Illinois Scouts BSA troop for girls is thriving, plus other good news from this week

Troop 2119 in Champaign-Urbana, Illinois, started four years ago, when girls were first invited to join Scouts BSA. Four years later, a handful of its members spoke to their local paper about what Scouting has meant to them.

“Scouts ultimately saved my life,” says one member. “I was going down a really dark path, and I kind of found my way out of it through spending time outside, meeting really good people.”

“I hated camping,” says another. “In the back of my head, I was just like, ‘If I hate this, I’ll just quit.’”

She didn’t hate it, and she didn’t quit.

“We just talked the whole night, and it was so fun,” she says.

Read more about Troop 2119 in this article from The New-Gazette.

Scout builds furniture for school out of recycled wood

His school was prepared to spend around $10,000 on new furniture.

He did for under $500, and he raised the money himself.

For his Eagle Scout project, Xander Coker from Troop 35 in DeForest, Wisconsin, reclaimed the wood from a retired set of middle school bleachers and turned it into four tables and a bench. He also built and installed 12 resin-coated log seats with timber donated from a local tree-cutting company.

“I figured it was a good way to give back to the community, since it impacts a lot of people,” says Xander. “Most kids in the district will go through school here, so this will reach a lot of people.”

Read more about this cool project in this story from the Times-Tribune.

His experience in Scouting led him to be a first responder

“I became a first responder back in 2009 after attending Scouts,” says Trent Wenger, the president of Friendship Hose Company in Newville, Pennsylvania. “I was an Eagle Scout, and I was interested in the medical field.”

Read a profile of Wenger in The Sentinel newspaper.

Cub Scouts meet police working dogs

When police officers in Eureka, California, visited with the families of Cub Scout Pack 28, they brought along some furry friends.

The Cub Scouts met Yeti and Bodhi, and witnessed a demonstration of their abilities as police working dogs.

Read more about the Cub Scouts’ experience in this story from ABC 7 KRCR.

Leatherstocking Council’s first-aid competition puts Scouts’ skills to the test

Around 110 Scouts attended the Leatherstocking Council’s most recent first-aid “meet,” in Oneonta, N.Y., in which teams of five Scouts were tasked with solving specific first-aid scenarios to win the competition.

Teams got two minutes to discuss the scenario, and 10 minutes to complete it. Each team was judged on its performance. The judges rotated to a new team after each exercise.

“It teaches kids how to work together as a team,” says the event’s organizer. “It gives them skills, first aid skills, and is confidence building.”

Learn more about this fun event in this story from The Daily Star

Let’s meet this year’s National Order of the Arrow officers

Zach Grinvalsky, an Eagle Scout from the Tidewater Council, has been elected by his peers to serve as the 2023 Order of the Arrow national chief.

He and new national vice chief Grant Kim, an Eagle Scout from the Last Frontier Council, are part of a leadership team for the OA, the BSA’s national honor society. Both will serve one-year terms as the OA’s top youth leaders along with two regional youth chiefs.

Section chiefs elected these officers at last year’s national planning meeting. They will serve lodges across the country, providing them with resources. The national chief and national vice chief will also sit on the national Order of the Arrow committee and will represent the youth voice on the volunteer-led group.

They’ll also preside over national OA events. The most notable event this year will be Operation Arrow, the OA’s service-based opportunity at the national Jamboree. The Jamboree is slated for July 19-28 at the Summit Bechtel Family National Scout Reserve in West Virginia. There, Arrowmen can serve on the Jamboree staff either on the OA Service Corps or at a new outpost program called Summit Apex.

What is the Order of the Arrow?

The Order of the Arrow, founded in 1915, recognizes Scouts and Scouters who best exemplify the Scout Oath and Law. This recognition encourages others to live these ideals, too.

The OA includes members in Scouts BSA troops, Venturing crews and Sea Scout ships. Youth members are elected by their peers. To be eligible, they must meet camping and rank requirements. Both boys and girls can be elected. Adults can also be nominated to an area lodge.

There are three levels of membership within the OA: Ordeal, Brotherhood and Vigil. After fulfilling certain requirements, including service, a member can be recognized to the next level of honor. An updated requirement this year: Elected candidates will have 18 months from the date of their election to complete their Ordeal induction ceremony. This requirement was previously 24 months due to the temporary COVID-19 membership eligibility policy.

This year’s officers

2023 National Chief Zach Grinvalsky

 From: Virginia Beach, Va. (Tidewater Council)

Scouting background: Scout since 2011, Eagle Scout

OA background: Vigil Honor member from the Blue Heron Lodge, James E. West Fellow, Founder’s Award recipient, lodge chief, section chief

Education: Attends Tidewater Community College, studying business administration and management

Favorite hobbies: Watching movies, swimming, reading, hiking and spending time with friends.

Random fact: He wants to write a best-selling book one day.

Quotable: “2023 is a year like no other for the Order of the Arrow. This year is our chance to propel our spirit into the new era of Scouting we find ourselves in today. I can’t wait to meet all the incredible Arrowmen that make up the Order we all call home.” 

2023 National Vice Chief Grant Kim

From: Edmond, Okla. (Last Frontier Council)

Scouting background: Scout since 2014, Eagle Scout

OA background: Vigil honor member from Ma-nu lodge, Founder’s Award recipient, chapter chief, section chief

Education: Attends the University of Central Oklahoma, majoring in insurance and risk management and finance. 

Favorite hobbies: Hanging out with friends and listening to music. 

Random fact: He’s a great vocalist and an avid music enthusiast. 

Quotable: “This year, I am looking forward to meeting Scouts from all around the nation. I am excited to work with the Operation Arrow planning committee as we are coming together to create an all-brand new event to bring to Scouters at the Jamboree.”

2023 Eastern Region Chief Matthew Carlson

From: South Brunswick, N.J. (Monmouth Council)

Scouting background: Scout since 2010, Arrow of Light, Eagle Scout

OA background: Vigil honor member of Na Tsi Hi Lodge 71, Founder’s Award recipient, Eastern Region NLS staff member, lodge chief, section chief

Education: Attends Middlesex College, studying engineering science and physics.

Favorite hobbies: Climbing, hiking, going on road trips with his friends and volunteering at a local First Aid Squad.

Random fact: In middle school, he was on the wrestling team and one of the lead roles in the school musical.

Quotable: “In 2023, I am looking forward to meeting Arrowmen from across the Eastern Region, while also working with the other national officers and section chiefs to put on an incredible program in 2023 that will inspire Scouts to dream more, learn more, do more and become more.” 

2023 Gateway Region Chief Michael Whitford

From: Albuquerque, N.M. (Great Southwest Council)

Scouting background: Scout since 2010, Eagle Scout

OA background: Vigil honor member from the Yah-Tah-Hey-Si-Kess Lodge, Founders’ Award recipient, Gateway Region Order of the Arrow high-adventure coordinator, Section Chief

Education: Attends the University of New Mexico, studying business administration

Favorite hobbies: Being involved in two Venturing crews and Delta Sigma Pi, playing sports and spending time with friends. 

Random fact: The Yah-Tah-Hey-Si-Kess lodge is the lodge for the Great Southwest Council. That council serves Scouts in northern New Mexico, which is where Philmont Scout Ranch is located.

Quotable: “I’m incredibly excited to meet new Arrowmen at NLS/DYLC and conclaves across the Gateway Region as well as see thousands of Scouts from all around the country experience Summit Apex at the Jamboree.”

 

This Saturday, do a Conservation Good Turn by participating in Earth Hour

A Conservation Good Turn doesn’t have to be limited to something you do in the outdoors. As we approach Earth Day, consider participating in Earth Hour, when every person on Earth is asked to turn off the lights in their homes for one hour.

Earth Hour started in 2007, when it was introduced by the World Wildlife Fund. It has since found supporters all over the world, including our friends at Leave No Trace.

“Earth Hour shows the power of citizen activism and our ability to create positive impacts with relatively small actions,” the Leave No Trace organization writes on its official blog. “Take part in Earth Hour – and then take steps to minimize your energy consumption the other 8,759 hours in a year to live more sustainably and reduce your carbon footprint.”

How to participate in Earth Hour

What I like about the concept of Earth Hour is that you really don’t have to do all that much.

You could encourage your Scout families to simply turn off their lights for one hour on Saturday, March 25. That’s it!

Leave No Trace suggests you participate from 8 to 9 p.m. local time. The official Earth Hour website says 8:30—9:30.

With people all over the world in different time zones, I’m not sure that it really matters all that much when you participate, as long as you participate at some point on that day.

Have a dinner party planned for that time? Fine! Do your part earlier in the day!

Are you out and about during that time? No problem! Do your part when you get home!

And though the official Earth Hour site suggests that you could spend that hour learning more about ways to conserve the environment, it’s also enough to just listen to a podcast, go for a walk or spend some time talking with your family.

Does it really make a difference?

Earth Hour is partly a symbolic gesture.

“Earth Hour has been known for the ‘lights off’ moment, with individuals from around the globe switching off their lights to show symbolic support for the planet,” says the official Earth Hour site.

However, the Leave No Trace blog says global energy demand decreases by around 4% on that one day. So, there is some real impact.

Among the other things you can do to minimize your energy consumption throughout the year:

As your current light bulbs burn out, switch to LED bulbs. They use less electricity than traditional bulbs.
Turn off the lights when you aren’t in the room, and especially when you leave the home.
Wash your clothes in cold water. (This still feels weird to me, as my mom always taught me to wash clothes in warm or hot water, unless the colors could fade. But that was a long time ago! Modern detergents work just as well in cold water as they do in warm or hot water.)
In the summer, turn the AC up a couple of degrees and turn on a fan. In the winter, turn it down a couple of degrees and put on a sweater.

Click her to learn more about the BSA’s own Leave No Trace program.

Acoustic Music Camp should strike a chord with music lovers

Got an ear for string music? Or maybe you can barely carry a tune, but want to learn how to play?

Beginners and advanced players alike are invited to the Summit Bechtel Reserve this August for Acoustic Music Camp. The weeklong event will focus on instruments like the banjo, guitar, fiddle, mandolin and bass. Attendees will get to enjoy classroom lessons, improv sessions and nightly jams with talented instructors.

Instrument class sizes are limited, so register soon through the Acoustic Music Camp page. The camp is open to everyone, so you don’t have to be registered in Scouting to attend.

Let’s jam

You will get first-class instruction at the music camp, slated for Aug. 6-11. The music instructors will feature 2018 Banjo Player of the Year Ned Luberecki; Grand Ole Opry regular and flatpicking guitarist Tim May; Musical Heritage Center of Middle Tennessee owner and fiddler Gretchen Priest; Bluegrass Heritage Foundation president and bassist Alan Tompkins; and Acoustic Music Camp founder and guitarist Gerald Jones.

Jones, who has been playing music for almost 50 years, has hosted similar camps around the country for more than two decades.

At this camp, attendees will learn different musical styles and techniques. Moreover, it’ll be a great time to not only enhance your musical skills but also make new friends and hang out with fellow music lovers.

The hills are alive…with fun

This year’s music camp will be set in the beautiful, lush West Virginia wilderness. But you won’t have to rough it at the Summit. Attendees can choose to stay on the property with the all-inclusive options at the bunkhouses, glamping tents or Yamagata lodging. You can also go with the base registration, which includes meals and the music program but not lodging.

While you’re at the Summit, you can sign up for one of three different adventure packages to enjoy on one afternoon. Activities in the packages include zip lining, rock-climbing, BMX and skateboarding, virtual shooting, hatchet and knife throwing, fishing, stand-up paddleboarding and kayaking.

For more on the Acoustic Music Camp, including registration, you can check out the camp’s page.

Ask Us Anything! We answer some of your most frequently asked questions

Have questions about the BSA? You can ask us anything!

If we don’t have the answers, we’ll find someone who does.

Below are a handful of questions we’ve recently gotten from readers (some of them multiple times), along with the best answers we can provide.

Leave your question in the comments below or send us an email, and we’ll answer in a future post.

Q: I would like your opinion on requirement 10 for First Class. An adult leader in my troop recently said that “just inviting a friend” to attend a Scout activity and telling this friend about all the fun stuff we do in Scouting is enough to fulfill the requirement. The friend does not actually have to go to a Scout meeting or activity.

A: The rule of BSA advancement is that the requirement must be completed in a “no more, no less” manner. Requirement 10 for First Class reads (emphasis is mine):

Tell someone who is eligible to join Scouts, or an inactive Scout, about your Scouting activities. Invite your prospect to an outing, activity, service project or meeting. Give information on how to join, or encourage an inactive member to become active in Scouting again. Share your efforts with your leader.

So, those are the requirements — no more, no less. Nowhere does it say that the friend has to actually go to a meeting or activity — though, of course, it’d be great if the friend did indeed visit the troop.

Q: The Scuba BSA patch is bigger than a regular merit badge patch. Where is it placed?

A: Very observant! The Scuba BSA patch is about 2 inches wide, while merit badge patches are only about 1.5 inches wide. The Scuba BSA patch is designed to be worn on the left leg side of swim trunks, not on the Scouts BSA uniform or merit badge sash. Happy diving!

Q: How would a high-adventure base handle a Scout turning 18 while on the trail?

A: At Philmont Scout Ranch, participants 18 through 20 years of age may be counted as youth or adults; however, once they turn 18, they will need Youth Protection Training, and can no longer have a buddy who is a minor. My advice would be to make sure the participant submits an adult application and takes YPT before they leave.

Q: When is the next National Jamboree after 2023? Dating back to 1950 (with a few exceptions), it’s been every four years. 2021 was canceled due to COVID so now the Jamboree is 2023. Does that mean the next one will be 2027? Or do we realign and get back on track, so to speak, and go again in 2025?

A: While I love the enthusiasm, the BSA is fully focused for now on executing the best possible Jamboree we can this coming summer. Trust me: As soon as the next Jamboree is announced, you’ll hear about it here first!

Q: How do you ask a parent to leave the troop because they do not like how things are being done?

A: Asking any family to leave a BSA unit should always be the last option. First, I would make sure the Scoutmaster, committee chair and chartered organization representative are all aware of the issue. Get together and make sure everyone is on the same page. Next, I would schedule a meeting with the parent, always being sure to abide by the Scout Oath and Law. Calmly and patiently go over the basic tenets of the Scouts BSA program and how beneficial it can be if everyone — including parents — plays their roles, as designed by the program. Perhaps you’ve already done this. If so, I would bring in backup in the form of your unit commissioner or district executive. This is why they’re here — to help with issues like these. If all else fails, you can explain to the family that they are free to join any Scout unit they want. People are people, and sometimes there are bad fits. It happens. Full disclosure: When I was my son’s Cubmaster, there was one family who did not like how our pack operated. They ended up joining another pack with no hard feelings, and everything turned out fine.

Eagle Scout earns rare honor from Nat Geo, plus other good news from this week

Lee Berger, Eagle Scout and award-winning researcher and paleoanthropologist, has been named a National Geographic Explorer in Residence.

It’s a big deal: The title of Explorer in Residence is highly prestigious, and there are only a handful of them at any given time.

“I am proud of my long relationship with National Geographic and thankful for their consistent support,” says Berger. “The National Geographic Society has played a significant role in supporting scientists who strive to understand human origins. I see it as a natural home for me and my work, as we share a curiosity and passion for understanding the very roots of humanity. I am excited for what more we can accomplish together as I undertake this new role.”

Berger has long been a supporter of Scouting. He helped create the Exploring merit badge back in 2017.

Read more about Berger’s latest honor on National Geographic’s official blog.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zHcV_sBxpas

Scouts BSA member saves family from drowning in Hawaii

“We were in Hawaii for my aunt’s wedding, and I saw a father and a son struggling to swim back into the shore. And then the mom went out there to try to help them, so I swim out there and helped them with my boogie board and I helped them swim back in to shore,” says Wesley Reed, 13, from Bossier City, Louisiana.

Reed earned the BSA’s Medal of Merit for his actions.

Read more about the heroic rescue at KSLA News 12 in Shreveport, La.

Scouts collect pajamas for foster children

For the third year in a row, Scouts from Troop 768 in Ramona, California, collected pajamas and donated them to a local foster children’s facility.

“We understand the difference made by just one pair of new pajamas to a foster child,” says Cyndi Wear, the grandmother of Scouts BSA member Brandon Duran, who led this year’s efforts. “It can mean the difference between making it and not making it out of that institution. I’m so proud of him.”

Read more about the project in the Ramona Sentinel.

Cortland County, N.Y., Scouts honor local community hero

Molly Reagan is an art teacher, Little League baseball coach, 1st– and 2nd-grade basketball coach, swimming instructor and musician.

The Baden-Powell Council will recognize Reagan for all she does at an upcoming banquet.

Read more about Reagan and the event at WHX News in Homer, N.Y.

Twins earn rank of Eagle together

“We’ve been working towards this for four to five years,” says 17-year-old Travis Richter. “It was something we’ve always wanted to accomplish.”

Travis and his twin, Austin, began their Scouting journey as Tiger Cub Scouts and have advanced through the program together ever since, eventually earning the rank of Eagle from Troop 55 in Santa Rosa, Calif.

“Scouting is our outlet,” says Austin. “We love being in nature with our troop. It’s kind of an escape from the world.”

Read more about the boys’ journey in The Press Democrat in Santa Rosa.

Guiding a Scout with neurodivergent issues through their Eagle Scout service project

The process of achieving the Eagle Scout rank is rigorous for any Scout. It is also designed so accommodations can be made for Scouts with disabilities or special needs. Guiding a Scout with neurodivergent issues can be done in a way that increases the Scout’s chances of completing the task without compromising the integrity of that process.

I recently heard from Gloria Wells, a parent and leader from Troop 240 in Gray, Tennessee. Wells is the parent of a Scout on the autism spectrum. She wanted to share her experience helping her child complete his Eagle Scout service project.

She notes that her experience may be useful to parents of Scouts with challenges such as sensory processing disorder, auditory processing disorder or attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.

The key, writes Wells, is to take the necessary steps to keep your Scout from feeling overwhelmed without taking over.

“Not taking over is key!” she writes. “Parents, hear this: Your job is to set up your child to succeed on their own. This is a pivotal moment for them. If you take over, they will understand that you thought they couldn’t do it.

“There is more at stake here than a rank. If you are the one communicating with the beneficiary, making lists of materials and communicating with the troop about the work to be done, you need to take a step back and let your child lead.”

Read Wells’ tips below, click here to learn more about serving Scouts with disabilities, and click here for the BSA’ inclusion toolkit.

Choose the right beneficiary

The Eagle Scout service project is a task that may seem particularly overwhelming to your child. You know by now that your Aspie (Editor’s note: “Aspie” is a term used for those on the milder end of the autism spectrum; formerly called Asperger’s Syndrome.) is not pleasant when overwhelmed. Between your expertise at parenting your child and a few tips specifically related to the Eagle project, properly guiding a Scout with neurodivergent issues can set your child up to succeed.

First, it’s time to choose a project beneficiary. I highly recommend that you encourage your Scout to choose a beneficiary that has experience working directly with special-needs children, or a church or organization where those in charge already know your child. Doing so removes the potential barrier of having to explain your child’s struggles to the beneficiary. For example, your Scout could choose to build a play area for a group that provides respite care for families of children with special needs. That group’s representative would probably understand that your Scout may not make direct eye contact and won’t perceive that as rude.

You’ll also want your child to consider their sensory issues when choosing a project. If your Scout is extremely sensitive to smells, they will struggle immensely if they choose a project that requires that they paint inside. If your Scout can’t stand to wear work gloves, they shouldn’t pick a project that will require them. Also consider that this is a leadership project and not every facet must be done by the Scout. It is possible they could delegate a task they are unable to do themselves due to sensory issues. However, they are ultimately responsible for making sure it gets done.

Break the planning process down into smaller steps

Now that they’ve chosen an organization and project, it’s time to proceed with the planning. When considering all the added challenges of Asperger’s, it is particularly important to approach this project step by step, have a plan and stay on top of things so as not to get overwhelmed in the process. For time management, get your child a paper wall calendar and put it up near where they will be working.

