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TAHAWK

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Posts posted by TAHAWK

  1. During WWII, with only olive drab cloth available, the dark  khaki  uniform (medium brown-green) was replaced with 100% cotton olive drab.  

    Following 1965, the uniform became lighter OD, frail, cotton-polyester.  The "tearaway" uniform.  We have trouble obtaining good examples for our museum since they were replaced so rapidly as unsatisfactory and are typically donated with significant damage.   Trouser crotches are often torn open.  This is when the V-neck shirt went away.

    The next uniform shirt, before we ceased to have a uniform, is the khaki "Oscar" shirt of cotton-polyester.  It is, objectively, an improvement to its immediate predecessor in terms of standing up to use.  

    When uniformity went away, replaced by a brand, we got 100% polyester shirts, 100% cotton shirts, and a variety of pockets and buttons., not to mention a range of BSA  brand  trousers, trouser-shorts, and shorts - all distinctive from across the room- not "uniform."  

    Long-sleeved versions have always been available

     

  2. Sweetheart deals have happened in Cleveland.  About 2000 acres on a large lake in SE Ohio went for under $200/acre to a company  whose management included a former council mid-level  employee and close, close friend of the then-SE ( soon to be "retired" for keeping two sets of books).   The company was in default for several month's of royalties payments to Council for a couple of gas wells on the property, but what's a little repeated breach of contract between friends?. 

    The plan was to turn the valley part of the property  into a landfill.  Really inept scammers.  The locals went NUTS!  The feds went NUTS!  (The lake, whose waters ultimately drained into the Muskingum/Ohio/Mississippi, was part of the "Navigable Waterways of the U.S.").  The Landfill plan was DOA at the state level and , iirc, was never even presented to the feds to begin the years-long process to obtain approval.  :confused:

  3. Lake Erie Council is pushing "virtual" merit badges, including Nature, Geology,  Soil & Water Conservation, and Wilderness Survival ("virtual fires"?).  

    Leatherwork MB

    Game Design MB

    American Heritage MB

    Electronics MB

    Scouting Heritage MB

    Wilderness Survival

    Robotics MB

    Mammal Study MB

    Public Health MB

    Moviemaking MB

    Disabilities Awareness MB

    Public Health MB

    Citizenship in the World MB

    Nature MB

    Coin Collecting MB

    Photography MB

    Reptile & Amphibian Study MB

    Genealogy MB

    Energy MB  

    American Business

    Chemistry

    Safety Merit Badge

    Wilderness Survival MB

    Digital Technology MB

    American Labor MB

    Soil & Water Conservation MB

    Fingerprinting MB

  4. 3 hours ago, Eagle94-A1 said:

    Well I got s copy of the Scouting U email to various training chairs which stated:

    · We have been asked specifically about Wood Badge, NYLT, IOLS and BALOO. As stated above these courses should not be revised by a local council to be run in an online environment. Each of these have experiential learning in the outdoors that cannot be duplicated online.

    In my email, it was highlighted in yellow.

    Very up-to-date code: "Scouting U" 

    Glad someone got something right. 

     

    Sadly, as I have noted, our SE thinks training is a bad idea becasue poorly-done training is not popular with the customers. His dichotomy is: poor training vs. eliminating training as much as possible  He very much favors everything on line becasue it is "more efficient."

    • Sad 1
  5. "But if they would rather sit at home and play video games, that's up to the parents."

    What they would rather do is largely up to them.  I have seen parents' efforts to coerce their children into Scouting.  The kids typically figure out how to escape.  E.g.: "Dad, I would really, really rather go on the campout this weekend, but if I don't study more for my test in AP algebra that's coming on Monday, I cannot do better than a 'C.' "

    •  
  6. Who decided who would be in this "patrol"?

    The "Patrol Leader" was elected by the "patrol" members?

    How does this "patrol" plan its unique patrol activities?

    How do the wishes of this "patrol's" member find its way into troop program?

     

    • Upvote 1
  7. "Earning merit badges should be Scout initiated, Scout researched, and Scout learned. It should be hands-on and interactive, and should not be modeled after a typical school classroom setting. Instead, it is meant to be an active program so enticing to Scouts that they will want to take responsibility for their own full participation."

    BSA, Guide to Advancement at §7.0.3.0

     "There must be attention to each individual’s projects and fulfillment of all requirements. We must know that every Scout—actually and personally—completed them. If, for example, a requirement uses words like “show,” “demonstrate,” or “discuss,” then every Scout must do that. It is unacceptable to award badges on the basis of sitting in classrooms watching demonstrations, or remaining silent during discussions.

    . . .

    Counselors agree to sign off only requirements that Scouts have actually and personally completed."

     Id. at § 7.0.3.2


    Filling in an unofficial worksheet is not, of course, discussing.  It may be showing or demonstrating if done by the Scout rather than done by someone else or merely copied down.  I have had xeroxed "work sheets" submitted with the expectation that they would be accepted.

    • Upvote 1
  8. As I came across this tread researching a different issue, I wish to make an observation that does not, I think, conflict with any observation made or opinion expresesed, but may be important. 

    A Scout neither passes nor fails a Scoutmaster's Conference - he has one. 

    The Scoutmaster or his designee decides if a Scout has passed a given Requirements.

