Jump to content

IndyScouter

Members
  • Content Count

    31
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by IndyScouter

  1. Yes, you heard right. I saw the plans last summer and you could have heard my chin hit the ground. I will write more about this later but right now I am still too mad about the decision to move on this project. I want to finish my day of Thanksgiving on a positive note.
  2. What camp did you say you worked at again? I think a treasure hunt into unknown woods sounds more fun than teaching my classroom of masked students next week. Hmmm...I could make it a field trip! 😁. I just need 30 shovels and a tape measure for social distancing.
  3. Great idea. We start next week and I am heading to the dollar store and see if I can't get a complete set for my classes. I might have to change my curriculum to underwater basket weaving. 😁
  4. Wow, I thought I was only old timer here. Most of the "youngins" I know have never heard of a baker tent(or wall tent). Probably thought it was were the kitchen staff slept. 😁😁
  5. I am a high school math teacher who has used the Canvas platform for several years through our local school corporation. I download all my power point lesson plans, word documents, etc into "my clasroom" and my students can access them when they are absent, when our school goes to all e learning days for snow days(northern Indiana) or more recently when Covid hit back last March. The teacher can also write quizzes/tests that students can take to show mastery on that topic. I also used It for one on one tutor (canvas conference) during E learning where the student and I could hear each other
  6. Sorry to hear that. I hope you will get another chance in the future. Thanks for working on the front lines...not an easy job ever but more so this year. Good luck with the certification. I pray you stay safe and healthy.
  7. Hey ItsBrian, Did you ever get to camp this summer?
  8. SSScout, I wish I had thought about writing down the stories earlier this summer. I am just about ready to go back to work(teacher) and I could have used some of my free time for writing stories. Ok, I will try to outline as many stories I can remember now and save the grunt work for winter or summer break. Great suggestion too!
  9. Qwazse, Thanks for the advice. My daughter and wife already roll their eyes and shake their heads at me when I tell one of my dad jokes. I have always had a tendency to tell very bad puns and have always blamed it on my dad's sense of humor. Did not think of it until now that I have been telling them about his "life lessons" too. Great way to memorialize the man he was.
  10. Thanks for the kind words. I inherited all my dad's scouting patches, files, pictures, etc and decided to get them out to see if he had one particular area of scouting he cared about more than others. Found tons of great memories...some that I had forgotten about and some that I had no idea about.😊 One particular item was a container that had 2 hand axes, 2 scout knifes, a whet stone, a metal file, a compass, a roll of twine, a mess kit, a small Coleman stove(coffee pot size), matches, various scout handbooks and a box of skill awards. I had forgotten that he brought this container to EVER
  11. Hey fellow scouts, I am new at starting a topic in this forum so please forgive me if I don't do this correctly. In June, my father died after living to a ripe old age of 80. Dad was an active leader in our troop and after my brothers and I moved on to college he stuck around to help as a leader for other troops and the district. I feel like I should honor his time in scouts in some special way. It got me to thinking that I am sure some of you have seen or participated in some special ceremonies for scouts or scouters who have passed away. I have a few ideas of how to praise him priv
  12. Having been in the program for many years all the way through to Eagle, scouting taught me so many of the items you listed and more. I can't tell you how many times I used my knowledge and/or experiences from my earned merit badges, camping and hiking troop events, and my cub scout camp staff days to complete my current life tasks. The chance to be a responsible youth leader in scouts prepared me to be a good leader and follower in life. That would be the carrot for parents. For the youth side, an active troop promotes itself through the activities they do. The second troop we joined
  13. On my...I just about wet my pants reading these comments. Oh no...I better not get those senior diaper ads!
  14. Really! That is cool. Might want to make me drop by and see the first aid office. You know... just to make sure I was fully cured. 😁
  15. Congratulations! I would read your friends recommendations and get comfortable with your council physicians orders for various treatments. I bet 75 to 80 % of the injuries are solved with a simple band aid and some comforting words. Not a bad idea to also have a health care officer backup person. It seems like injuries to campers always came in pairs and usually they were in opposite ends of the camp. The back up person can be trained in simple first aid so they can take of any simple problems while you take care of any major first aid cases. We even had a golf cart dedicated for the fir
  16. Hmmm...loved those pie irons meals. We used them all the time at our cub scout summer day camp. We did the apple/cherry pies the first year. I think we switched to grilled cheese the second year. The third year we went to a local mall pretzel company(Aunt Annies) and asked them for their recipe for pretzels. They were more than willing to give us their secret and we had pretzels with cheese sauce that year. Very popular with all age groups. I like your breakfast idea. Why is my nose smelling maple syrup???? 😊
  17. Thanks for the belly laugh! Needed to read that after a long, hard day of reading sad and depressing news.
  18. Totally agree with pushing water at camp. We had one camp in our council that started treating every minor headache, stomache, etc with sips of water and a short period of rest out of the sun. They found that most of the cub scouts were ready for action after 10 to 15 minutes with no further problems or medication needed. Some scouts just push themselves to play hard and need an adult to give them a short break. At our camp we always used the BSA first aid log book to document ALL cases brought to the first aider... No matter how small the issue was! Even a scratch was documented by t
  19. Thank you Rick_in_CA for this video. I am fairly new to the site and had not seen it before now. This clip is GREAT! After I started it, I thought it was just another safety video and I almost clicked it off but the last few seconds of the video changing from past to present made it very powerful. It sums up all of how I view my training as a youth in Scouting. Not all lessons I learned were as powerful as this video but as I continue through life there are constant reminders that my trail to eagle was a series of life skills/lessons that I could use along the way to make the road of life
  20. Hmmmm...Dutch oven treats made during an October weekend campout. Brings back memories of the old troop. My mouth is watering already.
  21. I agree Prof. Hate to see some of the old CAC camps be sold off. Spent many weekends on camp outs and Firecrafter rituals at both Red Wing and Bear Creek as a youth and an adult. I feel sad for the scouts who have spent years keeping the scouting spirit alive at each camp.
  22. I need some help trying to identify the following set of felt patches. They all originated from Camp Chank-tun-un-gi(now called Camp Belzer) located in Indianapolis. I am trying to find any history that anyone can provide about these vintage felt patches. I am guessing they were all pre-1948 since the camp name changed in honor of "Chief Belzer". There could be additional patches with this same design. Any information the forum can provide would be helpful.
  23. I will encourage you to keep up the push for your course. As I stated in my post, our council had adults who saw the importance of gun education in the 70s and proved that it could be a great benefit to the youth if we'll done. It was only at my first National Camping School in the early 80s that I saw National bring out the first demo of a gun range and how to teach it to the youth. At the same school one of the school instructors 👍pulled me to the side after the demo and asked me how our leaders were doing with the program. Based on what I saw they had used our successful program to teac
  24. I think we should always continue teaching our youth about gun safety. At our local cub scout day camp we started doing so since the mid 70s. We felt that exposing the cubs and webelos at an early age to a BB gun was extremely important. They needed to see adults treat the guns with respect and see that an unloaded gun by itself is not dangerous. It is what the handler intends to do with it that can be the dangerous part. We did not have shooting issues in the schools at that time period but it was more of an issue of a child finding a gun for the first time and the curiosity it can bring
  25. Excellent. You can actually solve a long standing question that many of us having been having the last few years. One of the staff photos had been marked as 1982 and I was fairly certain that it was 1983, the year that you worked. I am going to attach the staff photos for that year. I do believe I found you in the back right of the photo. Can you verify you see yourself? As long as you are certain that you worked only during 1983, then we will work on making sure we change it back the way I remembered it.
×
×
  • Create New...