Sit together and make some goals for when each step should be accomplished. Circle those dates, mark where you are now, and mount the calendar in a visible spot by the workstation. Set aside time daily or weekly for your Scout to work toward the next step. Do your best to provide the environment they need to work. If you have to send siblings outside, turn off the radio, or take the battery out of a ticking clock for your child to work, then do it.

It is not required to type out the paperwork. However, handwritten paperwork can be lost, and many Aspies cannot write legibly. Since they often do better with something they can touch, it may help your Scout if you help them create a paper chart they can touch to track their progress. I recommend writing down the steps on color-coded sticky notes and putting them on a paper or poster. That way, your Scout can move or remove sticky notes as tasks are completed and see and feel their progress. The tactile experience of something as simple as moving a sticky note can help a Scout with Asperger’s to see their progress and not feel so overwhelmed.

If multi-colored notes overwhelm your Scout, stick to one color, notes Wells. Photo courtesy of Gloria Wells

Do a dress rehearsal

Guiding a Scout with neurodivergent issues through the planning portion of the project could include a walkthrough of the project. Set up a time with your beneficiary to take your Scout to the worksite and let them visualize everything happening. Actually stand there and pretend to do the work.

“Okay, so I’m sanding this bench. Where is my power source? How many feet of extension cords do I need?”

“Now I’m painting this sign. Do I need anything? A drop cloth? Will I need paintbrushes for the different colors of paint, or will I have a place to clean brushes?”

It is one thing to picture the project while sitting at a desk filling out the plan, but it’s entirely different to walk through the site. There, your Scout can touch and feel where the work will be done. This will help you both think of details that may not have occurred to you at a desk. Having a chance to visualize the process and plan out every detail will help keep them from being overwhelmed when the big day comes, everyone is staring at them waiting for instructions, and your Scout realizes they didn’t tell their helpers to bring gloves. Planning every detail prevents meltdowns.

On the workday, stand back and let your child lead. Have them assign you a task and stick to it. Be available to your Scout for consulting. Always refer helpers’ questions to your Scout. Be Prepared to let things go wrong and let your child learn. You’re there as a coach and cheerleader. You must keep yourself from taking over, even if you have to let go of your own perfectionism.

Apply the same process to completing the paperwork

When the task is complete, there’s just the review paperwork left. It’s not nearly as overwhelming, but the basic idea of guiding a Scout with neurodivergent issues still applies: environment, time management and seeing how much progress has been made. Just keep reminding them that they’re almost done. Have your Scout download the “Life to Eagle Checklist” and follow the steps. When the paperwork and rank application are complete, communicate with the council ahead of time if any accommodations are needed for the upcoming board of review.

The rank of Eagle Scout is a prestigious honor that is attainable for non-neurotypical Scouts. As a parent of a Scout with Asperger’s you are in the exciting position to set them up to succeed. By helping them make a concrete checklist of goals, keeping their differences in mind when helping them choose a project, and offering support and understanding, you can coach from the sidelines as they reach this momentous goal. The benefits of this experience will extend far beyond just earning a rank. Your Scout will launch into adulthood knowing they can accomplish great things if they consider their challenges, make a plan and stick to it.

The Scout Life Job Board is the best way to find Scout camp jobs

Scout camp jobs can be some of the most rewarding, character-building, team-bonding experiences anyone can have.

We know this. Our council staff and volunteers know this.

But how do we make sure everyone else knows this?

Introducing the Scout Life Job Board, designed to bring job hunters and Scout camps together to create one (or more!) meaningful summer job experiences.

The benefits of working at a BSA property are many. Most of all, it’s fun, but it also teaches youth skills such as dependability, teamwork, leadership, responsibility and the value of hard work.

I have been to a Scout camp on the final week of the season. I have seen up close the look in the eyes of the staffers who were about to say goodbye to each other.

Trust me: They might have all been ready to go home, but none of them wanted it to end.

I know someone who’d be interested in the Scout Life Job Board. What do I do?

Send them straight to the Scout Life Job Board. No membership is required.

Applicants can search for a job near them, or far away, whatever they prefer.

They can search by keywords, such as “aquatics” or “first aid” or “merit badges” or “ropes course.” They can also search by age and state.

Some job postings will have an email address applicants can use to get more information. Others might feature a link to the council’s own job page

And it’s not just for kids!

Council camps often hire adults and youth older than 15. The BSA’s national high-adventure bases seek adult staff 18 years or older.

Scout camp jobs offer a variety of schedules to fit your availability. While most camps staff up considerably for the summer months, they also need some seasonal staff all-year long.

Councils are adding more and more jobs every day, so if you don’t see an opening near you, bookmark the site and keep checking back.

I represent a council. What do I need to do?

Scout Executives, camp directors, or whoever is in charge of staffing should go to the “Post a Job” page here: https://jobs.scoutlife.org/post-a-job/
Create your free account. (Please check your junk, spam or clutter folders for your verification email.)
Post either a single listing promoting all of the jobs available at your camp; or create individual posts for each job.
In the “job description” field, make sure you use key words to help Scouts find the right job. Examples would be “lifeguard,” “ranger,” “backpacking,” “horseback riding,” “shooting sports,” etc.
Post the job. That’s it! You’re done!

Why find a Scout camp job?

The only thing as fun and rewarding as attending summer camp as a participant is working at camp as a staffer.

The benefits of working at a BSA camp include:

It’s a great work experience to put on a resume;
It gives people the opportunity to meet potential future employers — all the adult leaders that come to camp;
It gives people the opportunity to become lifelong friends with fellow staff members;
It allows Scouts to be a positive influence on others;
In addition to a weekly salary, summer camp staffers also usually get room and board.
Working at summer camp still allows staffers enough free time to go on vacation with their families or do other fun things during the summer.

How this Indiana Scouting leader helps four units thrive at one church

Scouting has long been an integral part of the youth program at St. Timothy Community Church in Gary, Indiana.

It’s believed that the relationship began with Rev. Robert Lowery, who came to the church from Chicago in 1957. Lowery would eventually become the Scoutmaster of Troop 53 and would later be presented with the Silver Beaver Award.

“Growing up, it was just always expected that any young boy that came through our church would join Scouts,” says longtime member Kellauna Mack.

Sadly, as Mack and other church members were preparing a celebration to commemorate his 50th year of service to the church, Lowery died.

But thanks to Mack and other members like her, Scouting at St. Timothy lives on. The church currently charters a Cub Scout pack, a Scouts BSA troop for boys, a Scouts BSA troop for girls and a Venturing crew as part of its youth program.

“Don’t let my troop die,” Lowery pleaded with Mack after he became seriously ill.

She didn’t.

Kellauna Mack stands with several members of her Venturing crew. Photo courtesy of Kellauna Mack

From Webelos leader …

Though she had been around Scouting most of her life, Mack’s induction into the world of official Scouting leadership began when her first child joined the program.

Ken Whisenton was born in 1994. As soon as he was old enough, Mack signed him up for the church’s Cub Scout pack. Like many of the other moms, Mack made herself available to help out as needed.

Then came the moment that all Cub Scout leaders remember.

“They didn’t have a Webelos leader, and my pastor was like, ‘You should do that,’ ” says Mack. “And I was like, ‘no … no … no …’ ”

You can probably guess what happened next.

First, she was the Webelos leader.

Then, she became Scoutmaster, as her son moved up to what at the time was called Boy Scouts.

And when her son earned Eagle and moved away from home, she didn’t leave the troop.

Photo courtesy of Kellauna Mack

… to Scoutmaster

Mack’s second child, Kendall, was born 9 years after Ken. Back then, she wasn’t allowed to join Cub Scouts, but she was allowed to attend family camping activities.

“Scouting really was a family thing for us,” says Kendall. “My whole family was there.”

When she turned 14, she helped create a Venturing crew from scratch so she could officially be a member of the BSA. She served as crew president.

Then, the day finally came when she could join an actual troop as part of the Scouts BSA program.

“I never thought the day would come for girls to join Scouting,” says Kendall. “I remember my mom waking me up on that day and saying, ‘We’re going to register you as a Scout today.’

“It was time for me to lock in. I was on a mission. We got to work.”

Ken remembers those times as well.

“I was a huge advocate for (girls in Scouting),” he says. “Why wouldn’t I want my baby sister to be equipped to handle life? There are so many things I’ve encountered in life that don’t phase me. These are skills and a mindset I wanted my sister to have. Those should be universal skills, not only male or female.”

A few years later, Kendall was part of the BSA’s inaugural class of female Eagle Scouts. She was the first Black female Eagle Scout in her area, and one of the first in the nation.

Kendall Jackson is one of 14 young women in the Chicago metropolitan area to earn the Eagle Scout rank and the area’s first Black woman to do so.

“To say I have made Black history is a blessing. It is very humbling.” https://t.co/jd775TrXmt

— Chicago Tribune (@chicagotribune) February 19, 2021

Sticking with Scouting

Ken, now 28, is currently a community development reporting manager at Huntington Bank. He regularly commutes to Chicago, New York or Pittsburgh for his job.

Kendall, 19, is studying radiation therapy at Howard University.

With both of her kids out of the home, Mack has never seriously considered quitting Scouting.

She is now a field director at The Pathway to Adventure Council, a committee member for Pack 53, an assistant Scoutmaster for Troop 53G, Scoutmaster for Troop 53B, and an Advisor for Crew 53.

In her office, there’s a poster marketing Scouting to girls, featuring a picture of Kendall.

“The program works,” she says. “It teaches kids to Be Prepared for life. I believe in the program. It makes all the difference in the world. I will always support the program.”

St. Timothy’s congregation is predominately Black, as are the Scouts in the units it charters.

Selling Scouting to the Black community has its challenges, says Mack. But she has a hard time taking no for an answer.

“I tell them Scouting is for life, and life is for everybody,” she says. “I tell them all the things and the skills that the children learn. I talk about being prepared.”

Thankfully, she doesn’t do it alone.

Left: Kendall and Kellauna at a rainy Scout outing. Right: Ken and Kendall at Kendall’s Eagle Scout Court of Honor. Photos courtesy of Kellauna Mack

Rallying the community

When she first became Scoutmaster, she went to Scout leaders from other units in her area.

“I linked up with them right away,” she says. “I said, ‘What’s this all about? Help me!’ And they really stepped up to the plate.”

Later, she found support from her Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority.

And, through it all, there’s been the support of St. Timothy, which provides a place for the units to meet and volunteers to help with a variety of tasks as part of the church youth program.

The youth play a major role in the annual Scout Sunday service, and Mack does a presentation recapping everything the kids have done in the previous year.

“Because we have four units, we take over everything,” she says.

After seeing that, the congregation inevitably steps up with whatever the kids need.

“Every year, it always helps to remind people what we’re doing,” she says. “One time, I heard from a lady who was like, ‘You know I can teach first aid, right?’ And another lady called and said she can teach swimming.

“My ex-husband still helps out. I’ll call him up like, ‘Guess what? You’re driving the trailer this weekend.’ ”

Kellauna and Ken over the years. Photos courtesy of Kellauna Mack

Moving forward

It’s been 16 years since Rev. Lowery’s death.

A section of nearby 25th Avenue was renamed Rev. Dr. Robert E. Lowery Drive. Many Scout activities take place in the Rev. Dr. Robert E. Lowery Ministry Center, the church’s banquet facility that was remodeled in 2015.

“We discovered our main focus was our youth,” Rev. Alfred Johnson, who took over the position of pastor after Lowery, told The 411 Weekly News Magazine back in 2016. “This new building was designed to minister to youth.”

Scouts have formed the foundation of its church youth program, and Scouts from St. Timothy have been to high-adventure bases, traveled overseas, visited big cities and tiny communities, and done countless service projects in between.

It’s not all because of Kellauna Mack, but a lot of it is.

This summer, she’ll take a contingent to the National Scout Jamboree. After that, they’ll go to Puerto Rico to volunteer with Habitat for Humanity. And after that, it’s off to summer camp.

Photo courtesy of Kellauna Mack

Solid as steel

Gary, Indiana, is home to the largest steel mill complex in North America. Mack calls Crew 53 the Steel City Crew. She says S.T.E.E.L. stands for service, travel, education, entrepreneurship and leadership, named after the tenets upon which they’ve built that unit.

But I was thinking it could just as well refer to the strong-as-steel foundation that Scouting has established within the church and surrounding community.

“You know, we’re alive and well,” says Mack. “And our church — those who have been with us and understand the legacy of what we’re trying to do — they support us greatly.”

Rev. Lowery is certainly proud.

A handful of Scouting families from St. Timothy Church in Gary, Indiana. Photo courtesy of Kellauna Mack

A Scout in Action! Jenna Bush Hager’s husband, an Eagle Scout, saves woman from choking

Jenna Bush Hager, co-host of the immensely popular Today with Hoda & Jenna morning news program, revealed last week that her husband, Eagle Scout Henry Hager, recently saved a woman from choking by using the abdominal thrusts technique he learned in Scouting.

The incident happened when the couple was dining out, and serves as yet another example of how the training kids receive in Scouting can save lives … even decades later.

“We sit down, we’re having a lovely little conversation,” Bush Hager told co-host Hoda Kotb. “All of a sudden, he says, ‘That woman is choking!’ He gets up, he runs over, and he gives a woman the Heimlich maneuver for, it felt like it was 10 minutes.”

Bush Hager said she was amazed at how her husband stayed calm and persistent, as the abdominal thrusts didn’t work right away.

“He continued, and other men were helping him, and I could tell he thought it wasn’t working, and he was saying, ‘Guys, keep going, keep going, keep going!’” Bush Hager said. “And she survived. 911 arrived.

“People were saying to him, like, ‘Are you a doctor?’ And he was like, ‘No, I’m an Eagle Scout.’ ”

“You are my hero”

Bush Hager is the daughter of former president George W. Bush. Henry Hager, son of former Virginia governor John Hager, earned the rank of Eagle in 1993 as a Scout in the Heart of Virginia Council.

Henry Hager is currently the managing director at Waterous Energy Fund, a private equity firm.

In her book Everything Beautiful in Its Time, Bush Hager wrote that her mother, Laura Bush, has always been fond of Henry, in large part because of his Scout-like qualities.

“There is no arguing with her when it comes to Henry’s perfection,” writes Bush Hager. “She always said that she’d prefer her children marry an Eagle Scout than marry a prince.

“Henry is an honest-to-goodness Eagle Scout.”

During the show, Bush Hager was still obviously affected by the traumatic incident at the restaurant.

“I texted (Henry) this morning, and I was like, ‘You are my hero,’ ” she told Kotb. “He is. What a good guy. He’s not just going to sit back and watch something bad happen. He’s going to help.”

What Cub Scouts learn about abdominal thrusts

Webelos Scouts — Cub Scouts in the fourth or fifth grade — learn about abdominal thrusts as they work on the First Responder Adventure.

From the Webelos Handbook:

First aid is what happens when, after you scrape your knee, a caring adult cleans and bandages the wound. First aid is what happens when a server in a restaurant saves a choking victim by giving abdominal thrusts. First aid is what happens when a Scout performs CPR while waiting for an ambulance to arrive.

Requirement 3 of the First Responder Adventure is “Show how to help a choking victim.”

Position yourself behind the person and reach your arms around his or her waist.

Make a fist with one hand just above the person’s belly button. Cover the fist with your other hand.

Make a series of five quick thrusts inward and upward to force air from the lungs. (Pretend like you’re trying to pick the person up.)

Alternate between abdominal thrusts and back blows until the object is dislodged, the person becomes unconscious, or medical help arrives.

The training is reinforced in Scouts BSA

Later, when they become members of Scouts BSA, youth learn about abdominal thrusts as part of their first-aid training. From the Scouts BSA Handbook:

If the person is conscious, stand behind and place your arm across their chest and shoulder. Lean the person forward and, with the heel of your hand, firmly strike the back between the shoulder blades five times. If the victim still cannot breathe, continue to steps 2 and 3.

Stand behind the victim and position your arms around their waist. Make a fist with one hand and place the thumb side against the person’s body just above the navel but below the rib cage.

Perform up to five abdominal thrusts by thrusting your clasped hands inward and upward with enough force to pop loose the object that is blocking the airway.

Happy Friday! A Scouting endorsement from a Super Bowl-winning mascot, plus other good news from this week

“I know that (Scouting) is making a positive impact in the lives of so many young people in our communities around this great country of ours,” says KC Wolf, the mascot of the Super Bowl-winning Kansas City Chiefs.

(What is it about mascots and Scouting, by the way?!?)

KC, real name Dan Meers, spoke at a Scouting fundraising event this week. Don’t let the costume fool you, though. Meers sounds like a very smart, insightful guy.

“Your life is like a coin; you can spend it any way you wish, but you can spend it only one time,” he said. “So, spend it wisely.”

Read more about the event and KC Wolf’s part in it in this story from the Kansas City News Tribune.

Scouts BSA unit returns to Fort Hood

After being forced to miss their traditional outing to Fort Hood, the Scouts of Troop 1001 finally got to go back, and it sounds like they made the most of the process.

The Scouts started their day with meeting several tankers who allowed the visitors to a look inside of a M1 Abrams Main Battle Tank. They also received an opportunity to observe a live fire exercise conducted by 2nd Battalion, 12th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Armored Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division, and the chance to actually climb inside an Abrams tank to learn more about how it operates.

Read more about the visit in this story from the Fort Hood Herald.

Newspaper columnist attends Scout meeting for first time 60 years, finds core principles have not changed

“It was the first time since my brother and I were in a troop at Park Place way back in the 1950s,” writes Rick Bramwell. “Scouts then were high adventure. Nothing has changed.”

Read more about Rick’s visit, and his interview with the current leaders, in his column from The Herald Bulletin in Central Indiana.

Scouts participate in Stop the Bleed workshop

Controlling the bleeding of someone who is seriously injured is only part of the first-aid process, but it’s one of the most important parts.

Scouts from Long Beach, New York, learned how to control bleeding by applying pressure at a special workshop at a local hospital.

Learn more about their experience in this story from Rockville Centre, N.Y.

Webelos often transition to Scouts BSA during the spring. Here’s what you need to know

Springtime is the best time for the Webelos-to-Scouts transition.

This time of the year, Cub Scouts all across the country are participating in crossover ceremonies, after which they will officially be members of Scouts BSA.

How does it all work? And how can den leaders and parents make it work better?

It’s such a big deal that #CubChatLive decided to do not one, but two shows dedicated to the subject.

The first, “How Den Leaders Can Help Webelos Make a Smooth Transition to Scouts BSA,” aired last Friday. The second, “How Parents Can Help Webelos Make a Smooth Transition to Scouts BSA,” will air this Friday at 2 p.m. Central on Facebook Live or YouTube.

Watch last week’s discussion in its entirety below and read on for the highlights.

What is this “crossover” thing?

A crossover ceremony is when a Cub Scout crosses over into a Scouts BSA unit. It begins with a young person being a Cub Scout and ends with that person as a member of a Scouts BSA troop. Crossover ceremonies can take almost any shape and form you like, as long as they signify this transition to a new level of Scouting.

It could include the presentation of the Arrow of Light badge, a Scouts BSA Handbook and a troop neckerchief.

But the Webelos-to-Scouts-BSA transition actually begins months before the crossover ceremony.

How does the Arrow of Light program prepare Cub Scouts for Scouts BSA?

Cub Scouts in the fifth grade are working on their Arrow of Light requirements. One in particular, called the Scouting Adventure, is designed to prepare them for Scouts BSA.

“The Scouting Adventure is designed specifically to help Cub Scouts learn some of the methods and practices and parts of a Scouts BSA troop,” says national Scouts BSA committee member Angelique Minett, a former Cub Scouts den leader. “They’re going out to visit a troop, they’re going out on a campout or an outdoor activity with their troop, and they’re organizing themselves into patrols, which is a lot different than a Cub Scout den.”

How can the den leader help?

The Arrow of Light den leader’s job during this transition is to make contact with at least one (but hopefully more) Scouts BSA troops to set up visits and camping opportunities.

If your Cub Scout pack doesn’t have a pre-existing relationship with a particular troop, that’s OK — any Scouts BSA troop is going to love being contacted by a den leader looking for a troop for their Cub Scouts to visit.

