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Jameson76

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Everything posted by Jameson76

  1. They are spinning the big money wheel in Dallas to decide, gotta make up for the 20% impending drop in revenue (LDS departure) while protecting the National Scout Professionals salaries.
  2. Easy way is to donate to the CO (assuming the are a 501c3) FBO (for the benefit of) the troop for a period etc. Depending on how much may be good to get a board to oversee.
  3. We have built one for the troop (not the backpacking one) and started with the Philmont recommendations. Then we have added many items; band aids, additional wipes, etc. Mainly things for small injuries. Also added more of the large band aids. Good to keep some antiseptic cremes, ant-acids, on hand. While some do not, we do keep ibuprofen, some benadryl, and other pain relievers in the kit. Also there are some splints, chemical ice packs, some other more severe care items. This is in a large kit. We were fortunate to have a parent donate an AED, that is kept in the kit. The top of the one we have has a smaller section that opens and we keep small wound care items there. Due to the AED (concerned about the heat and the battery) we keep the kit at a leaders house, bring it to meetings and then outings. For backpacking we carry the standard PSR load out.
  4. As others have noted, reminder that while WB does pass along some management techniques, it is not the end all be all of the BSA nor does it make anyone who completes their ticket an expert at running a unit. The training is more management and less specific to actually running a unit. The nuts and bolts come from position specific training. The kool aid comment is the reminder to take the course for what it is, and recognize it for what it is not. For actual training on how to run a unit I would suggest position specific training, also reviewing some of the older (for now Scouts BSA) SM handbooks, and some of the older Fieldbooks that show woodcraft and outdoor items. Remember that successful units have fun. There is the mission of the Boy Scout - The mission of the Boy Scouts of America is to prepare young people to make ethical and moral choices over their lifetimes by instilling in them the values of the Scout Oath and Law. It is hard to prepare young people for all of that if you do not in fact have young people in your unit. Main effort should be to have an engaging program as the first priority, then the mission etc comes as a by product.
  5. As an interest point, what (if any other than an interested parent) is your role with the troop? Though it does not always tend to work this way, The Scoutmaster is selected and recruited by the troop committee and approved by the chartered organization representative. If there is an issue (perceived or real) that is the place to begin. Challenge is many times the committee and COR are not directly involved in the troop operations. But that is a place to start with your concerns. I would not recommend the talking to other parents, generating some groundswell of support for your positions, sort of going the back door route. If you have concerns, speak with the committee and be open about them.
  6. As will we, and post photos of us doing so. We clearly state that Scouts are not to target the other scouts, they are to aim for the area beside the scout and if said scout elects to move into that area, then so be it. There's always British Bulldogs.....
  7. Well...I guess that's one way to raise a million dollars This is comedy gold from the FAQ section: Ways you and your unit can raise the funds to cover the $12 Insurance Fee -Participate in the annual popcorn sale and have each Scout sell an additional three (3) containers of popcorn. Not sure what the question is...but the answer always seems to be SELL POPCORN
  8. Sort of agree. IIMHO it is correct that JUST being an Eagle Scout will not get you into college, a job, or will "pay off" down the road. However, if you actually ARE an Eagle Scout, the soft skills and lessons learned on the journey will put you ahead of the crowd, and will benefit you down the road. It is amazing how many people do not really understand how to actually get something done. Being in a storm and determining best path forward, salvaging a meal when somebody has forgotten something, having to make decisions quickly while your patrol looks on, trying to organize a group and complete a hike, watching the looks in the Scout you are working with finally gets up on the water skis; all of that imparts upon an Eagle scout the ability to get stuff done.
  9. You know, if they really really were interested, possibly "they" (whomever they may be) that are in fact making decisions, policy, and program decisions could actually go out and see Scouts in the wild. I have asked this question to Council Board Members, Scout Executive of the Council, Council Camping and Program chairpersons; when was the most recent time you were on an outing? Typically their answer falls into two areas 1) I was at Jamboree, the Council Event, came to Summer camp for the day OR 2) I was a leader XX years ago. My follow-up is when was the last time you been in the parking lot as a troop assembles, driven to the outing, wandered about the outing as the youth setup and started camp, sat with the adults, cooked a meal, mentored a youth on properly cooking bacon (Protip - you have to peel the strips off the big hunk-o-bacon for it to fry up), participated in the weekend program, maybe administered some first aid, counseled two youth who may have had a disagreement, maybe sit on a BOR one evening, pack up camp, loaded the trailer up, waited at the church for the parents. That is where Scouting happens. If the powers that be were truly interested, there are lots of troops out there, camping every weekend. GO AND SEE, talk with Scouts and Leaders. Surveys tend to tell you want you want to hear. Real change or understanding involves actual involvement with the program.
  10. We went very simple All are 3 x 5 flags, these are on 8' standard 1" dowels (available at Home Depot). We stained these US flag was made in USA and sourced locally at the hardware store Troop flag is the new one from wherever they come from State flag is a synthetic, not sure country of origin
  11. Wow - that is some Educational Ivory Tower wide ranging ramblings. Interesting the writer makes a number of broad statements, but little or no actual foundation. Some interesting revisionist history, they fall into the trap of viewing historical events in the lens of current thinking.
