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ianwilkins

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Everything posted by ianwilkins

  1. It's a different country, a different starting point, and a different culture. If they have good reason to carry those things, and don't arouse the suspicions of the police, they don't get arrested. That's how the law works over here. No doubt you might find a few Daily Mail articles listing ridiculous examples of "outraged" plumber who gets their stanley knife confiscated, or even arrested, but that's the Daily Wail for you. You need a "lawful reason" I think the expression is, to carry a bladed article. There may be exceptions for small penknives, I can't remember. At the moment I thin
  2. So if you lose one you have to find another?!?!
  3. Nice to see what we Brits have exported around the world. Our Explorers seem to think it's banned, so they play French Poodle, in which everything is exactly the same as British Bulldog but the name.
  4. And berate the leaders of an organisation they want nothing to do with. Strange way of showing it. Gods Gays and Girls. A heady combination.
  5. Token Brit reporting for duty... Executive Summary: I like it. Important Note: We'll still have the world membership badge, that's not changing. The swoosh logo felt really old fashioned to me, and looked so bad on social media type stuff that HQ put out (i.e. nearly everything, they think social media is the answer, I don't know what the question is) that they hadn't used it for years, instead using a scout arrowhead on its own, which I liked more than this, but I guess at small sizes the star points disappear a bit. This new one, looking at the brand guidelines, I like
  6. Meh, you say that, but I remember when we went co-ed, proper co-ed, and while it wasn't quite "blood on the streets", it wasn't especially pretty. We lost some fine leaders who just weren't prepared to work with girls, and didn't believe it was the right thing to do. Yes, we're growing, a bit, and have been for a while, but we've changed the programme, we've gone co-ed, we changed the uniform, changed the age ranges/sections, we've created alternative promises for the godless, we've recruited a world famous TV presenter as chief scout. We're in the process, it's always in progress, of changing
  7. It was called esJamboree. I think they did say it a bit like yamboree, but slightly more anglicised, thanks to the words BP roots. Well, I've no idea if I'm honest why you didn't see any spanish scouts on the camino. There certainly is scouting all over Spain, as the camp had a group from most regions I believe. Ah, scouting isn't huge in Spain, 56,000 in 2011, from a population of 46 million. And that's split into Mainly because it was mostly banned, sorry "tolerated" under Franco, and was only re-legalised in 1977. And the largest chunk of that 56k belong to an interreligious scout orga
  8. The explorers once decided as one of the leaders said how badly decorated her flat was, we should have a painting night round hers. The result was....awful.
  9. Last year we were the only British group at the Spanish National Jamboree on the Canary Islands (a bit less than 100 miles off the coast of Morocco, west Africa). I've just written up the text below for our annual report, and someone thought more uplifting pictures would be nice, I dunno about uplifting, but they're to hand so...enjoy... In total there 57 of us, 11 Scouts and leaders, 35 Explorers, 4 Network, and 7 Explorer leaders. There were around 3000 attendees and we were the only British group there. It was obviously mostly Spanish groups, but there were also groups from Argentina,
  10. Or strip down to your underpants, then go commando for the rest of the hike. Or what's wrong with a skinnydip? Well, I'm more of a chunkydunk these days but...
  11. I've just converted metric to imperial, and the youth necker worn by under 14s is 27" in length along the right angle sides (i.e. the shorter two sides), and the adult one is 32". And yes, I didn't realise the currency of neckers until I went on an international last year, it was a joy to see our UK international neckers wrapped around scouts from all over the world (well, mostly Spain) Thinks about making a joke about chest/necker size, thinks again... It's certainly triangles in the UK.
  12. So, basically, your CO is yet another person that doesn't understand what the changes actually are, i.e. separate boy and girl troops? From a lot of the hoo-haa I'm seeing on facebook, I think BSA have over estimated peoples capacity to read further than the headlines. It should have been front and centre "we'll be starting girl troops" not "we're accepting girls now and there's this name change and here's the reasons and this and that and oh by the way they'll be in their own girl troops". That bird has flown now, horse has bolted, and there's a shed-load of confusion out there. That con
  13. Ha! This pic pulled me up short! I used to work in that town! Horsell Common (where the martians landed) was just down the road, and is mostly houses now. Woking in Surrey. The martian was quite friendly once you got to know him. He did tend to hit the beers a bit early for my taste, but then he struggled with depression and holding a job down after Mrs. Martian left and took the kids back to the red planet. He hung around just down the road from my favourite sandwich shop.
  14. As I'm elsewhere, I'll pick this up... UK was boys only, except for Venture Scouts. If I remember correctly (it was a while ago, and I was a Venture leader, so was not having my playpen remodelled)... HQ said (I paraphrase) "we're going co-ed, if that freaks you out, stay boy only for now" Then when "for now" ran out, they said "you're all co-ed" (more or less) What they didn't do is say "yar, you can have boy troop here, and a girl troop thar, and that's cool. Okay, that was last year, now go coed. Love and kisses, HQ" Fingers crossed your HQ aren't that crazy.
  15. With the slight addendum that the Venture Scouts (which started in 1967, replacing Rover Scouts, and causing a schism that created alternative scout associations in the UK that still exist, but are tiny) went co-ed in 1976.
  16. So, this week they'll be in a Troop with their fellow boys, and next week they'll be in a Troop with their fellow boys, and next month, and next year. What are they protesting against exactly? That there's another Troop in town that is full of girls? And democracy isn't everyone getting what they want. That's anarchy.
  17. Ooof, "Tampa with me"? As in, tamper? Interfere? Hmmm. But yeah, don't ask us brits, we'll probably suggest Scouty McScoutFace these days.
  18. It's not like they're building more land anytime soon. It's a one way ticket.
  19. [Pirate voice] It's more of what you would call a guideline than yer actual rule.
  20. And actually, just teaching them to light a fire properly, not just build a bonfire and shove a load of paper in the middle. Fire/feather sticks.
  21. Or we've done: One blindfolded, one mute, one with one hand tied behind their back, and the patrol leader that isn't allowed within 3 feet of the tent.
  22. Be excellent to each other - Bill and Ted And yes, I have used this many times with my Explorer Scouts.
  23. Aaah, two countries divided by a common language.
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