“As a den leader, we are in charge of helping them make that transition so it’s smooth and enjoyable for both the Scouts and the families,” says Minett.

A crossover ceremony doesn’t have to take place on a bridge, but it’s a nice symbol for the transition from Cub Scouts to Scouts BSA. Photo by Michael Roytek

How can a den chief help?

When I was the den leader for my son’s Tiger Cub Scouts, all the kids just loved Mr. Aaron. (I miss those days!)

As they got older, however, they began to look more and more toward their peers for examples of leadership.

This is where a den chief comes into play.

When I brought a den chief into my son’s Arrow of Light group, it was a revelation. Here was a kid, much cooler than me (fine, I admit it), showing the Cub Scouts how to set up a tent, pack a backpack and do all these other fun things that Scouts BSA members get to do.

Our den chief played a major role in all of our kids crossing over into Scouts BSA simply by being a good leader and friend to the younger Scouts.

Is the transition more difficult for kids or their parents?

This is really a trick question because the answer is obvious: It’s more difficult for parents!

In Cub Scouts, the den leader or Cubmaster is in charge. In Scouts BSA, however, it’s the other Scouts who are in charge.

There’s a learning curve, and it takes some getting used to … for the parents. Parents who used to serve as den leaders or assistant den leaders are now being asked to stand in the back and wait patiently for the Scouts BSA youth to practice leading their own meetings and outings.

“At the very base level, Cub Scouts is leader-led and parent-led, and in Scouts BSA the leaders really are the youth,” Minett says. “And that’s an important transition, not just for the youth, but it’s definitely a big transition for the parents.”

Cub Scout family’s charitable efforts lead to ringing opening bell at Nasdaq

Rhode Island Tiger Cub Scout Christopher Schuler, 7, might not be old enough to know exactly what glioblastoma is, but he knows it’s a brain disease that took away his grandfather.

He might not yet be able to grasp the significance of the philanthropic work to which his Eagle Scout father, Chris, has devoted his life, but he knows they’re both living the section of the Scout Oath that says, “to help other people at all times.”

Their efforts recently led them to the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity of being part of a team that rang the opening bell at Nasdaq. The Schulers were there as part of a delegation from the Cure Brain Cancer Foundation, an Australian organization that is just now expanding its presence in the United States.

“It was the first time that a brain cancer organization has rang the bell at Nasdaq,” says Chris. “The opportunity to help ring the bell was huge, and having my son be a part of it was really special, with him losing his grandfather – my dad — who was really impactful to me in my Scouting experience.”

Father and son on a Cub Scout outing. Photo courtesy of Chris Schuler

A philanthropy leader

Before his dad got sick, Chris had already dedicated his life to philanthropy. He worked two different stints at two different BSA councils before accepting a position in higher education and, later, the healthcare industry.

When Christopher was old enough, Chris signed him up for Cub Scout Pack 11 in Coventry, R.I.

Then, in July 2021, the unthinkable happened. Chris’ father, an otherwise healthy 69-year-old, was diagnosed with glioblastoma, an aggressive and deadly form of brain cancer.

“It came out of nowhere,” Chris wrote on LinkedIn. “I grieved immediately. I cried. I felt anger, sadness, confusion, fear.”

But soon after, he dedicated his life to researching the disease and raising awareness through social media.

And that’s how he met Lance Kawaguchi, CEO of Cure Brain Cancer Foundation.

Christopher, live in Times Square! Photo courtesy of Slaven Vlasic / Sight & Sound

A connection with a common cause

Like Chris, Kawaguchi’s family was hit by cancer. His mother died from pancreatic cancer.

The former banker then switched gears, dedicating his life to finding better outcomes for people with cancer.

Kawaguchi and Chris met online, and when Kawaguchi’s organization received an invite to ring the Nasdaq bell, he called Chris and asked him to join him. Ringing the bell represented an enormous opportunity for the Cure Brain Cancer organization and the nonprofit movement as a whole.

“It’s very hard to get invited to these things,” says Chris. “They usually highlight much larger for-profit companies with hefty budgets.

“And it was a really unique experience for my son and daughter, for them to experience something that’s much bigger than they are.”

For Christopher, it was an opportunity to do a Good Turn, as he’s learned in Cub Scouts. That’s why Chris signed him up for Scouting in the first place, and why his daughter Leah will join as a Lion next fall.

“It was like I was in a different world,” Christopher says. “It was amazing.

“And it was important because Pop Pop had cancer, and because Lance’s mom had cancer.”

Scouting in 2123: a futurist weighs in

When the BSA was preparing to celebrate its 100th anniversary back in 2010, Bill Steele, at the time the director of the National Eagle Scout Association, thought it would be interesting to not only look back at the organization’s previous 100 years, but to also look forward to what the next 100 years might look like.

He reached out to John Strickland, a member of the National Space Society board of directors, author of a couple of books that take a deep dive into the future of humanity, and a contributor to the BSA’s own Space Exploration merit badge pamphlet.

Like it was nothing, Strickland wrote an incredibly fascinating essay on how Scouting could fit into the world of the future.

When I reached out to Strickland to ask him for permission to reprint his essay on this blog, he agreed – as long as I’d let him update it to include advances in technology since he wrote his original thought piece.

Below is Strickland’s updated essay, and — spoiler alert — you’ll be glad to know that he sees Scouting continuing to be as valuable to youth in the future as it is now.

Photo by Getty Images

Scouting in 2123, by John K. Strickland

To understand what Scouting in 2123 might be like, we first have to try to imagine 2123 itself.

This is as hard as someone from 1750 — before the Industrial Revolution — visualizing 2023. If they saw someone using a handheld communication device to talk to someone in India, they would think it was magic. They would not truly understand what the person was doing. And they would simply not believe that the person was talking to someone in India.

John Strickland

The two things that may have the largest impact on peoples’ lives and thus on Scouting are: (1) the so-called Technological Singularity (the great technology speedup) and with it, (2) the probable attainment of control over human aging and disease via the use of artificial intelligence. The Singularity, if it occurs as predicted, would take place between about 2030 and 2050. This will not mean the end of death, since people will still die in accidents. But the rate of accidental death will also decrease due to amazing advances in emergency treatment, which are just starting to be visible to us today. Deaths from wars could continue to rise if political tensions are not eased and the destructive power available to individual persons increases. Some people alive today will probably still be alive in 2123.

The end of aging would mean a significant reduction in the number of children in the population, especially in some countries where the current majority of the population is very young. Each child would be very precious to the parents and to society and would receive a vastly better up-bringing than that of today. The human population on the Earth will probably have been stabilized, but the population off the Earth, such as in Mars settlements and in orbiting and rotating space colonies, would be expanding. So, there will be fewer Scouts in each country, but they will be smarter, healthier and in a much wider set of locations than now. A longer lifespan may come with means of enhancing a person’s memory and mental skills. Education may become a “repeat” episode in a person’s life, much more than today.

Illustration by Anna Nesterova, from one of Strickland’s books

“Trips to almost any location”

The lengths of education in a person’s life and how education is accomplished may change and improve drastically, as more is learned about how we learn. This will have a significant effect on the structure of Scouting.

By 2123, most of our energy will probably be coming from giant space solar-powered satellites, arranged in a necklace around the Earth in the same orbit used by communication satellites; and from fusion power, if practical fusion has been achieved, which looks more likely now. Intermittent wind and solar energy may still provide a significant portion of our power.

There will be expanded natural zones to protect and preserve Earth life, and in some of those zones, animals like mammoths, which are now still extinct, will be a normal part of the ecosystem, having been re-created from actual mammoth DNA extracted from frozen hair and bone. Since transportation to all parts of the world will probably continue to get cheaper and easier, Scouts will be able to take field trips to almost any location and have it be as safe as going to a local park now.

There may be vaccinations against local diseases, or medical advances may have disease protection engineered into people’s bodies from birth. This would not protect them from being attacked by a wild animal, but new means of harmlessly chasing off attacking animals will probably be available to all Scouts and Scoutmasters. They will also be able to detect where the animals are before they get close to one by accident. You could imagine Scouts going on a field trip to the Arctic to get photos of a herd of mammoths and to get an accurate count of how many mammoths live there.

Illustration by Getty Images

“Geological field trips in a vacuum environment”

New outdoor risks will exist. Scouts in Florida will have to be wary of giant snakes, as well as alligators, while Scouts fishing in many waterways will have to look out for jumping Asian carp and other invasive species, which by this time will have expanded their ranges about as far as they can.

After the Singularity, manufacturing of individual objects may get to be very inexpensive, so there may be a great re-birth in the building of objects and creation of art by hand. This would certainly tie into the Scouting framework. Handcrafts would range from boat building and architecture to handmade electronic objects and artwork using many different materials and methods.

Progress in space transportation has been very rapid since 2015. There have been lots of images in popular culture of kids wearing space suits and hiking around on the moon and other airless places. For this to happen, the suit itself will have to be very “intelligent” in order to protect the wearer from their own mistakes, since recovering and surviving from the accidental opening of a space suit seal in a vacuum environment would be difficult or impossible. We would no more have kids wearing space suits like the current ones than driving race cars. These take highly skilled and trained adults to safely use. Once such “smart” suits using “smart” materials are available, and have been demonstrated to be safe to parents, it is conceivable that Scouting activities like geological field trips in a vacuum environment like the moon’s surface could occur.

Human settlements off the Earth will exist where there is money to be made and where creating settlements is easy, in terms of the availability of energy and materials. Scouting at such settlements will focus more on the life and activities of the settlement. If terraforming of Mars is underway by then, Scouts may be active in monitoring the changes in the atmosphere and surface. Some Scouts could well discover the first new running stream of water on the surface of Mars in many millions of years as the temperature and air pressure rises, ice melts and more water vapor enters the atmosphere. By this time, only warm clothes and an oxygen helmet might be needed for outside activities.

Illustration by Anna Nesterova, from one of Strickland’s books

Scouting on Mars

Mars settlements will probably evolve from government-sponsored scientific bases, with the people living at the base being able to produce more and more of the needs of the base as time goes on, with a real economy between settlements gradually evolving. Scouts will be learning all about what the local economy is about. If microorganisms were found deep under Mars by earlier explorers, there will be continuing interest in examining them, with Scouts certainly involved in the work. Some settlements may be built inside large domes with breathable oxygen-nitrogen atmospheres. Mars has almost 40% of Earth’s gravity, so games like baseball will need to have larger stadiums or fields to accommodate the lower gravity.

For Scouts living on orbiting space colonies, life and activities will be as different a life on Earth is from life on a Mars settlement. In these inside-out worlds, which can be made in many different shapes and sizes, down will be away from the center of rotation, and up will be toward the axis of rotation. There will probably be specialized resort habitats with climates from arctic to tropical, and habitats designed to preserve species which cannot be kept safely on Earth due to poaching. Although maintenance of settlements will be heavily automated, such structures will be very complex and Scouts from an early age will be learning about how to protect the colony they live on from damage and threats, such as impacting objects. Such colonies will have low-gravity and zero-gravity areas, where other kinds of sports and artistic displays will be possible. With low enough gravity, similar to that on the moon, flying with arm power using artificial wings attached to the arms (as has been depicted in science fiction stories for decades) may be possible.

Just like young people today, kids of Scouting age will be very active communicators. They will be communicating with kids all over the world and all over the inner solar system. For discussions between worlds, email videos will probably be the most popular form, since real-time discussions cannot easily take place over distances more than about 1 million miles. All of this communication will affect what the kids are interested in and how they approach their interests.

By 2123, it is possible that interstellar probes will be advancing toward promising earthlike extra-solar planets discovered many decades earlier. If the probes reach planets that could either support life or be terraformed to support life, it is likely that before the 22nd century is over, interstellar colonization ships would be getting ready to send people to those worlds. Life on such a ship would be very similar to that on an orbiting space colony, except that communication with other individual people could be very restricted and take years to exchange messages. Wideband, laser-based communication will be possible with any existing colony, settlement or other exploration ships.  Huge amounts of information will be coming in every minute about what has happened in other locations several years ago. There will be a lot to keep up with, so being a Scout with a Scout’s attitude toward life should be just as rewarding in the distant future as it is today.

Eagle Scout strives to promote disability inclusion in space exploration

As a filmmaker, actor and broadcaster, Eagle Scout Zach Damon has an impressively packed career. However, his passion for advancing the aspirations of people who have disabilities has launched him into a whole other pursuit.

Damon spends much of his free time volunteering for AstroAccess, a philanthropic organization that promotes disability inclusion in the field of space exploration.

Zach Damon stands in front of the zero-gravity plane at Ellington Field Joint Reserve Base in Houston. Photo courtesy of Zach Damon

“What inspired me to volunteer and work with AstroAccess was my passion for disability inclusion, flight and space exploration,” Damon says. “I was born with cerebral palsy. From my experience, I understand that inclusion is paramount if sustainable progress is to be made on the planet as well as within future space missions.”

What is AstroAccess?

Co-founder and executive director Anna Voelker says AstroAccess, part of the SciAccess nonprofit organization, is dedicated to promoting disability inclusion in space exploration through a variety of programs, including a series of zero-gravity flights. 

“These flights essentially allow researchers to experience microgravity in 20 to 25 second bursts — eventually experiencing weightlessness,” Voelker says. “At AstroAccess, we’ve provided an opportunity for researchers with disabilities — AstroAccess Ambassadors — to do experiments, demonstrations and tasks geared toward answering accessibility questions and finding solutions for space vehicles and future space stations.”

The overall goal is to see if all astronauts and explorers, regardless of any disability on Earth, can live, work and thrive in space.

Damon, with Anna Voelker, co-founder of AstroAccess. Photo courtesy of AstroAccess

Damon says being a part of AstroAccess is the opportunity of a lifetime.

“I believe strongly in the mission of AstroAccess in promoting disability inclusion in space exploration, and I am humbled and honored to work with so many extraordinary people on the Astro Access team,” Damon says. 

As the deputy director of development, Damon assists with the partnerships and fundraising that support AstroAccess. In other words, he manages relations with financial and in-kind partners and heads fundraising efforts and sponsorship requests for future zero-gravity mission flights. 

So far, there have been five flights in all, including two full flights with an entire crew.

Filmmaker, actor and broadcaster

6-year-old Zach Damon visits with legendary University of Michigan football announcer Frank Beckman at a March of Dimes event. Photo courtesy of Zach Damon

Whenever Damon isn’t working at AstroAccess, he’s entertaining the public by producing local television, radio and web-based media content in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Damon got a head start in entertainment at an early age.

“At 6, I started public speaking and volunteered with the March of Dimes organization. Eventually, I became a goodwill ambassador, helping to raise awareness to improve the health of babies by preventing congenital disabilities, premature birth and infant mortality,” Damon says. “This then led to my interest in the entertainment industry as a career.”

Damon appreciated being surrounded by influential people in the entertainment industry. He described it as a great experience and a blessing. However, he says it was his determination and drive that ultimately paid off the most.

Zach Damon on the set of the late-night TV show Ann Arbor Tonight in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Photo courtesy of Zach Damon

 

 

“It was up to me to apply the experience, get the education, the training and do my best to hone the craft. In my opinion, showbusiness is the best business, but like most worthwhile endeavors, nothing is given — it’s earned,” Damon says.

He also credits Scouting for his positive endeavors. Damon said the biggest lesson he learned in Scouting was that challenge is good. 

“Although uncomfortable at first, the skills you learn in Scouting make you comfortable with being uncomfortable,” Damon says. “Scouting purposely puts you in situations that challenge you to problem solve, work as a unit and accomplish a goal, just like any AstroAccess Zero-Gravity Flight or NASA Astronaut Mission.” 

10-year-old Zach receives his Webelos neckerchief. Photo courtesy of Zach Damon

Damon encourages Scouts to always Be Prepared, do their best, be brave, be kind, have fun, make lifelong friends and strive to attain Eagle Scout. 

“Eagle is one of the few accomplishments while you’re young that stays with you the rest of your life,” Damon says.

Up next for Damon and AstroAccess

The next flight for AstroAccess is in May 2023 in Boston, Massachusetts. Voelker says AstroAccess has an open call for interested applicants. Ambassadors are selected from around the world to participate in the zero-gravity missions. They also work with ground crew members to design a series of accessibility experiments and demonstrations.

“We’ve had people from all backgrounds, so they don’t need to be a scientist or engineer,” Voelker says. “Things that we look for are a demonstrated commitment to disability justice and making sure we’re compatible.”

Volunteer opportunities are also available for high school, college students and adults. Visit astroaccess.org for more information.

“I think there’s a great variety of professional development opportunities for students,” Voelker says. “I encourage anyone with a disability or is passionate about space to reach out to us.”

Zach Damon on location of his latest film project, the indie romantic comedy Get Real, set to be released on Amazon later this year. Photo courtesy of Zach Damon

As for Damon, he plans to continue to help with the AstroAccess development process. He also hopes to earn his spot on an AstroAccess Zero-Gravity Mission Flight Crew. In the meantime, he’ll also keep producing content under Zach Damon Productions, LLC, hoping to one day be part of an Emmy and Academy award-winning production team.

Happy Friday! Recognizing a community’s hardest workers, plus other good news from this week

Scouts pay tribute to community’s hard-working snowplow crew

The folks who clear the roads and sidewalks of snow are the true unsung heroes of our winter towns. Two Scouts BSA troops from Nevada have made sure their efforts don’t go unrecognized.

Troops 850B and 850G presented crewmembers with some complimentary, delicious Scout popcorn.

According to this article from the Elko Daily Free Press, the Scouts hope the popcorn makes for a delicious snack.

“I had three careers: medicine, the Boy Scouts and the Army”

George Allen of Rochester, Minnesota, is a retired rheumatologist who also served in the Army. Yet, being involved in Scouting remains one of his cherished memories.

In 1942, at age 12, Allen joined the Boy Scouts. By then, the United States had entered World War II. With his Scouting troop, Allen participated in scrap drives, during which they encouraged people to donate scrap metals, paper, rubber and cloth to be recycled and repurposed into weapons, planes, ships or other items. About once a month, Allen says, “We’d go on a truck through the neighborhoods and blow the horn. And if people had stuff that they wanted us to get, we’d go in their garage or basement, pick it up and put it in the truck.”

Read more about Allen’s experience as a BSA youth and, later, a volunteer in this article from the Rochester Post Bulletin.

Napa Valley Scouts head out into the snow

For more than 40 years, St. Helena’s Scouts BSA Troop 1 has gone winter camping in the High Sierra. This year was no different, when the Scouts snowshoed and spent the night in snow caves.

They also performed a retirement ceremony for a U.S. flag in an amphitheater made entire of snow.

Read more about their experience in this story from the St. Helena Star newspaper.

Montana troop recaps more than 100 years of service to community

As the BSA gets older and older (it turned 113 just last month!), we hear more and more about communities that have had a relationship with Scouting in one way or another for 100 years or more.

Scouting began in Havre, Montana, in either 1920 or 1921, based on research from its local troop. Read more about what else their fascinating research uncovered in this article from the Havre Daily News.

Scouts BSA troop helps assemble habitats for fisheries

They may look like large, spiky wheels for medieval torture machinery, but mossback habitats provide life to fisheries and offer broad benefits to lake ecosystems.

Under the direction of park rangers at Youghiogheny River Lake, Scouts from Rockwood, Pennsylvania, assembled 23 mossback habitats.

“The … Rockwood Boy Scouts are a great group of young fellows,” said one organizer. “They are fun to work with because they have a strong work ethic and truly care about the environment.”

Learn more about this cool project in this article from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

Outgoing chief diversity officer shares thoughts on BSA’s diversity journey

The former senior vice president, deputy general counsel and chief diversity officer reflects on her efforts to develop a culture in which every youth, volunteer and employee feels included and welcomed.

When Scouts go camping, their goal is to leave the area better than it was when they first arrived.

Elizabeth Ramirez-Washka, the BSA’s former chief diversity officer, has recently left the organization, but her past accomplishments will continue to shape and guide the BSA as it moves forward.

