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SpEdScouter

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Everything posted by SpEdScouter

  1. You are right but let's face it, Bartle as a scout camp is VERY lacking. Bad food. Disgusting latrines. Weak programming (ex. no carnival nights or entertainers). But what keeps Bartle going with about a 90% return rate (scouts returning year after year) along with low staff turnover - is Micosay. All those things you say Micosay teaches are true. Friendship. Discipline, Morals. Business networking. You work hard for your rank advancement and paint and you contribute much to scouting. BUT, Micosay has become the crutch that keeps Camp Bartle going. Because of Micosay their is no incent
  2. Do you all attend the same summer camp every summer, more than one in the summer, or switch around camps? Who decides?
  3. Yes, they have their secrets. Look at this page, It says under the title "Keeper of the Sacred Bundle" that "By tradition, the most important responsibilities of a Keeper of the Sacred Bundle are never detailed in print."
  4. Your right it is more adult led than OA. In fact if you look on their main page, you see the larger events are really adult get togethers.They make a big deal of the native american garb paint on the plastic claws on their lanyards.
  5. Walk, you said you were in Micosay back in the 80's? Have you been to Bartle lately? Is it voluntary? Yes and no. As I said when one goes to Bartle every staff member and nearly all scouts are members so "influence" and pressure to join is pretty high. As I said earlier nearly all the nightly campfires are Mic events and most meals have Mic call outs. So how can one say its strictly voluntary when its pushed so much? At NO TIME when I have been there the last 3 years has any leader said "You do not need to join Micosay".
  6. To fully see the impact of the Micosay organization on the life of Camp Bartle and the scouts involved you have to be there to believe it. On Day 4 of camp (see page 24 of the program here) is "Call out Night". On that day leaders of Micosay in tribal attire, walk around the various camps, shake hands with troop leaders, and say "Thank you for bringing down new recruits". Yes "recruits". Not new Scouts, but "recruits". ALL scouts and adults are required to attend this campfire. It is a 2 hour ceremony where different scouts are called out to be Foxmen, Warriors, Braves, etc... At no time a
  7. It has been around but only in the HOA district. If one wore their claws in say California they wouldnt know what they are. And I think its a little more than "sour grapes". When you go to Bartle you have to sit thru an endless barrage of Mic stuff like speeches, dancing, callouts and all that. As an adult just try and talk to a group of Mic people and see how quickly you are shunned. When it comes down to it Mic works to keep older scouts involved and adults involved and of course, paying money in.
  8. I'd like to ask, what do you think you gained from Micosay? I've talked to several members and they have admitted their is really little advantage in real life outside Bartle. it doesnt help you get into college or a job. I mean think of it. If you were in say New York and you had your Micosay necklace with all your beads and your painted claws, they wouldnt know its meaning.
  9. My son just got back from Bartle and he said he was really getting tired about how much they pushed Mikosay down there. For those of you not in the Heart of America district the Tribe of Mikosay http://www.hoac-bsa.org/mic-o-say is a local scouting honor society similar to Order of the Arrow. Now I really have no problem with the group but its just that they push it so much. At Camp Bartle they have specific areas where only Mikosay members can enter (granted they are very small). Almost every evenings campfire was centered around Mikosay (callouts and such) especially nights 4,6 and 8. No
  10. I think the OP's points are WHY we still need Scouting. Years ago we kids did some similar things but you know what? We lived in an area which had rural or undeveloped areas around us so we could do such things. Nowadays my kids and most others live in suburbs where every yard is mowed and landscaped and fenced off and building a treehouse practically requires a city permit. So we need Scouting to get the kids outside and doing things.
