whatever that was. I could not (would not) try to interpret the words any more than that. I did say that one's duty to God would be different for each person, and no one in Scouting (to my knowledge) would ever try to impose a particular faith on a Scout. She later resigned (formally!) and withdrew her son from the Pack. "By their fruits ye shall know them" As a first time Chaplain representing the Religious Society of Friends at the '05 Jamboree, I met many men and women of many different faiths (and some not so sure which, if any, to claim. More on that later.) The Jamboree had at least 25 different named faiths. We had Chaplains of many different flavors: Jew, Catholic, Mennonite, LDS, Methodist, Baptists, Episcopal, Congregationalist, RLDS, Lutheran, UU, Greek Orthodox, Christian Scientist (and Friend!). The only obvious absence were Presbyterian and Muslim and Buddhist. Us Chaplains worked surprisingly well together. Among other things, we established worship space for Muslim Scouts and a meditation space for Buddhist Scouts. A Muslim Imam came by three days to visit, but did not stay on the grounds. The last Sunday (First Day in Quaker parlance), the first and only Buddhist Navy Chaplain came to lead that religious service. (no mention of the different flavors of Muslim was ever mentioned. I met several Muslim Scouts, one a young lady Venturer). One of my duties was as a welcomer to the "Relationships " tent. Here were reps and exhibits of many faiths and service organizations. The Chaplains job was to guide the visiting Scout to the table of his/her faith, or, if there was none, talk to the Scout about his faith and thus fulfill the requirement for the "Duty to God" rocker for his/her Jambo patch. I have to say that I did meet several Scouts who honestly told me they weren't sure, probably did not believe in a god, let alone God, and had no idea what the purpose of "church" was. I listened but never cast guilt (?) on the boy for his searching. There are, after all, alot of choices out there. I noticed that when the Chaplains got together, each was very polite when probing the others about their faith. The Greek Orthodox taught about Icons, the Baptist taught about water immersion, etc. I learned some "polite" jewish insults! But Catholic went to the hospital with Quaker, Mennonite set up Muslim prayer space with LDS Deacon, and everyone helped as they could the Alaskan Troops. So what about the dozen or so doubting, unsure Scouts I met? 35 Chaplains times 12 Scouts equals 370 non-yet-believing Scouts? Out of 35,000 (at the Jambo)?? Are they to be summarily kicked out of the brotherhood? We do, after all, have to find our own way. I became a Friend, because that is where my searching led me. That is where, I felt, God wanted me to be. Most Friends are said to be "discovered" rather than converted. The old Friends used the term "convinced", if one was not born into Friends. I certainly cannot argue that my way is appropriate for YOU. (like Paul, I often tell folks "come and see") One may be born into a certain tradition, religion. That is how one starts. After that, I believe one must decide for onesself what, exactly, is ones "duty to God". No one else can. Perhaps another can help one define that "duty", but it cannot, should not, MUST not be imposed by another. At the Jambo, I met Troops that were totally Jewish, Catholic, LDS, one that was (I think) all Church of Christ. There were probably some more I was not aware of that were totally of one faith. Each of these homoginous Troops served their Scouts well, I've no doubt, I only hope that the non jewish Scout, say, who approached the jewish Troop was not turned away out of hand. Who am I to tell a Scout that HIS duty to God is not correct? It is, after all, not his duty to ME! But in conversation, perhaps I can understand HIS understanding and he can understand mine, and together we can see alittle more of what God might really require of us. I think it was Gandhi who said something to the effect that the most Christian person he ever met was a Muslim? Something like that. Could someone find the Kipling story about the blind men trying to describe the elephant to each other? I have to put away the dinner dishes and go to bed. YiS
  11. Amen to all that's gone before. My nickles worth... Here is how I have explained it to my son. And Scouts.... The english language has a large vocabulary. Many words to describe many situations. Using ONE word for so many situations is first , lazy. And uncreative. And unworthy of you. You are better than that. The words in question are intended to be provacative, to evoke a emotional reaction. They are unnecessary. If you intend to impress someone with your manliness by useing "grown up" words, you haven't impressed me. Impress me by BEING grown up. A word has a meaning. That's what communication is all about. If you would communicate a painful mistake, (thumb instead of nail), I always suggest yelling at the object, not the emotional reaction :: "HAMMER!!" Each of the words has a meaning. Usually, they are used incorrectedly. Sexual connotation? Nope, not that time. Excretory connotation? Nope, not there. Show off your KNOWLEDGE by being CREATIVE in your choice of words to describe what has happened or what you are talking about. It's more fun any way. And it sure doesn't annoy the adults as much. Why not get a reputation as a good talker, not just a talker. YiS.