“I’m proud of the progress we’ve made on our DEI journey and very much look forward to seeing the progress the BSA continues to make,” she says. “To Be Prepared to grow our impact, we should continue to identify new opportunities to expand our relevance and reach with families and communities. This will reinforce our commitment to ‘help other people at all times,’ and continue to prioritize the cultivation of a culture of belonging for all Scouters.”

During her time at the BSA, Ramirez-Washka worked with professionals and volunteers to enhance the organization’s environment so young people could ask more difficult questions to learn and understand others’ points of view. That began with the Eagle-required Citizenship in Society merit badge, but it didn’t end there.

Her efforts reached into every element of Scouting, including:

The introduction of DEI training for employees and volunteers.
A commitment to recruiting families from all walks of life.
An effort to attract diverse candidates for professional positions at the local and national levels.
An emphasis on supporting current professionals through diverse BSA workforce groups.

“A large part of my role has been helping people at all levels of the organization see the BSA in a future state, to help us realize what we need to do to have the greatest impact on our youth,” says Ramirez-Washka. “Every individual’s journey is unique to them. We’ve made progress on our journey, but we need to keep up the momentum. What’s important is the commitment to the journey and moving in the right direction.”

How we started the discussion

Conversations around diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) aren’t as physically demanding as, say, a high-adventure activity like rock climbing or backpacking, but they can be just as intimidating.

Young people might worry that they’ll say the wrong thing, offend someone or be criticized for sharing a perspective that differs from those expressed by others.

After arriving at the BSA in 2017, Ramirez-Washka strived to be open and understand the BSA culture, to learn how best to work with professionals and volunteers to create an environment where everyone is empowered to ask difficult questions and learn about others’ points of view.

“It’s not about giving them the answer,” she says. “It’s about making them think about the conversation and how it works with the Scout Oath and Scout Law. Once they take the first step, they see, ‘OK, I can have these conversations.’”

People are at different places on their DEI journey,  and the terminology often means different things to different people. But to Ramirez-Washka, the core principle of DEI work — understanding, including and treating others with respect — shouldn’t be controversial. It’s aligned with what is written in the Scout Oath and Scout Law.

The Scout Oath reminds us “to help other people at all times,” while the Scout Law’s 12 points include being friendly, courteous, kind and brave. By applying these principles to DEI, Ramirez-Washka says, we ensure that the Boy Scouts of America is a place where all Scouters feel welcome and supported.

“You can be part of the change,” she says. “It’s incredible what we can do, together.”

Not a “typical job”

When Ramirez-Washka joined the BSA and started meeting with professionals and volunteers, she discovered pretty quickly that she wasn’t at a typical job.

“I met volunteers who said, ‘Oh, you don’t have any Scouting background?’ And I say, ‘No, can you help walk me through it?’ And they did,” she says. “That’s part of being inclusive, and this organization has included me.”

Before long, Ramirez-Washka’s conversations went deeper than discussions about proper patch placement or the trail to Eagle.

“Establishing relationships with professionals and volunteers out there helped me to understand what works and what doesn’t when it comes to DEI,” she says. “I saw how the commitment is there for diversity.”

Ramirez-Washka has stressed to BSA volunteers that conversations about DEI are more productive when they aren’t focused on what’s “right” or “wrong.” Instead, they should be designed to help people educate themselves, listen to others and respect views that are different from their own.

None of that is easy, she admits.

“Even I struggle with it,” says Ramirez-Washka, who is Hispanic. “Just because I’m a minority doesn’t mean that I’m the expert on everything DEI. I’m not comfortable in every space, but I’m always open and willing to learn.”

The work continues

The BSA originally invited Ramirez-Washka to join the movement as associate general counsel. Before long, in a move most volunteers will appreciate, she was asked to wear an additional Scouting “hat.” In 2020, she was named the BSA’s vice president of diversity and inclusion and chief diversity officer, becoming the first Hispanic woman on the BSA’s executive team.

“Scouting has been a great experience — its rich heritage has stood the test of time for more than 110 years,” she says. “It’s been a pleasure and privilege to be part of this incredible organization and help BSA continue to grow and evolve with the changing times — while always holding true to our core ideals and values — such as kindness, integrity, respect, courtesy and care for others.

“Ideals like the Scout Oath and Scout Law have prepared millions of youth for a lifetime of leadership and success, and our goal is to prepare millions more well into the future.”

The BSA’s DEI work is essential to achieving that — by helping every family envision themselves thriving in this life-changing movement called Scouting. After all, there’s no top of the mountain or end of the trail with DEI. There’s no point where you can say, “I’m done. I made it.”

But you can absolutely make progress. Each step toward including everyone is something to celebrate.

“People want to do the right thing,” Ramirez-Washka says. “Those words do resonate: to treat people with kindness, courteousness and friendliness.”

“Scouting reinforces the values of your family. You learn how to be a leader, how to deal with conflict and how to understand different perspectives. We need to continue to lead by example and build communities where every person feels respected and valued to Be Prepared to welcome all interested families to take advantage of the many benefits that Scouting provides.”

Elizabeth Ramirez-Washka, top left, with Chief Scout Executive Roger Mosby (green shirt), and several of the BSA’s youth members

Psychology Today writer shares how he successfully grew his son’s pack

Anybody who has ever served as a Cub Scout volunteer gets it: We learned as much from the experience as the Scouts we served learned from us.

In a recent column for Psychology Today, Robert Evans Wilson Jr., an author, speaker, humorist and Eagle Scout based in Atlanta, Georgia, has done about as good a job of putting that experience into words as you’ll ever see.

Rob, it turns out, took over a pack that was struggling to get by due to a lack of adult leaders. However, instead of taking his son’s active Tiger den to another unit, he chose to stick it out, and in the process ended up becoming a better leader himself.

I encourage you to read the story in its entirety. It’s really great.

I’ve highlighted a few points that will serve Scout leaders well, no matter their situation.

Follow the program

That’s right: The best way to have a successful Scouting program is to follow the Scouting program!

“The Tiger den was quite active because the den leader … had us follow the recommendations of the official Tiger Cub guidebook,” Wilson writes. “The main pack, however, was doing little of the recommended activities.”

Right off the bat, Wilson hits on one of the most important elements of “Scout Leadership 101.”

Formally recognizing Cub Scouts for their achievements is an important way of making them feel like valuable members of their den and pack.

You don’t have to do it alone

“The problem was a lack of leaders in the pack,” Wilson writes. “There was only one: the pack Cubmaster. It was easy to see that he was completely overwhelmed.”

Again, Wilson shows that he gets it. Being the leader of a Scouting unit is not meant to be a one-person job. That’s why there’s a committee and assistant leaders and every other volunteer position on down the line.

Recruiting new Scouts …

And how did he do it? By taking advantage of his local council’s resources, in particular, a recruitment film that had already proven to be successful.

“On the sign-up night, several parents came up to me saying, ‘My son emphatically told me that I had to bring him here tonight and sign him up for Cub Scouts.’ ” he writes. “We signed up 40 new Scouts that night.”

… and their parents

Wilson says he explained that he needed every parent to participate, but that his mission was to spread out the responsibilities so no individual parent would be overwhelmed.

“I was determined that this Cub Scout pack would be the most fun for the kids and their parents with lots of learning opportunities for all,” he writes.

Come up with a plan of succession

Wilson installed a system that would prevent future pack leaders from finding themselves in this situation again.

The results speak for themselves. Years later, Wilson says he ran into some Cub Scout families from his old pack selling popcorn in front of a grocery story. They told him the pack was now up to 200 Scouts.

And what did he learn from the experience for himself?

“I learned so much about leadership from working with volunteers,” Wilson writes. “You can’t boss them around because they will quit. You have to treat them with courtesy and respect. You must have empathy for their interests and desires, and you should encourage them to bring their strengths to the organization.

“When you do these things, you’ll have joyful people willing to give their all.”

Click here to read Wilson’s story.

2022 merit badge rankings: A new chart-topper emerges

It’s time for our annual roundup of the most-earned and rarest merit badges. Let’s take a look at what changed, what stayed the same and what took the prize as our most highly earned merit badge of last year (SURPRISE! It’s never been in the top spot before).

In 2021, we saw the rebound of merit badges many Scouts earn at summer camp. And 2022 seems to have solidified interest in those badges. Read on to see where Scouts have remained consistent and where they’ve focused new interest.

The 10 most-earned merit badges of 2022

The Citizenship in Society merit badge shook up the top-earned list during its first full year as an option for Scouts (and as it became a required merit badge for Eagle Scouts last summer).

2022 Rank
Merit Badge

1
Citizenship in Society

2
First Aid

3
Swimming

4
Environmental Science

5
Citizenship in the World

6
Camping

7
Communication

8
Citizenship in the Nation

9
Cooking

10
Personal Fitness

The alternative top 10

OK, let’s take a look at the most popular merit badges that aren’t required to earn Eagle Scout.

2022 Rank
Merit Badge

1
Fingerprinting

2
Rifle Shooting

3
Archery

4
Leatherwork

5
Kayaking

6
Wood Carving

7
Chess

8
Wilderness Survival

9
Art

10
Fishing

The 10 rarest merit badges of 2022

Are you or your Scouts collector’s-edition merit badge fans? Here are some of the most rarely earned badges from 2022.

2022 Rank
Merit Badge

128
Veterinary Medicine

129
Composite Materials

130
Truck Transportation

131
Dentistry

132
Stamp Collecting

133
American Labor

134
Journalism

135
Surveying

136
Drafting

137
Bugling

Noteworthy changes in the rankings

While somewhat consistent, check out some minor shake ups in the rankings below.

Top gains

2022 Rank
Merit Badge
2021 Rank
Difference

81
Radio
98
17

65
Electronics
80
15

101
Whitewater
116
15

71
Nuclear Science
85
14

75
Railroading
89
14

35
Aviation
48
13

45
Chemistry
58
13

41
Engineering
52
11

72
Salesmanship
83
11

68
Snow Sports
78
10

The complete lineup

Green means a merit badge is required for Eagle.

A total of 21 merit badges must be earned for the Eagle Scout rank, including these 14 merit badges:

First Aid
Citizenship in the Community
Citizenship in the Nation
Citizenship in Society
Citizenship in the World
Communication
Cooking
Personal Fitness
Emergency Preparedness OR Lifesaving
Environmental Science OR Sustainability
Personal Management
Swimming OR Hiking OR Cycling
Camping
Family Life

2022 Rank
Merit Badge
2021 Rank
Difference

1
Citizenship in Society

2
First Aid
2

3
Swimming
1
-2

4
Environmental Science
3
-1

5
Citizenship in the World
5
0

6
Camping
4
-2

7
Communication
7
0

8
Citizenship in the Nation
11
3

9
Cooking
6
-3

10
Personal Fitness
9
-1

11
Personal Management
17
6

12
Fingerprinting
12
0

13
Citizenship in the Community
15
2

14
Emergency Preparedness
18
4

15
Family Life
16
1

16
Rifle Shooting
8
-8

17
Archery
10
-7

18
Leatherwork
13
-5

19
Kayaking
14
-5

20
Wood Carving
19
-1

21
Chess
21
0

22
Wilderness Survival
22
0

23
Art
24
1

24
Fishing
20
-4

25
Canoeing
23
-2

26
Shotgun Shooting
26
0

27
Climbing
28
1

28
Lifesaving
29
1

29
Space Exploration
25
-4

30
Mammal Study
27
-3

31
Astronomy
30
-1

32
Photography
33
1

33
Geology
31
-2

34
Basketry
34
0

35
Aviation
48
13

36
Small Boat Sailing
38
2

37
Nature
32
-5

38
Game Design
37
-1

39
Welding
44
5

40
Indian Lore
36
-4

41
Engineering
52
11

42
Metalwork
35
-7

43
Pioneering
39
-4

44
Robotics
43
-1

45
Chemistry
58
13

46
Search and Rescue
49
3

47
Weather
40
-7

48
Geocaching
41
-7

49
Sculpture
53
4

50
Orienteering
45
-5

51
Automotive Maintenance
50
-1

52
Music
56
4

53
Fire Safety
55
2

54
Fish & Wildlife Management
47
-7

55
Horsemanship
42
-13

56
Forestry
46
-10

57
Pottery
51
-6

58
Signs, Signals, and Codes
57
-1

59
Motor Boating
62
3

60
Animation
59
-1

61
Oceanography
63
2

62
Electricity
67
5

63
Sustainability
61
-2

64
Moviemaking
66
2

65
Electronics
80
15

66
Pulp and Paper
70
4

67
Soil and Water Conservation
64
-3

68
Snow Sports
78
10

69
Hiking
60
-9

70
Rowing
72
2

71
Nuclear Science
85
14

72
Salesmanship
83
11

73
Traffic Safety
77
4

74
Digital Technology
68
-6

75
Railroading
89
14

76
Disabilities Awareness
74
-2

77
Public Speaking
79
2

78
Archaeology
76
-2

79
Reptile and Amphibian Study
71
-8

80
Bird Study
73
-7

81
Radio
98
17

82
Scouting Heritage
65
-17

83
Crime Prevention
86
3

84
Painting
87
3

85
Woodwork
84
-1

86
Pets
69
-17

87
American Heritage
82
-5

88
Collections
81
-7

89
Cycling
75
-14

90
Law
91
1

91
Architecture
97
6

92
Coin Collecting
93
1

93
Sports
96
3

94
Entrepreneurship
101
7

95
Programming
100
5

96
Mining in Society
102
6

97
Plumbing
103
6

98
Fly Fishing
94
-4

99
Animal Science
88
-11

100
Scholarship
90
-10

101
Whitewater
116
15

102
Backpacking
95
-7

103
Safety
104
1

104
Reading
92
-12

105
Textile
110
5

106
Exploration
108
2

107
Home Repairs
109
2

108
Insect Study
99
-9

109
Graphic Arts
106
-3

110
Public Health
54
-56

111
Dog Care
107
-4

112
Inventing
111
-1

113
Model Design and Building
122
9

114
Golf
115
1

115
Medicine
114
-1

116
Farm Mechanics
112
-4

117
Plant Science
119
2

118
Theater
126
8

119
American Cultures
113
-6

120
Genealogy
105
-15

121
American Business
118
-3

122
Water Sports
124
2

123
Scuba Diving
121
-2

124
Skating
120
-4

125
Athletics
123
-2

126
Gardening
117
-9

127
Energy
127
0

128
Landscape Architecture
125
-3

129
Veterinary Medicine
129
0

130
Composite Materials
132
2

130
Journalism
130
0

131
Truck Transportation
128
-3

132
Dentistry
131
-1

133
Stamp Collecting
133
0

134
American Labor
134
0

136
Surveying
135
-1

137
Drafting
136
-1

138
Bugling
137
-1

Looking for more merit badge metrics?

Take a look at last year’s post to see how these numbers measure up to 2021. And thank you to Scouts BSA’s Garfield Murden for supplying this year’s rankings!

Want to be at the Jamboree? Here’s how to go as a visitor

In fewer than 150 days, thousands of Scouts and Scouters will converge at the Summit Bechtel Family National Scout Reserve in West Virginia for the National Jamboree.

Registration for the big event, slated for July 19-28, will be closing soon. You can register online by visiting the Jamboree website. Before you do, remember to ensure your profile on your My.Scouting account is updated.

You can also buy tickets to go for the day. Visitor tickets are now available for certain days of the 20th installment of this flagship BSA event.

When you can go

Visitors can purchase day pass tickets to visit the National Jamboree on the following days:

Friday, July 21: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Saturday, July 22: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Monday, July 24: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Tuesday, July 25: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Wednesday, July 26: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

The day passes cost $75 for adults (ages 14 and up) and $50 for youth (ages 6 to 13) for the first four available days. Adult passes cost $50 and youth passes cost $30 for Wednesday, July 26. Kids ages 5 and under are admitted free on all visitor days.

Purchasing tickets in advance is strongly encouraged as the numbers of visitors will be limited. You can purchase tickets online here. Tickets will also be sold on-site.

What your ticket gets you

When you arrive at the J.W. and Hazel Ruby West Virginia Welcome Center, your ticket is good for shuttle service to and from the Jamboree. For safety, security and parking availability, you cannot drive your personal vehicle to the Jamboree site.

Once you’re shuttled in, you will have access to many of the fun, exciting activities the Scouts are enjoying. Visitors can check out:

An autonomous vehicle race
Rock climbing
Pioneering and buckskin games
Skateboarding
The BSA’s Sustainability Treehouse
The Summit’s interpretive history trail
The equipment and vehicles of disaster response services
The imagination and thrill of STEM
BMX bikes
Maker areas to race in the world’s longest derby race
National Jamboree Trading Post

If you haven’t been to the Summit before, know that getting from certain places may require hiking up and down slight hills. You will need to be physically prepared for hiking.

Visitors will only have access to the Summit Center area at the Jamboree site; you are not allowed in the subcamps or other adventure areas, like zip lining, aquatics or canopy tours.

If you want to meet someone — like your Scout who is attending the Jamboree — arrange to meet them at a certain place in the Summit Center area. Wi-Fi and cellular service are available. Making arrangements ahead of time is a good idea as it will likely be crowded.

What to bring 

Since you might be doing a lot of walking, you’ll want to bring a good pair of hiking shoes. Here are some other items to bring, so you’ll Be Prepared to visit the Jamboree:

Rain jacket or umbrella.
Refillable water bottle. Refilling water bottle stations are available throughout the site.
Good walking or hiking shoes. You should wear closed-toed shoes.
Dress in layers — the weather changes often with passing thunderstorms, and sometimes these changes occur rapidly.
Sunscreen/insect repellent (consider long sleeves for sun protection).
Wide brimmed hat or cap.
Snacks (food vendors will also be on-site).

Some items are not allowed, check this page for restrictions.

If you forgot something, stop by the Jamboree trading post. You can also purchase a 2023 National Jamboree souvenir while you’re there.

Happy Friday! A project for the dogs, plus other good news from this week

Connecticut Scout’s Eagle project is for the dogs

Ian Ceduscky, from Troop 15 in Redding, Connecticut, spotted a need in his community, then dedicated his Eagle Scout service project to filling that need.

“I really like dogs, and Redding doesn’t really have a large area where they can be off leash,” Ian told his local newspaper.

Thus, the idea of the Topstone dog park was born. And, many months later, Ian was an Eagle Scout.

Read more in this story from The News-Times.

Great Smoky Mountain Council recognizes Scout of the year

On the firing range, John Campbell is a champion. In 2022, he was the state champion in the Tennessee Sporting Clays Association tournament.

In Scouting, John Campbell is a leader. He’s an Eagle Scout completing an ambitious project rebuilding a playground at his church and twice serving as Pellissippi Lodge Order of the Arrow Chief.

Learn more about John’s accomplishments in this report from WATE 6 News in Knoxville, Tennessee.

Illinois Scouts continue to maintain duck nests

Below-freezing temperatures didn’t stop the Scouts of troops 92 and 609 from doing what they promised: performing annual maintenance on wood duck nests in Chain O’ Lakes State Park.

Over time, the natural habitat of the ducks has declined because of development and hunting. Special nests are needed to attract them. Scouts installed 50 boxes back in 1980, and they continue to maintain them to this day.

Read more about this long-term service project in this story from the Lake County Journal.

Scouts pay tribute to firefighters lost in 1954 wildfire

Four firefighters lost their lives fighting a wildfire in the Tennessee mountains in 1954. Scouts BSA Troop 516 is making sure their community never forgets.

Led by Eagle Scout candidate Seth Whitehead, the group recently installed a memorial recognizing the tragedy.

“I’m a very big history person,” said Whitehead. “I just wanted to show the community what happened here on that day.”

Read more in this story from the WJHL News in Johnson City, Tennessee.

Sea Scout’s project sheds light on the importance of proper fishing line disposal

Disposing of monofilament fishing line is a tricky thing.

A properly planned and executed recycling program is the answer, but not all marinas and other fishing areas have such a system in place.

That’s where Sea Scout Quinn Laffey — and other public servants like him – can help.