  12. We are about 90% Scouts in hammocks and 50% leaders
  13. When we go on hikes, even short ones, we stress the rule of 3's for being out and dictating what your priorities may be. Note these are generalities, this makes it simple to remember: You can survive 3 weeks without food You can survive 3 days without water Your may survive 3 hours without shelter in the rain Key being shelter is vital. Our SPL on a Webelos visitation campout was explaining the importance of a jacket and the emergency blanket as the troop went on a hike. The Scouts repeated (in unison) " You can survive 3 weeks without food, 3 days without water, 3 hours without shelter in the rain...take proper shelter or die". Some of the Cub parents thought it was a bit over the top, my response was that we want all of the Scouts to clearly understand what needs to be the priority when out in the woods. I asked them what they hoped their son would do if in 10 years he was on a hike with friends on a fall afternoon and a sudden rainshower hits the group, soaking them, the temperature was dropping, and they were several miles from the trailhead; what would you hope they did? One of the Scouts overheard and said seek shelter, build a fire as much as possible and calmly assess the next step. I said nothing else.
  14. As others noted, bear tacos is one reason (though pretty unlikely). Main reasons are tree damage, spreading sites out to the trees, also there are wandering deer etc that could get hung up on the hammocks. Potentially a better shelter in a tent. Last thing may be it would be a might chilly. You would still need pads, potentially heavier sleep gear, rainfly, etc. Not sure you would save a great amount of weight
  15. That too is my concern. The inevitable slide. So you are camped out in a back country site. Your crew of 16 - 17 year olds, say day 7 or 8. There is a crew of Mustangs in the next camp. Maybe it's their only night out, so they are more boisterous. Also it can lessen the feeling of being out and away. At the surface, seems benign, it would not take much to have a less than favorable impact. Maybe there are ways to promote outdoors and not be out in the crown jewel of Boy Scouts backcountry. Hey...there's always Summit and they desperately need folks to go there. Make it Family Scouting paradise and leave the rest of us alone. Not sure how many families you need attending to pay down an over $125 million balloon bond payment....
  16. Not 100% sure about that. There were many pics posted by PTC with the kids and families out and about in the back county. (see one example below). Not much a stretch to see this could impact the remoteness and "adventure" experienced by the 12 days crews when they come across a group of kids or families on the trail. Sort of like when families come up mid-week to summer camp, can changes the dynamics of the experience. I wonder what the long-term impact of more families, family scouting, the family glamping, will be to the Philmont experience for the 20,000 Scouts and Leaders that come to New Mexico looking for the (literally) mountain top backpacking and crew experience as part of their Scouting journey. A group of Mustangs from the Philmont Training Center hike toward Crater Lake's main cabin after spending the night in the backcountry.
  17. Once you write stuff down, you have to start abiding by it. Use the documents from BSA on structure, etc. Everything else should be situational. Don't reinvent the wheel. We have a 100 +/- Scout troop. No troop rules, by laws, etc. We do give out information on how we do stuff. Maybe 1 page?? Only written rule not covered by BSA is no cell phones on the outings, summer camp.
  18. Not sure if this would work in all councils / districts / towns / CO's; but I know we could raise more money than we knew what to do with selling something like this...
  19. That pretty much sums up a great issue...SIX YEARS OF CUB SCOUTS. The Cubs used to be sort of the waiting room for Scouts, as that was the really good stuff. Now it can be a 6 year slog to Scouts, parents may determine to do something new. Also after SIX YEARS OF CUB SCOUTS many parents (can you say family scouting) expect Troops to be the same, or in many cases worry that it will be more of the same
  20. Good reading https://www.nuvo.net/voices/guestvoices/your-kid-and-my-kid-are-not-playing-in-the/article_768c0500-0f5b-5b63-961d-b2be73b3d7f3.html
  21. Cautious reminder that many of the advertisements on the benefits (and not discounting there are positive aspects) of youth sports are driven in many cases by groups that will benefit financially from youth sports Sporting goods stores and manufacturers that sell equipment Coaches who are paid and need customers Associations that run the "exclusive" tournaments and need the revenue Private coaching and instructional academies that need customers Groups running sports camps that need attendees Parks and rec groups that have fields that see leagues as rental clients For the "elite" youth athlete I have questioned the wisdom to pay $4k - $6 annually to participate in a sport for 6 - 8 years with hopes/plans of getting a scholarship. That same money spent could be invested and you could pay for most of college. If they like a sport, maybe there is a rec program. Interestingly the participation in Sports has come to define many youth, and I guess their parents. Not sports bashing in any way. But I have seen a evolution in the last 40 years from kids playing 3 to 4 sports, having fun, off season, doing random sports things to the drive for 1 sport at 8 or 9, year round, and that's it. Kids get burned out, injured etc. Youth need family sports (organized and just exercise) social things (church group, Scouts, youth groups) academic (school) free time All of that should part of a balance kid
  22. We provide the insurance detail for our out of council summer camp. It's on the council website I did have to provide a certificate of insurance from the council when we camped at a county park (not sure why), the service center assisted.
  23. A lot to unwrap here, but this pretty much sums it up As Dirty Harry said in Magnum Force "a man's got to know his limitations" Your limitations may be turning this Titanic around Not sure of the timing but 4 Scoutmasters in a few short years is a sign of trouble The one who slapped a Scout (Was his name Patton??) The one there when you joined You The next Scoutmaster victim As a comparison my home troop had 4 Scoutmasters in 16 years 70's and 80's. Current troop has had 2 in last 19 years, retired one and current. Overall in 35 years current troop has had 9 SM's and one had a short tenure due to heart attack.
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