  12. Slumgullion.. at last I know... two l's... That was my dad's favorite name for whatever he was cooking when mom was out for the evening. Always looked alot like hamburger stew to me. YiS And the thirteenth point of the SL is...
  13. My best bud and I would connect over our college vacations. We went up to my favorite campsite late one friday afternoon intending to camp there friday and then hiking out the AT some miles to a rock climbing site and then back for sat evening. Trout fishing before we head home sunday. Our menues: Fri dinner: Burger king. Sat morn: eggs and sausage and bread and jam and oj. Sat lunch: bread and sliced ham and left over oj. Sat dinner: Dinty Moore and fruit cocktale Sun morn: left overs. Trout fishing in the stream (rainbow !). Take the trout home... Sun lunch: Same Burger King (don't mess with tradition) Now the sad part. I had been to this campground a dozen times before. We drove in to the park and went round and round. Couldn't find the road down into the valley to the campsite. I finally gave in and went to the ranger station to ask. Was my memory so faulty? No, it was just that in the intervening two years since I had been there,the state had damed the stream, flooded the valley, and created a lake. So we camped elsewhere, fished in the lake. And ate dinty moore. Ah, youth..
  14. Never like to interfeer in stuff I'd much rader jes sit back and watch the conflagrashun transpire. Now that we are all educated as to who will (has to) pay for the fire service overtime, I'd like to ask an importune question: (keeping in mind the purpose of our organization::: What happens to the boys who (alledgedly) failed to properly extinguish the fire they never should have lit? Do they gain from the insurance settlement, perhaps some counseling? How do the PARENTS deal with the boys reaction? Can any of us, far removed from the incident, possibly imagine what must be going thru their minds? How do the UNITS support these folks ("a Scout is Loyal")? Revoking the Fireman's Chit? LNT retraining? They don't seem like the best thing to me, but one wouldn't just cast these folks lose to drift with the tide, if you will. YiS safely...
  15. Myth: "Save up a pound of aluminum pop-tops and send them to Coca-Cola/Pepsi/Snapple/((enter drink company of your choice here)) you can buy an hour on a dialysis machine for a poor patient". Suuurrreee. Myth: "Twinkies are made with a preservative so that they never spoil". How long is never?? Myth: "If it's on TV, it must be true, it wouldn't be allowed on TV if it wasn't true". Run with that one, boys. Thankyew, thankyewvermuch.
  16. Ahar, Thar ye go agin, with the idee of a Cub Scout Day Camp Code. We been thinkin', it be more like guidelines, afterall...ahar. Seriously, a Manual is a good ides, especially if you have alot of new folks helping, as is often the case in CSDC. It gives you something to point at in training, too. And them that come after you will appreciate the headstart for their turn at the wheel, ahar. What is your theme this year? They ("THEY") have given us "Land Of The Pharoahs". Did you hear about the young lady that was studying Ancient Egyptian Plumbing? She was a Pharoah Faucet Major.... YiS, ahar.
  17. Pogey bait? Bug juice? Geedunk? Tube steak? Brillo cakes? Chicken tetraterrible? Moo juice? Burger bombs? Hen fruit? What IS on the menue???