Quinn, 19, led the assembly and installation of 20 fishing line recycling tubes at five different marinas in northern Virginia last year. Later, he collected 32 miles of fishing line from these tubes, which was shipped to a facility in Iowa so it could be properly recycled.

He participated in multiple community outreach events designed to educate the public on the importance of fishing line recycling. And he established a program that will allow the project to continue for years to come.

The installation of the recycling tubes alone earned Quinn the rank of Quartermaster, the highest award for Sea Scouts. The rest of the project satisfied the requirements for one of his two Distinguished Conservation Service Award projects. (Quinn’s other Distinguished Conservation Service Award project involved building and installing nesting and feeding boxes for the Southern flying squirrel population at a community nature center.)

“It’s great because you can see with your own eyes the impact and the result of the work that you’ve put into it,” says Quinn, an Eagle Scout from Troop 4077 in Alexandria, Virginia; a Quartermaster from Ship 1942 in Arlington, Virginia; and a member of Venturing Crew 1942 in Arlington.

Photo courtesy of Quinn Laffey

The problem with monofilament fishing line

Because of its flexibility and strength, monofilament fishing line is one of the most popular types of fishing lines used today.

But it comes with a real problem: How do we get rid of it when we’re done with it?

Some people throw their used line in the trash, but all it does there is take up space in landfills or end up scavenged by animals that may become entangled in it.

You can’t put it in your household recycling bin, since monofilament line is a high-density plastic and requires a special recycling process.

Sadly, some fishermen leave their used line in or near the water, where it can remain for as long as 600 years, according to the Boat U.S. Foundation. More than 100,000 marine mammals die every year from ingesting debris or becoming entangled in fishing lines, nets and other types of fishing gear.

Some recycling bins were already in place at a few of the marinas Quinn selected for his project, but they were old and too small to hold enough fishing line to allow for an ongoing recycling system to be put into place.

Quinn replaced eight old tubes with his own tubes, then installed an additional 12 tubes where there had been none before. All of his tubes were larger than the old ones and constructed under parameters set by Boat U.S., a non-profit dedicated to promoting boating safety and clean water.

Each tube features clearly marked signs and instructions for proper recycling.

Photo courtesy of Quinn Laffey

Spreading awareness

As part of the Distinguished Conservation Service Award project, Quinn appeared at five different community events — one of which was a Cub Scout fishing derby — where he talked with citizens about the work he was doing.

“I set up a poster board at one of the tables to talk to people about my project and for

outreach to the community about what these tubes were and the impact of fishing line on the environment,” he says.

And he worked with the managers at each marina to ensure that they understand it, too. Ultimately, they all agreed to collect the deposited fishing line on a recurring basis and drop it off at either of two nearby stores, from which it will be shipped to the facility in Iowa for free.

Who can earn a Distinguished Conservation Service Award?

The BSA Distinguished Conservation Service Award Program offers options for youth, adults and entire organizations. The awards recognize projects that are clearly outstanding efforts in planning, leadership, execution of plans, involvement of others and opportunities taken to help others learn about natural resource conservation and environmental improvement.

“My advice to other Scouts who would like to complete the award is to find projects in your area which you are really interested in,” Quinn says. “And start your planning about one year in advance so that you have time to complete the field work.”

U.S. House of Representatives passes resolution supporting the BSA

For the second year in a row, the Boy Scouts of America has been recognized on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives.

As they did a year ago when the BSA turned 112, Reps. Glenn Thompson (R-Pa.) and Sanford Bishop (D-Ga.) co-sponsored a resolution supporting the designation of a “Boy Scouts of America Day,” this time in celebration of the BSA’s 113th anniversary.

“There are more than 1 million youth currently enrolled in Scouting who contributed more than 17.7 million community service hours in 2022, helping to advance important projects from conserving local waterways to constructing accessible parks in nearly every congressional district across the country,” Thompson said on the floor of the House while holding his copy of the Scout Handbook.

You can watch Thompson’s speech in its entirety below.

Dedicated to Scouting

Both Thompson and Bishop are Eagle Scouts, and both have a long history in Scouting.

Thompson has spent more than 50 years in Scouting, including serving as a Scoutmaster. Bishop is a Distinguished Eagle Scout, and in 2012 was awarded the Good Scout award by the National Capital Area Council of the Boy Scouts of America for his “years of service as an Eagle Scout and longtime supporter of the Boy Scouts of America,” according to the news release.

I joined Rep. GT Thompson in introducing HRes 111, a resolution celebrating the founding of the @boyscouts. Scouting has shaped my life & the lives of millions by instilling the principles of moral character, responsibility, leadership & service to others. https://t.co/JrWMJXF4kt

— Sanford Bishop, Jr. (@SanfordBishop) February 13, 2023

“As co-chair of the Congressional Scouting caucus, I’m proud to introduce a resolution alongside my good friend from Georgia, Mr. Bishop, designating today as Boy Scouts of America Day to honor the tireless service of Scout volunteers and participants in our communities,” Thompson said.

Having spent more than 50 years in Scouting, I was proud to celebrate the 113th anniversary of @boyscouts this week. My experiences in Scouting first sparked my interest in public service. Congratulations to the Scouts on this momentous occasion! pic.twitter.com/rE6nweTq63

— Glenn “GT” Thompson (@CongressmanGT) February 10, 2023

The official text

The resolution, officially classified as “118th Congress 1st Session H.Res. 914,” reads in part:

Whereas the Boy Scouts of America was incorporated by Chicago publisher, William Boyce, on February 8, 1910, after learning of the Scouting movement during a visit to London;

Whereas the purpose of the Boy Scouts of America is to teach America’s youth self-reliance, character, ethical decisionmaking, and civic leadership through adherence to the Scout Oath and Law;

Whereas, by 1912, Scouts were enrolled in every State;

Whereas the first Eagle Scout Award was earned in 1912, and more than 2,722,000 youth have earned the Eagle Scout Award since;

Whereas 35,342 young men and women earned the rank of Eagle Scout in 2022;

Whereas, in 2023, there are more than 1,042,000 youth currently enrolled and more than 17,000,000 living alumni across the United States;

Whereas each individual Scout, unit, and local council commits to performing community service yearly, totaling more than 17,700,000 community service hours in 2022;

Whereas more than 628,000 adult volunteer leaders serve young people in their communities through religious, civic, and other organizations chartered by the Boy Scouts of America;

Whereas the men and women involved in Scouting often neither seek nor receive the thanks of the public for their contribution to the future of our country;

Whereas February 8, 2023, would be an appropriate day to designate as “Boy Scouts of America Day” in celebration of the 113th anniversary of the incorporation of the Boy Scouts of America; and

Whereas the Boy Scouts of America endeavors to develop American citizens who are physically, mentally, and emotionally fit, have a high degree of self-reliance as evidenced in such qualities as initiative, courage, and resourcefulness, have personal values based on religious and spiritual concepts, have the desire and skills to help others, understand the principles of the American social, economic, and governmental systems, take pride in their American heritage and understand our Nation’s role in the world, have a keen respect for the basic rights of all people, and are prepared to participate in and give leadership to American society: Now, therefore, be it

Resolved, That the House of Representatives supports the designation of a “Boy Scouts of America Day” in celebration of the 113th anniversary of the incorporation of the Boy Scouts of America.

 

Everything you need to know about working at a high-adventure base or BSA camp

Each summer, thousands of seasonal staff bring outdoor adventure to life for Scouts from across the world. Ever wondered who makes up this staff?

If you’re older than 18 (or even 15 for many council camps), the answer is people just like you are the professional staff at camps around the country!

Learn how you can have the experience of a lifetime working at one of the Boy Scouts of America’s four high-adventure bases or at one of more than 450 council camps by checking out the perks and requirements of the jobs.

Why serve on staff at a high-adventure base or council camp?

The benefits of a job at Philmont, the Summit, Sea Base and the Northern Tier will be abundantly clear to anyone who’s visited one of the high-adventure bases. You truly can’t beat the locations or adventures surrounding you when you set foot on these legendary Scouting grounds.

The same is true of Scout camps closer to your own backyard. Working at a BSA camp puts you at the epicenter of outdoor adventure and rewarding youth development.

But the perks of the job don’t stop there. Here’s what else makes working at camp the opportunity of a lifetime:

A wide range of ages are encouraged to apply! Council camps often hire adults and youth older than 15. The BSA’s national high-adventure bases seek adult staff 18 years or older (and yes, even retirees land jobs at camp).
With more than 20,000 positions available, there’s probably a perfect fit for you. Depending on your age, training or interests, you could serve in a role like manning a ropes course with other trained adults. Or if you come from a medical background, you could be serving in a capacity that puts those skills to use.
These positions are incredible resume builders. You never know when your summer serving on the staff at Philmont will strike an impressive chord with a potential employer. Or your seasonal position at the Summit could set you on a path to make working at camp a lifelong career.
Camps offer a variety of schedules to fit your availability. While most camps staff up considerably for the summer months, they also need some seasonal staff all-year long.
You’ll love your downtime. Most staffers have the chance to explore one-of-a-kind scenery and facilities in their free hours. That means hiking, canoeing, snorkeling, zip lining, and way more at your fingertips!
Compensation is a weekly salary based on your role and skillset. Each location is different and the best way to learn more about potential earnings is to apply.

Who can apply to serve on staff at high-adventure bases and council camps?

As we mentioned, while high-adventure bases offer employment for those 18 and older, council camps often have staff opportunities for youth older than 15.

Each position’s requirements are unique and tailored to serve the best program possible to the youth of Boy Scouts of America. To find out more about a job that can greatly impact your life and the lives of countless Scouts, check out each of the high-adventure base career boards.

Sea Base
Summit Bechtel Reserve
Philmont
Northern Tier

If you missed last week’s live livestream, catch it on Facebook for more info on summer and seasonal staffing.

 

Happy Friday! Here’s all the good news you may have missed this week

Scouts BSA troop sponsors town sculpture of frog … wearing a Scout uniform!

The town of Windsor, Virginia, is known for its impressive frog population, due to the area’s heavy, damp soil.

To celebrate, the town commissioned three frog statues … and one of them — sponsored by a local troop — is wearing a Scout uniform.

Learn more about this unique effort in this story from the Windsor Weekly.

Scout with autism creates accessible toys for children with disabilities

Thomas Keenan, a Scouts BSA member in Nebraska, took a batch of regular children’s toys and modified them to make them easier to use for kids with disabilities.

“Some of the toys today will have really small buttons, and they [children] might not have the accuracy of their motor skills to press those buttons,” says the doctor with whom Thomas worked. “We’re turning these into adapted toys by adding in a headphone jack that will activate the toy the way it is supposed to be, but just with bigger buttons and more accessible options. That way the kid can continue to play with the toys and continue that growth.”

Read more about Thomas’ project in this story from Fox42 in Omaha.

Scout troop helps town retire American flags

Respectfully retiring used and worn American flags is a great way a Scout unit can help the community. Cub Scouts and Scouts BSA members from Marathon, Florida, took that to a whole other level, retiring more than 700 flags no longer fit for use.

See pictures and learn more about the project in this story from Keys Weekly.

Six Kansas brothers all earn the rank of Eagle Scout

The oldest, 35, earned his two decades ago.

The most recent, 14, earned his earlier this month.

Read more about this remarkable family in this article from The Leaven newspaper in Kansas City.

Ask Us Anything! We answer some of your most frequently asked questions

Have questions about the BSA? We’ve got answers.

And if we don’t have the answers, we’ll find someone who does.

Below are a handful of questions we’ve recently gotten from readers (some of them, multiple times), along with the best answers we can provide.

Leave your question in the comments below, or send us an email, and we’ll answer in a future post.

Q: Are there any patches that belong on the pocket flaps of a Scout’s shirt?

A: Yes. Most commonly, you’ll see Order of the Arrow lodge pocket flap emblems there. They’re designed to fit the exact size and shape of the standard BSA uniform pocket flap and should be worn on the Scout’s right side. Also, female Venturers and Sea Scouts who have earned the Girl Scout Gold Award may wear the pin on their Venturing uniform shirt’s left pocket flap. The Cub Scout Outdoor Activity Award is worn on the right pocket flap, as is the National Summertime Pack Award. Venturing’s Ranger bar goes on the left pocket flap. Also, temporary insignia may be attached to the button under the pocket flap. For more guidance on patch placement, go to the BSA’s Guide to Awards and Insignia page.

Q: One of my goals in the next couple years is to take a training course at the Philmont Training Center. I wanted to ask about the process for how to do that.

A: Great idea! Everybody should attend a training session at Philmont. They’re awesome! I would start here to get an idea of what the PTC has to offer. You can get more details on the classes offered by clicking here. And, before you head out, you’ll want to take a look at the PTC Orientation Guide for even more details on what to expect from your trip. Have fun!

Q: Can a Venturer over the age of 18 still earn the National Outdoor Activity Award and its segments? And the way I interpreted it was that the award was for youth which would be Scouts under the age of 18?

A: Yes! Though Venturers ages 18-20 are considered “adult program participants,” they are still eligible to earn the same awards as any younger Venturer.

Q: What is the proper way to put troop number patches on the adult uniform to represent two different troops? I have a son in one troop and a daughter in another. I am committee chair this year for one and a voting committee member for the other.

A: First of all, thank you for your service to both of your kids’ troops. While the BSA does not have a way for an adult to wear unit number patches for more than one unit simultaneously, there are some crafty ideas out there for making your service in two units known. Technically speaking, if you’re a member of multiple troops, you might have multiple shirts. Or, you could do something like switch out your unit numbers using fabric fasteners.

Q: Does a Star or Life Scout have to be in charge of a work project? Is there any writeup on what projects a Star or Life Scout has to do?

A: Requirement 5 for both the Star and Life ranks are to serve actively in your troop for four months (for Star) or six months (for Life) in one or more positions of responsibility — or to carry out a Scoutmaster-approved leadership project to help the troop. If the Scout opts for the service project option, they should discuss it with their Scoutmaster in advance, as one requirement of the project is that it help the troop. This might disqualify some traditional Scout service projects.

Scouters in Action: They saved the drowning man from the rip current!

The Scouts from Troop 71 in Forest Grove, Pennsylvania, were enjoying a nice swim on a Delaware beach last summer when a crisis suddenly developed. Far out from shore, a man — not part of the troop — was struggling to keep his head above the surface of the water.

The adult leaders, all strong swimmers with previous knowledge of the area, and all of them properly trained in the BSA’s Safe Swim Defense and BSA Swimming & Water Rescue, then made a series of decisions that likely saved the man’s life.

Here is their story, in their own words.

Richard Lotito, 43, Scoutmaster, Troop 71

Troop 71 was on a camping trip to Cape Henlopen State Park in Delaware. We arrived on Friday and set up camp. The Scouts cooked dinner and then turned in for the evening. On Saturday, we started the schedule of events for the trip, which included a bike tour of the historic areas of the cape, a walk to the World War II lookout towers and then a trip to the beach to allow the Scouts to go for a swim. We always follow Safe Swim guidelines — all our Scouts were swim-tested and approved as swimmers. We were in possession of throw bags, PFDs, life vests and a rescue tube. We implemented the buddy system and had seven adult leaders assigned as lookouts or lifeguards for the Scouts that were swimming in the safe swim area.

Robert Boquist, 55, Eagle Scout, Troop 71 assistant Scoutmaster

I was acting as lookout. As I had training as a BSA Aquatics Instructor and am a certified lifeguard with the American Red Cross, I had been coordinating all of our lifeguard actions. As a Wilderness First Aid instructor, I was also our designated first-aid resource in our emergency action plan.

Jason Morehouse, 46, Eagle Scout, Troop 71 committee member

After a period of approximately 90 minutes, the adults got the Scouts out of the water because there seemed to be a strengthening current that made it unsafe to continue swimming beyond the break. Simultaneously, the break at the shore was increasing in strength and was challenging for even some of the stronger Scouts to maintain safe positions.

Herring Point Beach is a popular swimming spot within Cape Henlopen State Park

Rich Lotito

A beach visitor came up to us to advise that someone was struggling to swim ashore by the rock jetty. After hearing this we then were able to audibly hear the yells of “help” coming from that area and visually confirm the victim’s location.

Dean Cotroneo, 49, assistant Scoutmaster

I noticed a woman waving her hands in the air to get our attention. She didn’t speak English, so I couldn’t make out what she was saying. She kept pointing to the ocean frantically. I proceeded to run down the beach where onlookers were gathered and saw a distressed swimmer flailing his arms and screaming “help.”

Rob Boquist

I scanned the surf zone but could not see anyone in distress. I asked them to show me where the person was, and they said he was “way out.” I scanned past the surf zone and saw someone in the water waving his arms. He appeared to be about 75 yards offshore. As I looked at the waves and conditions, I could see the swimmer was caught in a rip current. He was not actively swimming at the time; he was vertical in the water and waving his arms, appearing to be in distress.

Dean Cotroneo

Nobody had come to the victim’s aid, nor were there any lifeguards at the beach, so instinctively I ran into the water and began swimming toward him.

Jason Morehouse

I turned and grabbed a rescue tube and ran adjacent to shore to minimize the distance of swimming.

Rob Boquist

I asked if anyone had called 911, and other bystanders said “yes, we called 911.” I ran back to our troop gear and got another rescue tube to assist with the rescue. When I passed by the onlookers who had alerted us, I asked one of them to help direct EMS when they got here. As I looked out again to find the victim, I saw Dean swimming out diagonally to him. To get to the victim quickly, I decided to run up the beach and enter the rip current where it was closest to shore. As I was swimming out, and about halfway to the victim, I saw Dean off to my right. He did not have any flotation support with him. I stopped for a second and yelled to get his attention.

Dean Cotroneo

I got about 75-100 yards in the ocean and realized I didn’t have a flotation device. When I turned around and saw that Jason, who had a rescue tube, was behind me, I motioned for Jason to go ahead. Soon after, Robert screamed, “Dean do you have a float?” I screamed “no.” He motioned me to get back to shore. Once I knew Jason could get to the victim first, I began to make my way back to shore.

Jason Morehouse

I swam approximately 75 yards to reach the person. As I approached, it was clear that the person was an adult male. He was screaming for help, and he was sometimes falling below the level of the water. He was gasping for air and seemed only moments from going under when I reached him. As I approached, I told him that I was there to help and that I had a rescue tube I was going to give him. I stabilized the swimmer and began swimming with him in an assisted carry/swim position. Robert joined me soon after.

Rob Boquist

I asked the victim what his name was, and he said “George.” With that, l knew he was conscious, responsive and breathing. He was obviously exhausted. He appeared to be in his early 20s. I looked around to see our situation. We were more than a football field away from the shore and had moved a little north of where I entered the water. I told Jason we should try to swim north parallel to the shore and get out of the rip current. It only took about 30 seconds of towing the victim and tubes until I could see we were not going farther out from shore.

Jason Morehouse

We were unable to swim back to the original position on the shore. The current seemed to be fighting our progress.

Rob Boquist

The current was now pushing us toward the northern rock jetty. This created a hazardous situation. If we tried to get to shore, and the current pushed us into the rock jetty, all three of us could be badly injured on the rocks. Jason and I stopped again and talked about our situation. I looked north to the other side of the rock jetty and saw some vigorous wave action, and some surfers in the waves. I knew this was actually one of the safer areas to go, to make sure we did not re-enter a rip current, and I told Jason that’s where we should go. He agreed, and we began towing George toward the north side of the jetty. As we got closer to the surf zone, we started to get pounded by breaking waves. We kept letting George know when a wave was coming so he could hold his breath as the wave went over the top of us.

Dean Cotroneo

While I was swimming back to shore, I yelled at a surfer in the water to go help Jason and Robert with his board. He paddled over to the three of them.

Jason Morehouse

As we approached the shore, a surfer came to us and offered help. We were able to use the board as a more stable device to help the victim over the intense break.

Rob Boquist

The surfer swam over to us and let us use his board to help get George get a little higher out of the water. When we could stand, we pushed the surfboard away, and Jason and I supported George on either side to help him out of the water. He could barely move his legs from exhaustion.

Graphic courtesy of Rob Boquist

Dean Cotroneo

The victim was so weak, Jason and Rob had to carry him to shore over each of their shoulders to the shore.