  11. I think the publicity behind this has embarrassed the GSA. I've posted this discussion on other boards and GSA admits their program is severely lacking in rugged outdoors activities. They defend their GSA program and claim that their program is what the girls wanted and supposedly, the girls voted out the camping component. I will say the GSA has at least put a face on emphasizing more camping. For the first time since the 70's their is now a girl scout knife offered on their website. Still no girl scout axe though which they DID have in 1953. In fact they now offer way more camping essent
  12. This is also ignoring the fact that many girls also participate in Cub Scouts with their brothers.
  13. You can always build an observation hive. Basically a hive with 1 side being glass so you can see them at work. The problem with beekeeping is they are alot of work and someone has to be inc charge of maintaining them.
  14. I have an idea. What if there was a badge or reward specifically for each state that the Scouts could earn? This badge would be issued maybe by the state itself to Scouts who have visited, camped at, and hiked a certain amount of designated sites in that state. Sites could include state, national, and local parks, scenic areas, military bases, and historical sites. What I'd like to see is an emphasis on the outdoor attractions and nature with less emphasis on indoor attractions. Granted states like California could have more than one. I think it would be a great way for the Scouts to explo
  15. Well we are from Kansas and nobody here as far as I know has done the A.T. I just thought it would be a great high adventure trip. Thing is from what your saying is its best to have people along who have already done it. For example this thing with the shelters. Plus I hear the AT can be pretty crowded at times and have quite a party culture. Maybe we should try something else.
  16. Has any Scout troops out there done the Appalachian trail or could you give some insights into such a trip?
  17. You think OA is bad, try Micosay. This is a similar honor society in the Heartland area that I cannot see any real advantage for other than keeping older scouts involved. Other than that I see no college scholarships and no business networking opportunities. But go to Bartle and they look down on you if your not wearing the claws. Now at least with OA I've seen them do alot with mentoring and helping the scouts with business and personal goals.
  18. Well for a Dutch oven you often need as much heat on the top as you do on the bottom so thats why you put some coals on top.
  19. Kibbee sounds interesting. Hmmm. stuffed grape leaves. Only had that at restaurants so should be interesting at a campfire. Pizzelle? I looked that up. Is that a kind of waffle?
  20. Thanks for the replies so far. We had a camporee this weekend and I thought it would be interesting to give demonstrations about doing traditional Asian or at least non traditional foods on the campfire. For example it would be interesting to see what Japanese, Korean, Chinese, or Indian Scouts would eat on a campfore. But also say Pakistani, Russian, Polish, French, or Italian scouts would eat. You can get kind of an idea when you watch videos of the World Scouting Jamboree.
  21. I'd like to ask our international friends what unique foods they eat around the campfire that we might not see in the USA. For example, we sometimes cook food in foil. This is where you put your meat and vegatables in foil, wrap them up, and put them in the fire to cook. Then you eat right out of the foil. Do you do that? Do you cook in what we call a "Dutch oven"? Do you cook in cast iron? A common breakfast is what we call a "hobo meal". That is shredded potatoes, sausage, eggs, topped with cheese cooked in a dutch oven. What would you call that? Do you do s'mores? Do yo
  22. I support you all in pushing to keep the camp but OTOH, you all should double your efforts to bring in more funding or increase the use of the camp. Any chance you could encourage other Scout groups to camp there?
  23. I'd say it would be better to have some sort of emergency radio. Sending 2-4 scouts 20 miles away to find help would be crazy and besides, how often are we more than an hour or two away from where we can get help? Efven at Philmont arent they no more than 3-4 hours away from a checkpoint? Maybe a better plan is to teach someone how to get to a high point and call for help?
  24. Thing is if a troop is truly "Scout lead" you as an adult need to be willing to sit back and allow for some mistakes, some goofing off, and a little less quiet formality. I learned this because we recently moved from one troop that was heavily adult led to one that was way more scout led and we had our first Court of Honor last weekend. Boy what a difference. In the adult one it was all very solemn, quiet, formal. Adult leaders handed out every badge and ran the ceremony. Everything was neat and trim and by the numbers. Exactly what you'd expect from a troop lead by adults age 50 pl
  25. I'd like to ask you all, how many of you have seen girls doing cub scout, webelos and boy scout activities "under the table"?
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