  18. Oh well. The link will give you the Baltimore Sun Page. Go to the Baltimore Sun home page, March 7, go to the Howard County section (left side), story is ""A Place to Love and Preserve"". YiS
  19. Well, let's see if this works... http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/howard/bal-ho.patapsco07mar07,0,2896540.story?coll=bal-local-howard
  20. Seems a fellow named Kit Valentine useta be an Eagle Scout, then he grew up (sorta) and founded a group to help preserve a State Park that he worked in as a Scout. His project is still there... (the Eagle mention is about half way thru the article) ((did our headline section catch this?)) http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/howard/bal-ho.patapsco07mar07,0,2896540.story?coll=bal-local-howard
  21. Aye, Pack, me bucko, 'tis good ta see that Aye'm not tha oonly one what sees tha Pirates Coode ta be maar Guidelines, like. A Harr. "I would never belong to any club that would have me as a member." == Groucho Marx ==(This message has been edited by SSScout)
  22. If the 'A' person believes that his/her "duty to God" is to NOT believe in him (my perception is of a more male image), then so be it. ( see also 'spaghetti monster') The Scout Promise is not a "judicial oath", but never the less, I will remind them to whom it is important, that our Lord instructed us to "swear not at all, but let your yea be yea and your nea be nea". Hence, certain folks (please correct me if I am wrong in my naming) such as Quakers, Amish, Jehovahs Witnesses, Mennonites, Brethren, Hutterites, et al, will not swear either in court or else where. They will "affirm" that what they say will be (is) the truth. And isn't that what we promise in the SO and SL? 'Course, not all the above will appear on the Scout rolls. "On My Honor" is a declararation of intention, so hence a promise. What you say is what you'll do. "A Scout is Trustworthy". That's the core. The rest is extra sauce on the already richly merinated ribs. ((There I go again thinking of food)) The basic question, I think, is what is ones ultimate authority? If one wishes to declare themselves a "Conscientious Objector" for Draft Board purposes, one must convince the Board not only of ones beliefs and the sincerity behind them but of the origin of those beliefs and the "ultimate" authority one claims. It can't be a "belief of convenience", to use their term. Same thing here, to a lesser degree. Now, if one thinks that ones god requires one (your "duty") to steal from 7-11s and knock over mail boxes, well maybe we need to imbue that one with knowledge of ANOTHER god... Do we talk about the so-called Pledge of Allegiance here or on another thread? YiS
  23. Ditto oldsm. In our Council, we have a noble personage known as the "Merit Badge Dean". He/she keeps track of who is the up to date MBC for a particular subject. You might poplitely beat on doors until your Council Advanvement Chair tells you who it is ( if there is one), or perhaps if your District has some umph, you might have a District MBD. But be forewarned, you may be asked to BE the MBD! Godspeed , YiS
  24. Hey, there's that question again. Howcum only certain "Headlines" appear in our "Headlines section" but some newspapers never seem to make it?? This marvelous story appeared in the Maryland Gazette Newspapers last week. Try http://www.gazette.net/stories/022807/chevnew225915_32320.shtml . YiS
  25. A Grand Tally Ho to the one that can identify the book from which comes this evocative scene (modern Sci Fi): Our hero has a dream in which he dies and goes to "heaven". At the Pearly Gates, he is met by the Gate Keeper, who tells him that to come to God's throne, he should walk thru the door of his choice in the wall ahead. The wall stretches far into the distance to either side, there are innumerable doors, each with the name of a religion above it, everything from Anglicanism to Zoroastrianism and everything in between. As he walks along, the hero cannot choose which door to walk thru, he can't remember what he did on earth. So he walks thru the first one he comes to. On the other side, he sees ahead of him the blazing bright throne. But when he looks behind him, he sees the infinitely long wall... with one closed unlabeled door. Then he wakes up.
×
×
  • Create New...