Rich Lotito

He proceeded to throw up and advised that he did swallow a good amount of seawater. His friends were around him to comfort him, and they advised that the ocean was very rough and that their friend got caught in a riptide, they went out further than they should have, and that this particular person was not a strong swimmer and should not have gone out that far. There was an agreement that if it had not been for both Jason and Rob’s actions, this swimmer would have been a drowning victim.

Rob Boquist

He said he swallowed a lot of seawater and was feeling sick because of that. After vomiting up the seawater, he said he felt a bit better. I asked him if he was having any trouble breathing, and he said no. His breathing was deep and strong, not labored.

Jason Morehouse

Upon shore, the victim was reunited with his peers. We stayed to help them get the victim through possible shock, inhaled water and dehydration.

Rob Boquist

George had a few friends who were around us now, but there were no rescue personnel on the beach. I asked his friends to call 911 again. I explained to George and his friends that if he had inhaled any water, there could be delayed complications with swelling of his lung tissues.

Rich Lotito

Had Troop 71 not been there or did not act when they did, this young man would have drowned for sure as there were a lot of bystanders on the beach and they just did not know what to do.

Dean Cotroneo

Onlookers were commenting to us, “Thank God the lifeguards were here.” And Rob said, “We aren’t park lifeguards — we are Scouts!”

Robert Boquist and Jason Morehouse each received Heroism Awards for their actions that day. Dean Cotroneo received a Certificate of Merit.

Washington Crossing Council commissioner Bill Cameron (far right) recognized the Scouters at a recent Troop 71 court of honor. Photo courtesy of Nate McHugh, Troop 71 Order of the Arrow Unit Representative

 

Let’s take a moment to watch the Oregon Trail Council’s video on Scouting safely

A safety related incident in 2018 prompted the Oregon Trail Council to reemphasize their efforts to communicate the BSA’s safety rules to its adult volunteers.

One of the results of that initiative is their Scout S.A.F.E. Video, in which the council’s Scout Executive, commissioner, vice president of district operations, and two youth members of the BSA walk viewers through the BSA’s S.A.F.E. Scouting checklist and other elements of safe Scouting.

“We decided our goal was to make sure all our leaders were educated on those elements of Scouting,” says Scout Executive Scott Impecoven. “We felt the need to get word out sooner to our leaders, rather than waiting until they took leader specific training.”

The 8-minute video is brief and direct, and does a great job of emphasizing the importance of following the BSA’s safety rules — and the possible consequences if you don’t — without coming across as overly somber or preachy.

It’s well worth taking the time to watch it.

Parents trust Scout leaders to conduct safe programs

If none of the material covered in this video is news to you, that’s great. That means you’re doing it right.

If some of it is new to you, that’s OK. No time like the present to learn.

“We understand the trust that parents have placed in us when they made the decision to allow their children to participate in Scouting,” council commissioner Claudette McWilliams says in the video. “And we continuously strive to earn and maintain that trust.”

The video is the brainchild of Phil Ermer, a member of the council’s enterprise risk management committee.

“One of the goals of the video is to establish a standard process of safety planning for Scout activities so it is clear what everyone’s roles and responsibilities are,” Ermer says.

Assessing risk during planning

Ermer breaks down his process into six steps.

Who is the leader on this trip? How are they qualified to lead this activity?
Who are the assistant leaders — the eyes and ears watching the youth?
The leader studies the challenges and hazards of where the Scouts are going, cross checking everything with the BSA’s Scouting Safely resources. One example of the kind of thing you could learn: If you’re planning a hike at a state park, and the park’s website notes that some sections of the trail require hikers to use their hands to go up a hill, you are no longer hiking, you are now climbing, and the BSA’s climbing rules now apply (you’ll note that they’re quite different from hiking rules and require leaders with more advanced training).
The leader refers to the BSA guidelines: S.A.F.E., Guide to Safe Scouting and weather safety training for how to mitigate any hazards.
Communicate to other adults: They must understand the rules and their role of being the eyes and ears for safety on the trip.
Communicate to youth: In pre-trip planning and via Safety Moments, don’t be concerned about some repetition. Set clear and firm expectations to youth. They must understand and abide by safety rules to be part of the trip.

BSA’s Wood Badge course turns 75, remains as relevant as ever

In more than 20 years of writing about the BSA, I’ve heard participants claim the “pinnacle” of their youth experience as anything from earning the rank of Eagle to taking a trip to a high-adventure base or even spending a week at summer camp with their friends.

But when it comes to the adult Scouting experience, there’s only one pinnacle: Wood Badge.

Wood Badge is an advanced leadership training course open to Scouting volunteers and participants ages 18 and older. Leaders from Cub Scouting, Scouts BSA, Venturing, Sea Scouts and Explorers all have something to gain from Wood Badge.

“If you ever thought about Wood Badge, I would suggest don’t wait,” says Renee Estrella-Wells, a 2017 participant. “Take it as soon as you can. I have made friends that I am sure will be lifelong friendships. I have learned many new tools that I can apply in my life, family, work and Scouts. … It truly is a life-changing experience.”

What is Wood Badge?

Most councils offer a Wood Badge course at least once per year, either over two three-day weekends or one six-day week. Participants are divided into patrols and learn how to better handle leadership skills such as listening, managing conflict, leading change, mentoring and project planning.

Participants leave with “tickets” — long-term projects designed to help them realize their personal vision of their role in Scouting. For example, one of the tickets might be to grow Scouting in some way or to encourage other leaders to take Wood Badge themselves.

Photo by Michael Roytek

How did Wood Badge begin?

The first Wood Badge course ever was held at Gilwell Park in England in 1919. It lasted nearly two weeks, and the participants experienced a course devised by Scouting founder Robert Baden-Powell.

Much of the course involved learning practical Scouting skills, such as patrol jobs, ceremonies, flag courtesy, campcraft, pioneering, nature lore, signs and signals, Scout games, compass work, map making and drawing. Participants also took an eight-hour hike in the forest under “sealed orders” — meaning they didn’t learn of the destination until the hike began.

Like today’s course, the 1919 version included two parts: the in-person training and the application of the training in your home unit. Participant John Wilkinson, for example, went on to help develop Scouting in Ireland and Albania.

When did Wood Badge come to the United States?

Seventy-five years ago!

Wood Badge finally made it to the U.S. in 1948. Author Kenneth Davis wrote extensively about the BSA’s adoption of the Wood Badge program in his book, A History of Wood Badge in the United States.

After thriving overseas for decades, it took a Baden-Powell visit to Schiff Scout Reservation in New Jersey in 1935 to sow the seeds for American Wood Badge. Baden-Powell remarked that the 470-acre Scout camp — more than eight times larger than Gilwell Park — would make a great location for an American version of the course.

The first U.S. Wood Badge course was held at Schiff in July and August 1948. The course director and Scoutmaster was William “Green Bar Bill” Hillcourt, known as the “Scoutmaster to the World.”

Has Wood Badge changed since then?

Yes!

The Wood Badge program has evolved over the years, including an update in 2020 designed to make it more streamlined and accessible.

“The new course creates a warmer, friendlier, more inclusive and welcoming environment for participants,” says Randy Cline, an Eagle Scout, Silver Buffalo recipient (2009), and a nearly 50-year Scouting volunteer from Mechanicsburg, Pa., who chaired the Wood Badge Update Task Force. “It should attract more participants.”

Photo by Michael Roytek

But, what can Wood Badge do for me?

To this day, Wood Badge remains the highest level of Scout leader training available.

But don’t take it from me. Take it from Scouters who have experienced the course for themselves.

“You will find things about yourself you never knew before,” says one.

“So much takeaway that you will be able to use in the future not only in Scouting but in everyday life,” says another.

“Wood Badge changed my life to the point that I made significant changes in order to support my personal vision and Scouting plan,” says one participant who works for a company that itself specializes in workplace training. “I gained self-confidence, realized untapped skills and became a better person.”

Happy Friday! Here’s all the good news you may have missed this week

Scout leaders use CPR training to save a life

While attending Scout camp with his son, Ron Height suffered a cardiac event.

“I started walking off and that’s the last thing I remember,” he says.

Thankfully, there were two other Scout leaders and a paramedic nearby. The men spent 40 minutes performing CPR, then switched to an automated external defibrillator.

“All I could think about was Ron’s kids and his wife and that’s what really got me, kept me going,” one of the men said.

This week, two of them received Heroism Awards for saving Height’s life.

Get more details on the rescue in this story from CBS 17 in Raleigh-Durham, N.C.

Western Massachusetts Council touts membership gains

“This is just a good step forward again, coming out of the pandemic, to be able to say that we’re growing again,” says Art Lobdell, assistant Scout Executive.

Lobdell talks about how the Cub Scouting program was hit the hardest by COVID-19 pandemic, and also how the Exploring program has grown in the last year.

Read more about this council’s efforts in this article from Western Mass News.

Alamo Area Council honors longtime Scout leader

Bill McCalister earned the rank of Eagle in 1958 and fought in the Vietnam War before embarking in a long, successful career in the insurance industry.

Along the way, somehow he found the time to serve as Scoutmaster — for 45 years.

McCalister was formally recognized for his service by other troop leaders, past Eagle Scouts and other members of the community.

Learn more in this article from Community Impact San Antonio.

Church recognizes Scouts for parking lot improvement project

Holy Cross Lutheran Church was trying to replace the parking lot barriers that keep vehicles off the grass. Scouts BSA Troop 575 — and, in particular, Eagle Scout candidate Evan Hendrix — was willing to help.

Find out how the partnership worked out in this story from the Davie County Enterprise Record.

Quite the hike

More than 100 Scouts took part in the Barefoot Mailman Hike, paying tribute to carriers on the first ever U.S. mail route that stretched from Palm Beach to Miami back in the 1800s.

Learn more in this video from CBS Miami.

It’s Scouting for Food season

Each year, North Carolina BSA units celebrate the BSA’s birthday by giving back to the community through the Scouting for Food campaign.

Scouts from the eight counties of the Old North State Council hit the streets on February 4, when they distributed door hangers asking residents to prepare one or more bags of non-perishable food to be picked up the following Saturday.

Read more about how it works in this story from WFMY News 2 in Greensboro, N.C.

Extreme Makeovers, Round 47: Eagle Scout project before-and-after photos

This is the 47th entry in an occasional series in which we share Eagle Scout project before-and-after photos. See the complete collection here and submit your own here.

To fully understand the impact Eagle Scout projects have on communities, you need to see to believe. That’s why we ask to see Eagle Scout project before-and-after photos — the same photos prospective Eagles are asked to include with their post-project report.

The latest batch of 10 projects — from eight different states — includes building gardens, painting tables and repairing cannons.

If your Scout is looking for ideas for his or her Eagle Scout project, you can show him or her this story or any in the Extreme Makeovers collection. You can also find ideas in Scout Life’s Eagle Project Showcase. Still stumped? Try the National Eagle Scout Association’s project idea generator.

TIP: Click/tap and drag the slider below each image to see the change.

Connor from Oregon

Who: Connor, Troop 162, Beaverton, Ore.

What: Connor and his helpers created a garden by landscaping a 20-by-20-by-20-foot triangular spot at a church. They removed dirt, added plants, and installed a rubber border and a wooden bench.

Giancarlos from Texas

Who: Giancarlos, Troop 83, Rockwall, Texas

What: Giancarlos and his helpers offered a free introduction to horse-assisted therapy for children with special needs and their parents. The event included a therapy demonstration, horse grooming, horse petting, crafts and photos.

William from North Carolina

Who: William, Troop 75, Fuquay-Varina, N.C.

What: William and his helpers renovated an old ambulance, transforming it into an ambulance simulator for his high school. They installed walls, shelving, the rear bumper, cabinets and benches.

Jonathan from California

Who: Jonathan, Troop 384, Palm Desert, Calif.

What: Jonathan and his helpers rebuilt desert tortoise rehabilitation pens at a zoo in Palm Desert. He chose this project in memory of his younger brother, Evan, who died in an RV accident 16 months before the project began. Desert tortoises were Evan’s favorite reptile, and he slept with a picture of one next to his bed.

William from California

Who: William, Troop 699, Rancho Cucamonga, Calif.

What: William and his helpers painted 27 tables and benches at a local cultural center in Pomona. He wanted to give back to the center, where he learned his native language.

Ella from Ohio

Who: Ella, Troop 1149, Mariemont, Ohio

What: Ella and her helpers built a food blessing box outside of a local food pantry. The box allows people to get food whenever they need it and not just when the food pantry is open. She also hosted a food drive to fill the blessing box.

Trevor from Pennsylvania

Who: Trevor, Troop 1280, Waynesburg, Pa.

What: Trevor and his helpers cleaned headstones, built a map stand and set a memorial stone for five veterans whose headstones had deteriorated over time. He has wanted to make improvements to this cemetery since he first placed flags on Memorial Day when he was a Tiger.

Alexander from Iowa

Who: Alexander, Troop 214, Cedar Rapids, Iowa

What: Alexander and his helpers created a room that looks like an artificial cave. The room, which is at a local park, also displays information on local bats.

Kevin from Ohio

Who: Kevin, Troop 314, Elmore, Ohio
What: Kevin and his helpers repaired, welded and painted the cannon at the American Legion in Elmore.

Christopher from Kentucky

Who: Christopher, Troop 281, Frankfort, Ky.
What: Christopher and his helpers installed a pergola and concrete pad to help protect a beehive for a camp and retreat center in Irvine, Ky.

Eagle Before & After FAQs

How can I see more in this series?

By going here.

How can I submit my project (or my Scout’s project) for consideration?

Go here to learn how to send them to us.

Are scholarships available for outstanding Eagle projects?

Yes! The Glenn A. and Melinda W. Adams National Eagle Scout Service Project of the Year Award honors outstanding Eagle projects. An Eagle Scout, their parents or any registered BSA volunteer (with the Eagle Scout’s permission) may submit the Eagle Scout service project for consideration.

How can I see even more great Eagle projects?

Check out the Scout Life Eagle Project Showcase.

Who owns the photos used in this series?

Unless otherwise listed, all photos are courtesy of each Scout and their family.

One Super Bowl team has two Eagle Scouts on its roster. Any guesses which one it is?

There are lots of reasons to tune into the Super Bowl: the commercials … the halftime show … and I hear a few people might even watch to find out who wins the game itself.

Here’s one more thing to watch for: Keep your eye on the team that has “Eagles” in its name, because it’s got two Eagle Scouts on its roster.

Philadelphia’s Landon Dickerson, a 6-foot-6, 332-pound offensive lineman from Hudson, N.C.; and Britain Covey, a 5-foot-8, 173-pound wide receiver from Provo, Utah; both earned the highest youth rank in the Scouts BSA program.

Dickerson earned his Eagle in 2016 as a member of Piedmont Council Troop 50 in Hickory, N.C. Covey earned the rank in 2015 as a member of Utah National Parks (now Crossroads of the West) Council Troop 761 in Utah.

This Sunday, both will be on the field for one of the biggest sporting events in the world.

More on Dickerson …

We first heard about Dickerson back in 2016, when he said on live TV that he was going to delay his college enrollment so he could work on his Eagle Scout service project.

Landon Dickerson. Photo by Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports

Many of the best high school players in the country graduate in December of their senior year so they can enroll in college in January and participate in spring practice at college a couple of months later. That, presumably, would put them ahead of the high school players who graduate in the spring – therefore missing spring practice at their college – and waiting until summer or fall to enroll.

Dickerson had the grades to graduate from South Caldwell High School in December, but he had one thing left to accomplish. For his Eagle Scout service project, he built and installed park benches at a local recreation center.

Putting off college for one semester didn’t hurt. He excelled at Florida State for two seasons (he missed most of his junior year due to an ankle injury), earned his undergraduate degree, then transferred to Alabama for his final two seasons of eligibility.

In 2020, he helped the Crimson Tide win the national championship, then was drafted in the second round by the Eagles.

Landon Dickerson blocks in a game earlier this season. Photo by Eric Hartline-USA TODAY Sports

More on Covey …

Covey played quarterback in high school, but college scouts were so impressed by his overall athletic ability that he earned a scholarship to the University of Utah as a wide receiver. He excelled as a freshman in 2015, then missed two seasons in a row while he completed his LDS mission in Chile.

When he returned, he picked up right where he left off, ultimately leading Utah to the Rose Bowl, where the Utes lost a hard-fought battle to national power Ohio State. Covey set the Utah team record for most career punt return yards, finished second in career receptions and third in all-purpose yards.

All of that, however, was not enough to impress NFL scouts. Draft day came and went without Covey’s name being called. He signed with the Eagles as an undrafted free agent, was actually cut from the team the following August, then re-signed to join the practice squad, only to be later elevated to the active roster, where he has remained to this day.

Covey’s grandfather is Stephen R. Covey, author of The 7 Habits of Highly Successful People, one of the most popular self-help books of all time.

Britain Covey reaches for a pass during a preseason game. Photo by Scott Galvin-USA TODAY Sports

Once an Eagle, always an Eagle

In addition to excelling on the field, both players, not surprisingly, also put in tons of work for their community off it.

Dickerson once organized a fundraiser to benefit a firefighter and father of four who had been diagnosed with lung cancer, the result of breathing in toxins while on the job.

Covey uses his platform to raise awareness for Bridle Up Hope, a foundation with the purpose of helping women through the sport of horseback riding who have struggled with depression. The organization was created in memory of one of Covey’s cousins, a passionate rider who died after a bout with depression.

Dickerson has missed some practice time recently with an injured elbow. The Eagles are hopeful he will be healthy enough to play in the Super Bowl.

Covey is expected to be the Eagles’ primary punt returner. He has returned 33 punts for 308 total yards this season. He’s also returned 10 kickoffs for 206 yards.

Britain Covey. Photo by Maria Lysaker-USA TODAY Sports

New this week: Tune into #TroopTalkLive for answers to all your Scouts BSA questions

Maybe you’re a veteran Scouts BSA leader or parent who knows the program from top to bottom. Or maybe you’re a newbie with tons of questions. Either way, #TroopTalkLive is for you.

Debuting this Wednesday at 2 p.m. Central, the BSA’s official monthly Scouts BSA-focused Facebook livestream features expert guests and insiders who share their experiences, advice and the occasional behind-the-scenes look at the Scouts BSA program.

The same team that brings you #CubChatLive will bring in the experts who can answer your questions … live!

This week, we discuss the BSA’s merit badge program. What’s the point of earning a merit badge? Can requirements ever be changed or added to? What about a Scout who is differently abled?

Watch #TroopTalkLive on the second Wednesday of each month at 2 p.m. Central on Facebook Live or YouTube. We’ll share useful tips, tricks and ideas to help your Scouts BSA troop.

Expert advice

Future topics include youth training options: We emphasize letting the Scouts lead … but how do we set them up for success? What resources are available to teach youth how to be better leaders? How does a new troop’s youth leadership get started?

We’ll also talk about the concept of the BSA uniform as a method. Why do we wear uniforms? Can uniforms be required? In what ways are youth allowed to personalize their uniform? And, how can we make sure everyone in the troop has access to a uniform?

Photo by Michael Roytek

Why #TroopTalkLive?

The goal of #TroopTalkLive is to help give you, the Scouts BSA leader or parent, new tools and ideas to take back to your troop and to talk about new things happening in the Scouts BSA program.

“BSA National is a huge network of volunteers and participants with a small team of very wonderful, patient, and dedicated employees supporting them,” says Angelique Minett, communications chair of the Scouts BSA program. “As you can imagine, communication with all these moving parts is complex. We on the Scouts BSA program committee are seeking to create more ways for us to communicate effectively.

“We’re excited to be offering #TroopTalkLive as part of these efforts.”

Ashton Kutcher confirms that he’s a Cub Scout den leader

No, Daily Mail, it’s not a Halloween costume.

(At least they got closer to the last month, when the British tabloid called it “getting in the Scouting spirit.”)

Why does actor Ashton Kutcher keep walking around the streets of Los Angeles in a BSA uniform, for all the paparazzi to see? Sometimes the most obvious answer is the correct one: He’s a registered leader in the BSA.