    It has been our understanding for decades in our little corner of the World, that appeal from the denial of a rank, other than Eagle, which has its own detailed process, is to the District Advancement Committee, if you are fortunate enough to have districts.  Most such issues were resolved with out a formal hearing by counseling the adults responsible. God knows what happens now that our SE staged his putsch and replaced our districts with employee-run committees. 

  9. Hopefully there would be answers - acceptably correct answers. 

    Hopefully he would know what questions to ask: "... I am learning you have to blow up a self inflating mattress and store it with the valve open.  What other important information has been withheld??? 

    Can we supply handouts?

  10. In Winter when tenting well-below freezing, place the tops of your boots between the sleeping bag and the insulating mattress so they don't freeze solid.

    A sacrificial sheet or light fleece blanket  over your sleeping bag in cold weather causes the condensation to be less absorbed by the sleeping bag.  Moisture in your sleeping bag may freeze when you have abandoned the bag to ambient temperatures, unless your Winters are sunny and dry (Ours are grey and damp, except, occasionally, when below 0º F)  and reduces the insulating value of the bag

  11. 25 minutes ago, Eagledad said:

    Hmm!. So, during this strange time of spending of lives in our homes with a computer, your suggestion is wait for an unscheduled course with a unknown staff of unknown experience to learn a few tricks that will make camping more comfortable. Sometimes I worry about you. 

    Barry

    Your capital suggestion?  One supposes he could go on asking questions here, there, and elsewhere. Jolly good!

  12. Polyester batting-insulated sleeping bags gradually lose loft (insulation value) if stored compressed. The greater the compression, the faster the loss of loft.  Some polyester batting resists such abuse better , but all yield in the end.  Some makers advertise otherwise. Some believe the Earth to be flat.

  13. 12 hours ago, 5thGenTexan said:

    I might be stupid!!!  We had a Council "Camp-In" this weekend.  We all camped at home, did Scout things during the day, and shared on the Council FB page what we did.  Anyway, last night was another miserable night.  Waking up every so often hurting.  I have been opening the valve on my sleeping pad and throwing it in the tent to inflate while I do other stuff.  Never been much of a pad.  I decided to get out in the house tonight and open the valve and just watch it.  It wasn't doing a lot.  I fished the instructions out of the bag and it said to blow on the valve to desired firmness.  Well, now its a good two inches thick and firm.  I feel pretty stupid.

    Its an ALPS pad if that makes any difference.

    Blowing up a "self-inflating" mattress is an old trick, but you need to store it with the valve open to allow some of the resulting moisture to evaporate to try to avoid mildew inside.  Storing it open also greatly improves inflation in the "field."

  14. 9 minutes ago, Mrjeff said:

    It has been a while since I was involved in the Cub Scout program. Cubs didn't go on camping trips or participate is Boy Scout activities, and I realize that there was a very minimal camping requirement for Arrow of Light.  I think that one very big issue with declining membership is that now there is nothing for the Cubs to look forward to.  They have camped, hiked.....for several years and when they cross into Boy Scouts there is no adventure and they are just burned out with Scouting. Or, they are recruited with grand expectations which don't materialize and they just quit.  When this happens we will never see them in a Scout Troop.  This is not a theory, it's a fact and our terraible retention numbers prove it.

    This is especially the issue when the troops are run like one big Cub den.  

    • Upvote 3
  15. 10 hours ago, Jackdaws said:

    How come they suggest you do the online portion of BALOO prior to doing the practical portion? 

    Outdoor Skills Training Courses

    These courses are designed to help Scouters with skills related to the BSA’s outdoor program.

    Cub Scouts IconBasic Adult Leader Outdoor Orientation (BALOO)

    This one-and-a-half day course is designed as an introduction to the Cub Scout outdoor program for leaders interested in adding a camping component to their Pack activities. BALOO training consists of an online pre-requisite component in addition to an overnight hands on practical. BSA’s Cub Scout level camping policies will be taught along with the discovery of the necessary tools to help units carry our a successful camping experience. Completion of this course is mandatory for a MINIMUM OF ONE adult on a Pack overnighter.

    This course should not be taught with IOLS. As part of a two-part blended learning format, the on-line modules are the first step to become BALOO trained. The on-line training modules contain introductory and basic information that will be built upon during the practical training that is completed during an in-person, council instructed course. The on-line component must be completed prior to the practical component and the course facilitator should check this before allowing enrollment into this part of the course. The in-person syllabus is facilitated by the council training committee and the syllabus must be followed to include the overnight portion of the training. Otherwise the training code will not be awarded.

     

    Been a while since I was the training person and in cub scouts so I have not re upped my BALOO training.

    My "home" council offered Baloo credit for taking a slightly modified IOLS for at least fifteen years.  The modification consists of adding thee sessions to cover Baloo topics otherwise not covered, or covered well enough, in OLS.  The troop scouters usually voluntarily took those sessions too.  This credit for training did not mean that Baloo was not offered as well.  

    Under our latest SE, training has been greatly deemphasized, forcing Scouters to obtain basic and "other" training in neighboring councils.  Those council's training teams are very welcoming of more "business."  Those councils are also doing better in all the metrics so loved by BSA as well as doing better in offering Scouting to youth.

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