“I’m the den leader for my son’s Cub Scout den,” Kutcher told Access Hollywood during an interview promoting his latest movie, Your Place or Mine, with costar Reese Witherspoon. “It was funny, because the first time I went, it was around Halloween. And this thing came out like, ‘oh, Ashton’s in a Halloween costume!’

“No, I’m the den leader. And that’s me on the way to the den meeting.”

“I was a Scout”

Kutcher, who broke into show business when he starred in the long-running sitcom That ‘70s Show, was a Scout as youth and has praised the program for shaping the person he is today.

“I was a Scout,” he told Access Hollywood. “I was a Cub Scout … I was a Boy Scout …”

When Witherspoon asked him if has the Scout “code” memorized, Kutcher didn’t hesitate.

“Trustworthy-loyal-helpful-friendly-courteous-kind-obedient-cheerful-thrifty-brave-clean-reverent,” said Kutcher without hesitation.

(Witherspoon, to her credit, was able to recite the Girl Scout Promise rather effectively as well.)

“That’s what I’m saying!” responded Kutcher. “I’m telling you … Scouts had such a deep impact on my life. It sets you in a place where you feel self-sufficient, you feel prepared …”

“Accomplished … capable …” Witherspoon chimed in.

“You feel capable,” Kutcher nodded. “If all hell breaks loose, I’m lighting a fire and going camping, guys. … I think it’s a powerful thing.”

According to one report, Kutcher’s appearance in Your Place or Mine almost didn’t happen due to Kutcher not wanting to miss out on the experience of being a den leader:

Shooting was set to happen during the school year, and in Georgia, and that was not going to work for Kutcher. He didn’t want to give up that kind of time with his kids nor his den leader position for (his son’s) Cub Scout pack, and so he negotiated with Netflix to have them take the extra cost of shooting in L.A. (The Peach State offers a nice tax break!) out of his salary.

Esquire confirms:

He was able to make the movie and still make it home for dinner. Go to school events. Keep his gig as den leader for his son’s Cub Scout pack. It was worth it.

“In our pack, we have boys and girls, and it’s incredible”

Kutcher is also a philanthropist, devoting much of his efforts to fighting human trafficking.

He and ex-wife Demi Moore founded Thorn, a company that builds technology to defend children from sexual abuse. His charity, Ashton Runs, is dedicated to raising money for Thorn.

After the success of That ’70s Show, Kutcher appeared in comedies such as Dude, Where’s My Car? (2000), action movies such as The Butterfly Effect (2004), and a string of romantic comedies, including What Happens in Vegas (2008), Valentine’s Day (2010) and No Strings Attached (2011).

He returned to television for a successful run on Two and a Half Men (2011-2015) and The Ranch (2016-2020) and is currently in That ‘90s Show, the sequel/spinoff of the show that started it all.

“What’s amazing is in our pack, we have boys and girls, and it’s incredible,” Kutcher said. “And these kids are learning all of those values and all of those skills that I think will serve them in life.”

Your Place or Mine hits Netflix on Feb. 10. That ‘90s Show is available on Netflix now.

Happy Friday! Here’s all the good news you may have missed this week

Building bridges

An Eagle Scout candidate from the oldest Scouts BSA troop in Washington, D.C., has installed a bridge over a small waterway in a popular park.

“As regular park visitors know, the old log footbridge was uneven, deteriorating, and slowly sinking. Eventually, it would have blocked water flow from the spring-fed valley stream. The new bridge is a welcome and a considerable trail improvement for Linnean Park and will serve the Forest Hills community for many years to come.”

This story gives a great play-by-play of the Scout’s efforts.

Conducting themselves like Lincoln

The West Coast’s version of the Lincoln Pilgrimage is back. After being canceled in 2020 and 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the California Inland Empire Council event returns next week.

“The pilgrimage encourages youth to dedicate themselves to the principles and virtues held by President Abraham Lincoln and our Founding Fathers.”

Click here to read more.

(It’s worth noting that Abraham Lincoln Council in Illinois hosts its own Lincoln Pilgrimage.)

Restoring a cemetery

A Kansas Eagle Scout candidate has led an inspiring project that resulted in the restoration of a largely neglected cemetery in his community. The football field-sized site is the burial ground for many Civil War veterans and an important part of the town’s history.

“The small plot of land, officially known as the Evan H. Young Cemetery — others call it the Daniel Deal Cemetery, in honor of one of the Civil War soldiers buried there — is familiar to local history buffs, but not many others.”

Click here for more details.

Installing new picnic tables

Scouts BSA members from Fort Bragg, N.C., installed new wooden picnic tables in support of the community’s oldest standing structure, a Presbyterian church built in 1847. Members of the church use the picnic area for an annual service in honor of Martin Luther King Jr.

“Answering recent requests from descendants of the original congregation, new tables were needed to replace the older wooden tables, which had collapsed after many years of picnics.”

Learn how the Scouts answered the call by reading this story.

Helping animals

A Tennessee troop spent a recent Saturday volunteering at a local animal shelter.

“The troop spent the day making enrichment items for the animals in our care, including stuffed KONGS, lick mats, frozen pup-sicles, and cat nip toys. These enrichment items are essential for keeping the animals from getting bored in their kennels.”

Click here to read more.

Restoring headstones

And, finally, watch this local news report from New Port Richey, Fla., that details a Scouts BSA troop’s efforts to restore the headstones at a veterans’ cemetery.

National Jamboree looking for security, EMS volunteers

The 2023 National Jamboree is going to be big, not only in terms of the number of attendees, but also in terms of the massive high-adventure base that’s hosting it.

The BSA is currently recruiting volunteers to serve on the Jamboree’s emergency management team, responsible for providing security and emergency medical services, and otherwise doing what they can to make sure the event runs smoothly.

The security team is looking for volunteers willing to take on a variety of assignments each day at different locations throughout the Summit — no previous experience required.

The EMS team is looking for certified emergency medical technicians with up-to-date CPR training to provide high-quality service to participants, visitors and Jamboree staff. Applicants should be willing to work a 24-hour shift in a high-adventure setting, which will include riding on a military medic unit, utility vehicle, bicycle or patrolling the grounds on foot with other providers from around the world.

Read on for more details.

Security positions, explained

Security volunteers are tasked with securing the Jamboree site using a combination of foot and mounted patrols, as well as manning entry control points. Law enforcement experience is not required, but if you are a current or retired law enforcement officer, please be prepared to provide your agency’s information on your application and proof of your current status.

Experienced personnel may be asked to conduct investigations.

Physical demands are dependent on position and range from high to low activity. Some personnel may be required to drive UTVs while others may be assigned to foot or bike patrols.

Photo by Stephan van der Werp

EMS positions, explained

EMS volunteers will join a diverse group of personnel trained to provide emergency medical care in the field to the Jamboree’s staff, participants and visitors. All volunteers will be managed by experienced providers under a unified command system. Those who join this group will be assigned rotating shifts that run between 10 and 24 hours, with ample personal time to enjoy the Jamboree during your off time.

Physical demands range from low to high, depending on the area of the Jamboree to which you are assigned. Duties may include patient movement, and some personnel may be required to drive UTVs while others may be assigned to foot or bike patrols.

Current certification as an EMT or higher in your home state is required.

How do I sign up to work at the Jamboree?

The National Jamboree is July 19-28, but Jamboree Service Team (JST) volunteers are expected to arrive by July 16 and leave July 29.

Volunteers can sign up to work the entire two weeks or choose to work just the first or second half of the Jamboree.

Prospective staffers can sign up at the JST website. JST members serving on the EMS or security teams must be a minimum of 18 years old on the first day of the Jamboree.

All adults participating in the National Jamboree must be registered with the BSA and have taken Youth Protection Training on or after July 19, 2022.

The secret of their success: How one Indiana troop retains older members with the promise of a “big trip”

We’ve long known that older kids have different interests than younger kids.

That’s why there’s Cub Scouts for youth in kindergarten through fifth grade, and Scouts BSA for kids in fifth grade and higher.

But I would suggest we could take it one step further: Scouts BSA members who are 13 years and older have different interests than kids in the same troop who are 11 or 12.

They’re both the right age for Scouts BSA, but in many cases, they’re completely unalike.

So how do you run a troop that keeps kids of all ages interested? For Troop 4010B out of Clarksville, Indiana, the answer is to focus on what they call their “big trip.”

The big trip is an annual event that goes well beyond your average Scout campout or summer camp experience. Sometimes it’s a trip to a BSA high-adventure base. Other times it’s a trip to an exotic location such as the Boundary Waters, Yellowstone National Park, Alaska, or, more recently, Iceland, where the troop visited last summer with a few members of their sister troop, 4010G, and Venturing Crew 4010.

Photo courtesy of Troop 4010

Something to look forward to

The troop requires big trip participants to be at least 13 years old and to have achieved the rank of First Class. Each big trip requires about two years of planning, so there’s literally always something for Scouts to look forward to.

Younger Scouts stay with the program and work on advancement because they can’t wait to be old enough to go on a big trip. Older Scouts stick with the program because they can’t wait for their next big trip.

But it’s not just the trips themselves that keep the troop strong; it’s the process surrounding the trips: They’re brainstormed and planned from the start entirely by the youth, with adults there to provide guidance only as needed.

“The whole process ties in with the methods of Scouting,” says Dan Ellnor, a former youth member of the troop who continues to serve now as an adult leader. “It’s leadership development. It’s personal growth. It’s all of the methods. (The Scouts) come up with all the ideas. They really inspire us.”

Photo courtesy of Troop 4010

There was an idea …

The planning for each Troop 4010B big trip starts with a handful of Scouts doing extensive research on the cost, logistics and advantages of going to any destination of their choice. For the trip to be considered by the rest of the Scouts, they’re required to put all the data together in a presentation in front of their peers.

“We voted on Iceland after looking at a handful of destinations to choose from,” says 17-year-old Mark Nokes, who also served as a crew leader on the trip. “We picked it because of its natural beauty, and it was an incredible and otherworldly experience.”

Recently, the troop watched presentations on options such as the United Kingdom or Colorado, but it was 15-year-old Wyatt Chisman who put together the presentation on Iceland.

“I wanted to go somewhere not many people have gone before,” says Wyatt.

The adults worked with the youth to make sure they adhered to the BSA’s rules on international travel. They also helped with tasks that youth can’t do, like making airline and lodging reservations and making payments.

“This was the first trip that we went out of the country for,” says Scoutmaster Garry Nokes. “It created new challenges that we were up for, and all of them were worked out.”

And once they got there?

“The Iceland trip was strenuous but an all-together amazing experience that I will never forget,” says 16-year-old Mary Braden of Troop 4010G. “It was fascinating to explore the land and the culture. We did caving, snorkeling, sightseeing at a glacier lagoon and trekking on a 30-mile hike to a hut in the mountains.

“It was hard, but it was an adventure.”

Photo courtesy of Troop 4010

Fundraising, fundraising, fundraising

It’s worth noting that big trips are not cheap. That’s why fundraising is such an important part of Troop 4010B’s programming during each two-year planning period.

The troop offers a lot of fundraising opportunities, but the main one involves performing essential duties such as assisting people with disabilities and removing trash before, during and after a very popular community festival.

“It’s all about managing the people flow,” says assistant Scoutmaster Jeff Braden. “We look at it as a community service, but it’s great that we get some funding from it, too.”

In between the fundraisers, the Scouts stay active, going on regular campouts and working on advancement.

They also find time to make sure they’re all in top physical condition for the next big trip, and prepared for all possible weather conditions, which, for Iceland, meant being ready for the cold.

“We went through lots of practice hiking trips, did cold-weather camping and had lots of meetings to discuss foreign travel,” 16-year-old Ian Prinz, who served as another crew leader. “I worked closely with the adult and other crew leaders to help plan the itinerary and keep things moving.”

Photo courtesy of Troop 4010

They do it because it works

Troop 4010B’s adult leaders say the big trip goes a long way toward keeping all of their Scouts – no matter their age – engaged in the program.

Recently, the troop recognized 10 members for earning the rank of Eagle. Most of them were within six months or so of turning 18, the drop-dead date for earning the Eagle requirements.

They didn’t wait that long because they were lazy, either.

“It was because of the big trip,” says assistant Scoutmaster Ben Chisman. “They wanted to stay involved.”

It’s a model they think would work for any troop looking for ways to keep older kids active.

“The main advice I would give is that getting used high adventure takes time,” says 18-year-old Eagle Scout and assistant Scoutmaster Jeffrey Braden. “You won’t be perfect at it at first, but once you get the routines down, it can be — and will be — a blast.”

Those dark specks in the photo are flies! Photo courtesy of Troop 4010

Share your “success” stories

We’re always on the lookout for Scouting success stories. Know any units or leaders who have gone above and beyond expectations? Email us and let us know! We might feature them in our next “secret of their success” story.

Take time to focus on reverence during Scout Sunday, Scout Sabbath, Scout Jumuah

Every point of the Scout Law helps guide young people to make ethical and moral decisions over the course of their lives. Ideally, they remind themselves of the tenets that follow the words “A Scout is…” every day.

But we can all use a reminder. Each February, around the time of the BSA’s birthday, we ask Scouts to focus on the 12th point of the Scout Law: reverent.

Through the celebrations known as Scout Sunday, Scout Sabbath and Scout Jumuah, Scouts can reflect on their faith. Every unit can celebrate these days as they choose — you can attend a worship service wearing a full field uniform, participate in a worship service or conduct a service project for a religious organization.

When is Scout Sunday 2023?

Scout Sunday this year is Feb. 12, according to the BSA’s Calendar of Religious Observances. However, units and chartered organizations are free to schedule their Scout Sunday on any Sunday in February. Check with your local religious leaders before making any further plans.

You can buy official Scout Sunday gear, including the Scout Sunday 2023 patch, at scoutshop.org.

When is Scout Sabbath 2023?

This year, Scout Sabbath is Feb. 10 and 11, according to the BSA’s Calendar of Religious Observances. Scout Sabbath (also called Scout Shabbat) is the Jewish observance of the significance of religion in Scouting. It begins at sundown that Friday and continues into the next day.

Jewish Scouts are invited to attend their local Jewish Committee on Scouting-sponsored Scout Sabbath or their regular worship services in their field uniforms. If Scouts have earned any religious emblems, they should wear them to the service.

Some councils or units will celebrate the occasion on other days. Be sure to check with your council or local Jewish Committee on Scouting to verify the date.

When is Scout Jumuah 2023?

Scout Jumuah is Feb. 10 this year, but units may adjust this date to best meet their needs. Scout Jumuah (sometimes stylized as Scout Jumu’ah) is the Islamic observance of the significance of religion in Scouting. It offers a chance to recognize the contributions of young people and adults to Scouting within the Muslim community.

A Scout Jumuah program might include recognition by the chartered organization representative, a service project or a display that explains the benefits of Scouting.

Text for a Scout Sunday, Scout Sabbath or Scout Jumuah program

The BSA has prepared this text you can add to a worship service program (digital or print) on the day of your congregation’s celebration. You are welcome to copy and paste — or adapt it however you’d like.

The Scouting program at (name of congregation) is more than just an activity for our youth to learn about the outdoors. Scouting provides fun, fellowship, and training to our youth as well as youth in our community. It emphasizes honesty, self-reliance, and respect. Through a year-round program, it affects character, citizenship, and personal fitness. But the success of our Scouting depends on our volunteers, who serve in a variety of leadership roles so that our young people may benefit from our Scouting ministry. As the Boy Scouts of America celebrates its anniversary, we salute the splendid volunteers who serve as Cubmasters, Scoutmasters, Sea Scout Skippers and Venturing Advisors, and in other positions of leadership. Our Scout unit(s) would like to invite you and your family to be a part of their program. (Unit contact person/information)

Suggested services

The BSA’s National Religious Relationships Committee has prepared this helpful Word document containing suggested services for an inter-religious celebration, an Islamic celebration, a Jewish celebration and a Christian celebration.

Scouts and unit leaders can pick one of the Scouting anniversary celebrations within or combine pieces in a way that works best for them. You’ll find a suggested program that includes prayers, poems, songs, worship messages, sermons, scripture readings and much more.

Let’s look at the awesome projects these Eagle Scout Adams award winners did

If your Scout hasn’t submitted his or her Eagle Scout service project to be considered for a national recognition, there’s still a little time left.

The deadline to submit an Eagle Scout project to your local council for the Glenn and Melinda Adams Service Project of the Year Award is Jan. 31. You can find the nomination form and guidelines here.

We’ve told you about last year’s winner: Apara Sai Jella who built a playground and meditation area for women’s rehab center in California. She wasn’t the only award recipient. Apara received the national recognition, but 15 other Scouts received territorial honors.

Nominations must be sent to your local council for review by Jan. 31. The councils will select a council winner. Only the council winner will be sent in for a national service territory review. Each national service territory will review the council winners and select a territorial winner. The territorial winners will then be reviewed, and a national winner will be selected.

Let’s look at what the territorial winners did:

Nijrell Jackson’s Eagle Scout project.

Territory 1

Nijrell Jackson, Far East Council

Nijrell built a garden for a community center in Okinawa, Japan. The garden provided a peaceful place for the low-income families who frequent the center to enjoy.

Ravindu Vithanachchi’s Eagle Scout project.

Territory 2

Ravindu Vithanachchi, Catalina Council

Ravindu constructed slant boards and outdoor desks for an elementary school in Tucson, Ariz. The boards and desks helped students, including special-needs students, to learn at the school’s outdoor classroom during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Apara Jella’s Eagle Scout project.

Territory 3

Apara Sai Jella, Golden Gate Area Council

You can read about Apara’s project, which was selected as the national winner, here.

Johnathan O’Brien’s Eagle Scout project.

Territory 4

Johnathan O’Brien, Northeast Iowa Council

Johnathan planted 14 native trees and created four flowerbeds containing more than 900 native prairies grasses and flowers for a nature preserve in Asbury, Iowa.

Brendan Zahner’s Eagle Scout project.

Territory 5

Brendan Zahner, Heart of America Council

Brendan replaced a watering system with a targeted drip irrigation system for a regional food bank’s demonstration garden in Kansas City, Mo. The garden is used to teach the community how to create their own garden using low-cost methods.

Zain Dhatwani’s Eagle Scout project.

Territory 6

Zain Dhatwani, Three Fires Council

Zain launched an international program for students in five countries to meet online to discuss topics such as discrimination, service and leadership. He also hosted an event at his school in Illinois where students could learn more about schools from around the world.

Territory 7

Cole Kosch, Capitol Area Council

Cole produced a 30-minute documentary on the dangers of vaping, told from a teenager’s perspective. He then worked with the American Lung Association to integrate his film into their educational programs for teens and schools.

Nicholas Sasseen’s Eagle Scout project.

Territory 8

Nicholas Sasseen, Last Frontier Council

Nicholas tore down an old structure at a park in Lawton, Okla., and replaced it with a covered pavilion that had a patriotic theme. The large project topped $150,000 in cost, which was collected through donations and grants.

Adam Weaver’s Eagle Scout project.

Territory 9

Adam Weaver, Dan Beard Council

You can read about Adam’s project here. He created a sensory path for a school in Mason, Ohio.

Jake Christel’s Eagle Scout project.

Territory 10

Jake Christel, Theodore Roosevelt Council

Jack constructed a serenity labyrinth for a church in Oceanside, N.Y. The place was designed for people to walk, pray and become closer to God.

Eric Hense’s Eagle Scout project.

Territory 11

Eric Hense, Mayflower Council

Eric developed 80 sensory kits to give to first responders in the South Shore area of Massachusetts. The kits were designed for first responders to use calm and communicate with people with autism during emergencies.

Logan Decker’s Eagle Scout project.

Territory 12

Logan Decker, Mountaineer Area Council

Logan built a large pavilion for a church in Fairmont, W.Va., that included a basketball court, grill, prayer bench, woodshed and picnic tables.

James Stickel’s Eagle Scout project.

Territory 13

James Stickel, Northern New Jersey Council

James installed a veterans memorial for the township of Washington, N.J. The memorial included a wall, flag poles, brick pavers and landscaping.

Taylor Bell’s Eagle Scout project.

Territory 14

Taylor Bell, Middle Tennessee Council

You can read about Taylor’s project on page 11 of this special edition of Scout Life magazine. She built a mobile obstacle course for a sheriff’s department’s K-9 unit in Tennessee.

Christian Norris’s Eagle Scout project.

Territory 15

Christian Norris, Indian Waters Council

Christian developed a donation method that helps fund more than a dozen children to receive cancer treatments and for their families to receive housing and meals. You can read about his project here.

Jacob Friedman’s Eagle Scout project.

Territory 16

Jacob Friedman, Central Florida Council

Jacob designed a garden with 150 native plants to help combat coastal erosion at New Smyrna Beach, Fla. The project helped restore a natural habitat for several insect and animal species.

 

Eagle Scout project addresses the need to Be Prepared if someone has a seizure

As a young person living with epilepsy, Gavin Bouchey knows that it’s all fine and well if he, his family members and his fellow Scouts BSA members know how to respond to a seizure.

But what about everyone else in his community?

Gavin Bouchey

For his Eagle Scout project, Gavin, from Troop 112 in Carmel, Indiana, organized, promoted and successfully conducted a seizure first-aid training session.

“I wanted to do something for people outside my troop so they can help people who are having a seizure,” Gavin says.

Around 1 in 10 people will have some kind of seizure at least once in their lifetime, according to the CDC. When you look at it like that, being prepared to help someone who’s having a seizure is just as important as knowing other basic first-aid measures.

“This training can help save a life,” says Gavin.

Understanding epilepsy

Epilepsy is the fourth most common neurological disorder in the world, according to the Epilepsy Foundation. It causes sudden, unprovoked seizures that are the result of electrical activity in the brain.

Not all seizures are the result of epilepsy, but a doctor may diagnose a patient with epilepsy if they have two unprovoked seizures, or one unprovoked seizure with a high risk of more.

Seeing someone have a seizure can be scary, just like it could be scary to see someone suffering from hypothermia or dehydration.

And just like with other aspects of first aid, proper training can go a long way toward improving your ability to respond properly.

Gavin worked with the Epilepsy Foundation of Indiana to develop the materials for his training session. He recruited volunteers to help promote the event by handing out fliers and bookmarks with seizure first-aid basics printed on them.

When his session was over, the participants had to complete a quiz to receive their certificates.

“It felt important for me to do a project that helped others with epilepsy,” Gavin says. “I have had seizures in places where someone didn’t know how to help me, so I wanted to try to make a change to that for others.”

Courtesy of Gavin Bouchey

What to do if someone is having a seizure

There are many different types of seizures, and during some of them a person may be unaware of what is going on or lose consciousness. Knowing what to do when someone has a seizure can make a real difference.

The Epilepsy Foundation lists the following steps as basic seizure first aid:

Always stay with the person until the seizure is over.
Pay attention to how long the seizure lasts.
Stay calm. Most seizures last only a few minutes.
Prevent injury by moving nearby objects out of the way.
Make the person as comfortable as possible.
Keep onlookers away.
Don’t hold the person down.
Don’t put anything in the person’s mouth.
Don’t give water, pills or food by mouth unless the person is fully alert.
Make sure their breathing is OK.
Know when to call for emergency medical help.
Be sensitive and supportive and ask others to do the same.

Learn more at the Epilepsy Foundation’s website.

Graphic courtesy of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Worth reading: Eagle Scout sets goal to meet every mayor in his state

Meet Mitchell.

Mitchell is on a mission.

Mitchell Whitley, a native of Greensboro, N.C., a graduate of Samford University, and an Eagle Scout, has set a unique goal: to personally meet every mayor in his home state.

There are 551 of them.

Why?

Whitley says it’s because he wants to know what issues really affect the residents of North Carolina. He hopes to eventually publish a book documenting the experience and use the knowledge to unify people from every community.

The project is called Mitchell’s Mayors.

“It is actually quite simple: non-partisanship,” Whitley says in a statement on his website. “Local elections are almost always conducted with no political ID attached to names; instead, candidates and the subsequent winners are based around character, morals, physical interactions and so many other personal aspects.”

You can read more about Whitley’s efforts in this recent story published by The Carolina Journal, and in this report by Spectrum News 1 in Charlotte.

Whitley says the project is helping him refine the leadership skills he first learned in Scouting.

“It’s helped me to continue to be a well-rounded leader for those around me because I’m an Eagle Scout, and that’s another aspect that’s helped me to be a good leader. I wanted to get that next level of experience, and listening and learning about municipal work helped me grow even more.”

Working for the weekends

On weekdays, Whitley works for myfutureNC, a nonprofit organization dedicated to improving the educational opportunities for North Carolinians.

On the weekends, he travels with his father across the state, meeting one mayor here and another mayor there. He’s paying for the project out of his own pocket.

“Interviewing the North Carolina mayors means I can truly understand what problems all people in our state face, not just issues focused around specifically red or blue,” Whitley says.

The project started in late 2021 and isn’t even halfway complete yet, but Whitley and his dad aren’t slowing down.

“For somebody to come and listen and learn to the mayors and say I’m not here to politic, I’m not here to ask for money,” he told The Carolina Journal. “I just want to hear your story and hear about your town, and that means a lot to people.”

Whitley, left, with one of North Carolina’s 551 mayors. Photo courtesy of Mitchell Whitley

Meeting some fascinating folks

Among the highlights of Whitley’s experience so far:

In the town of Atkinson, he and his dad drove the car for the mayor and the mayor’s wife for their community Christmas parade.
In St. James, he learned that the mayor’s father was one of the workers who developed the material that covered the plutonium that made up the world’s first atomic bomb.
In Littleton, he heard all about the mayor’s business — The Cryptozoology & Paranormal Museum, which includes alleged video footage of Bigfoot.
In Monroe, he sat in a space capsule once used by NASA astronaut and Silver Buffalo winner John Glenn.

When he’s done, Whitley says he hopes to use his knowledge and experience to improve the lives of all the citizens of North Carolina. Whether that’s by running for local office or impacting people’s lives in another way, well, let’s just say he’s still thinking that through.

“My home state means everything to me, and the people here deserve someone working on behalf of every single one of them,” Whitley says. “Every voice matters, every North Carolinian matters, and Mitchell’s Mayors is here to teach us that every North Carolina city, big or small, should truly matter to us all.”






Eagle Scout adds name to the few that have completed the Race Across America

In Colorado, Phil Fox pushed up mountain passes. Across the Great Plains, he battled constant 20 mph winds. In West Virginia, he watched out for aggressive drivers, some of whom didn’t seem too keen on sharing the road with cyclists.

By the time he reached Annapolis, Md., the 39-year-old Chicagoan and Eagle Scout could look back and claim he pedaled more than 3,000 miles across 12 states, finishing the “world’s toughest bicycle race.”

“It was an indescribable feeling,” he says. “I just had tunnel vision — that race was going to change me.”

That’s the impact the Race Across America has on cyclists. About 300 or so people have completed the epic journey in its four-decade history. Fox finished it on his first attempt last summer, earning the “rookie of the year” honor and ending the race in fifth place overall. It left him with the experience of a lifetime — along with the satisfaction that he did a small part in helping those afflicted with a serious disease.

An Eagle rides

The Race Across America began in 1982 with four cyclists traveling from Los Angeles to New York City. It was named the Great American Bike Race then, and the nearly 3,000-mile event measured well beyond the famous Tour de France. It also differed from other long cycling events as it aimed to be continuous. No daily stages. Just nonstop cycling.

Shortly after the race’s inception, Fox was born. He joined Cub Scouts and crossed over into Troop 117 of Western Springs, Ill., a suburb of Chicago. He was active in his troop, went on a Philmont Scout Ranch trek and earned the Eagle Scout rank.

“I biked as a youth to get around,” he says. “Then you get your driver’s license and you shelf the bike for eight years.”

He didn’t grab the bicycle again until he started working in downtown Chicago and discovered cycling helped him save money on gasoline, relieve stress and lose weight. He lost about 40 pounds by getting back on the bike and commuting to the office.

The commuting turned into socializing with other cyclists, but soon pivoted to racing with a purpose. Two of his best friends were diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, a central nervous system disease. He signed up to do a 200-kilometer race that raised money for MS research.

“I didn’t know how to help my friends,” Fox says. “I was angry that was the only thing I could do. That was the start.”

Preparing for the big race

Fox joined a long-distance bike club and started challenging himself by riding in long races. In 2021, he attempted to set a world record by cycling around Lake Michigan in three days’ time. He completed the 921-mile ride in 64 hours while raising money to help those with multiple sclerosis.

“That was a pressure test for the Race Across America,” he says.

Fox recruited a team of 10 people who would drive alongside him during the Race Across America, helping him navigate, monitor his nutrition and health, offer bike maintenance, watch out for his safety, and — most important — encourage him along the 3,000 miles. One team member was Chuck Judy, an Eagle Scout and assistant Scoutmaster for a troop in Ohio.

“The structure was there; we each had our duties,” Judy says. “We had 20 pages of protocols; we would know what to do where.”

With the team in place and practice rides under his belt, Fox took off from California. He was among 33 riders to start the Race Across America — and would be one of only 14 to finish.

Across America

Last year’s race launched from Oceanside, Calif. The route would take riders across California, Arizona, Utah, Colorado, Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, West Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania. The cyclists would need to endure temperatures varying from 40 degrees to the 110s, elevations as high as 10,857 feet and a lack of sleep. Daily sleep breaks were 2-3 hours on average.

“Murphy’s Law would have a vote on what happened,” he says. “We had to be adaptive. We were always thinking about why we were doing this. Our superpower was our adaptability. This was a really different race; the failure rate is quite high.”

As the race progressed, more solo cyclists dropped out, either from illness or exhaustion. Fox’s team was prepared for the long haul with the goals in mind to be safe and finish with distinction.

“There’s no way we could finish this race without the talent of everyone on this team,” he says. “Once I crossed the finish line, I was elated we pulled it off.”

After going through two bikes and eight flat tires, Fox finished the race in 11 days, 4 hours and 38 minutes. He raised about $50,000 for multiple sclerosis research during his journey.

The next step

After the grueling race, Fox considered slowing down a bit. Nope. There’s still more that can be done to help those with MS. He is planning another fundraising ride this June. This time, he is going to attempt to set a world record by circumnavigating Lake Erie, a 640-mile trip.

You can follow his journey here or through his social media pages listed on that page.

 

“I can’t believe it’s something I’ve actually done”: NESA’s World Explorers share details of their experience

To get to Tiputini Biodiversity Station (TBS), one of the most remote scientific research stations in the world, you must first get to a rural area called Tumbaco, just outside Quito, the capital of Ecuador.

From there, you can catch a short flight to Coca, a city in eastern Ecuador located inside the Amazon rainforest.

From Coca, you hop on a motorized canoe for about a 2-hour ride up the Napo River.

You’re now officially in the middle of nowhere, but you’re not even close to your destination.

Photo courtesy of Trevor Burke

After clearing a security checkpoint, you hop on a bus for another 2-hour ride, then you’re back in another motorized canoe.

Then, finally, you arrive at TBS, deep inside the rainforest, in the middle of the one of the most ecologically diverse areas known to man.

And then, if you’re Eagle Scouts Josh Slavin and Trevor Burke, the real adventure begins.

Josh and Trevor spent a week at TBS last summer as part of the National Eagle Scout Association’s (NESA) World Explorer program, directed by Distinguished Eagle Scout, chief medical advisor for crisis response at the Greater Washington Board of Trade and former NESA vice president Michael Manyak. They got to work hand-in-hand with researchers from the Universidad San Francisco de Quito on a variety of environmental-related projects.

The World Explorer program, which is operated separately from the BSA’s youth programs, pairs Eagle Scouts ages 18 to 27 with cutting-edge researchers at exotic, exciting sites around the world. All activities are supervised by qualified, trustworthy adults.

“It’s an opportunity that very few people in the world will ever have,” Josh says, “to experience the rainforest and work alongside really intelligent people who are doing important work.”

One of the TBS trails. Photo courtesy of Josh Slavin

A unique opportunity

TBS was established in 1994 by Universidad San Francisco de Quito in collaboration with Boston University. It sits on around 1,500 acres of lowland rainforest on the Tiputini River.

Its primary purpose is to help scientists and students learn more about the surrounding rainforest so they can expertly recommend the best conservation strategies possible.

Because the water level of the Tiputini varies greatly depending on the time of year — and sometimes the time of day — the station is built high up on a rock formation overlooking the river’s north bank.

“They did a good job of straddling the line of being a permanent establishment, but also consciously making design choices to minimize its impact so it doesn’t carve away a piece of the jungle,” says Trevor.

While there are some actual buildings — including sleeping quarters, showers, kitchen and of course a research center — much of the property consists of trails leading to a variety of areas of interest within the forest.

“You really feel like you’re a part of the jungle,” says Trevor. “It’s pushing in all around you.”

The rainforest is full of surprises. Photo courtesy of Josh Slavin

Work to be done

During their weeklong stay, Trevor and Josh worked primarily on three different research projects.

One involved maintaining a series of camera “traps” strategically placed off the trails to capture photos of wildlife in their natural habitat.

“We basically inventoried all of the camera technologies,” Josh says, “combing through all the footage looking for sightings of mammals and birds.”

Lot of things can go wrong when you leave a camera in the jungle for days and weeks at a time. The Eagle Scouts had to trudge through mud up to their knees just to reach some of the cameras.

“Sometimes the memory card fills up or the camera gets knocked over or the battery will die,” says Josh.

Another project involved studying the Tiputini’s pink river dolphin population using technology that captures the sounds they make to communicate.

And the third project involved the river’s population of turtles.

“Since the river moves up and down very quickly, it’s hard for turtles to lay their eggs in the perfect spot that’s high enough to keep them from drowning but low enough to keep them from getting baked in sun,” says Trevor.

Trevor (left) and Josh take a dip in the Tiputini River. Photo courtesy of Josh Slavin

Being prepared

The rainforest is a harsh environment. Temperatures regularly creep into the 90s, which might not sound all that bad until you factor in the near-constant 100% humidity.

TBS has showers and comfortable sleeping quarters, but they only turn on the electricity for a few hours in the mornings and evenings.

Because of the constant moisture and intense sunlight, plants grow better there than almost anywhere else. With plants come all kinds of other challenges, such as bugs and snakes.

“I was blown away by the ecological diversity of it,” says Trevor. “By the size of everything, and how much more there was of everything.

“There is literally stuff growing everywhere. It just blew me away, seeing that in person.”

The Eagle Scouts did get some down time, highlighted by a swim in the river, but even that came with warnings of parasitic fish that you really don’t want to mess with.

It took all of their Scout skills to stay comfortable throughout their stay, but it was also an experience they will never forget.

“There are a lot of different things that can happen, so we had to Be Prepared for a lot of different kinds of occurrences,” says Josh.

“But it was an absolutely amazing experience. Looking back, I can’t believe it’s something I’ve actually done.”

NESA hopes to offer another World Explorer experience to Eagle Scouts in the future. The application process usually involves submitting an essay detailing why you should be accepted. Follow NESA’s website for updates.

Open for debate: What’s your philosophy on the Pinewood Derby?

Here’s a little bit of Cub Scout trivia for you: Cub Scout packs are not required to participate in or host a Pinewood Derby.

In the most recent editions of the Cub Scout den leader guides, the Pinewood Derby is mentioned only as one of several events that you’ll want to get on your pack calendar as early as you can.

In the Cub Scout Leader Guide (more than 170 pages in all), the concept of the Pinewood Derby gets only a few paragraphs of explanation, along with a couple of other mentions about making sure your families are aware of it and fundraising to pay for a track, if necessary.

When it comes to advancement, the Webelos/AOL Engineer elective Adventure gives Scouts the option of building a car (or using one from a previous race) to learn about the principles of mechanical engineering.

The Baloo The Builder Bear required Adventure allows Scouts to learn about tools, some of which could in theory be used to build a Pinewood Derby car.

So, when it’s all said and done, a Cub Scout could technically go through their entire time in Cub Scouting and never participate in a Pinewood Derby.

Yet, that concept seems almost blasphemous, does it not?

It begs the question: What’s the purpose of the Pinewood Derby? Why do we do this?

A lot of it might depend on how you, as a parent and/or Cub Scout leader, approach the big event.

Competitive? Or not competitive?

When it came to the Pinewood Derby, my son was not super competitive.

During his five years in Cub Scouting, I attended five Pinewood Derbies. I watched as some families sat on the edges of their seats the entire time, fixated intently on every race in which their child participated, while others talked with each other and had a good time, even as they were mostly uninterested in the results of the races themselves.

Personally, I had no problem with either group.

Recently, I asked my son, now 16, what he remembers the most about the Pinewood Derby races in which we participated. He said he remembers building the car with me over a period of several weekends before the race, then getting some satisfaction from doing well in the race itself.

I asked him if he remembered the year we finished third in the pack, and he said of course he did.

I asked him if he remembered the year we finished second-to-last in our den, and it’s funny how his memories of that race are kind of fuzzy.

(What we did wrong from one year to the next I’ll never know. Probably didn’t spend enough time here.)

By the time my son was about to age out of Cub Scouting, I had developed what I feel like is a pretty solid Pinewood Derby philosophy — just in time to never have to use it again.

That’s why I’m here now to share it with all of you.

Photo by Dan Bryant

Where I stand

It’s OK to try to win your Pinewood Derby race.

There. I said it.

Just as kids learn from camping in the woods and doing service projects for their community, there are lessons to be learned from working hard to build the fastest car possible and seeing it do well on race day.

(There are also lessons to be learned from working hard to build the fastest car possible, only to find out that other kids in your den also built fast cars, preventing you from finishing as high in the standings as you would have liked.)

It’s also OK to not care if you win your Pinewood Derby race.

Yep. I said that, too.

Some of the best-looking cars we’ve ever seen are not the fastest. Some of them didn’t even require any fancy tools.

This is why it’s a good idea for packs to give out awards for things like best paint job, best use of stickers and other categories besides simply speed.

Your Cub Scout might be a good driver

Here’s the key: Let your kid be the one who drives these decisions (pun intended).

If your Cub Scout says she wants to build the fastest Pinewood Derby car possible, that’s great! Just sit down with her and explain how much time and work that will take, and make sure she’s willing to put in that kind of effort.

Note that you should definitely not build the car for her. You should build the car with her. If she’s willing to put in the work, then your family is in for a fun and memorable time.

At the same time, if your child decides he doesn’t care how fast his car goes, as long as it features 15 lightsabers sticking out in every direction, maybe that’s OK, too? After all, there’s some value in building a car like that together, isn’t there?

We’ve learned again and again and again that people have strong feelings about this event. Let us know in the comments how you approach your Pinewood Derby.

Photo by Dan Bryant

Ask us anything! We answer some of your most frequently asked questions

Have questions about the BSA? We’ve got answers.

And if we don’t have the answers, we’ll find someone who does.

Below are a handful of questions we’ve recently gotten from readers (some of them, multiple times), along with the best answers we can provide.

Leave your question in the comments below, or send us an email, and we’ll answer in a future post.

Q: What are the standard measurements for a Scout troop’s trailer?

A: Much like with pocketknives, the BSA sets no official standard for troop trailer size. I would suggest that, like pocketknives, a Scout unit should choose the trailer that’s right for the job. This could vary from troop to troop. Here are the BSA’s official guidelines on troop trailers. And here’s a story about a Scout troop that ditched their trailer all together.

Q. As an adult volunteer, why do I have to pay to be a member of BSA, and where does that money go?

A: First of all, thank you for being a BSA volunteer. Without our volunteers, there is no program. The fact of the matter is, there are costs associated with running all of Scouting’s programs. The national membership fees for both youth and adults help cover the cost of essential services, including program resources, liability insurance for those participating in approved Scouting activities, criminal background checks, youth protection, and the development of intellectual property for national, council, and unit programs. The Scout units themselves may also charge a fee to adults and youth help offset the cost of their program.

Q: I have a question about the tassels and ornamentation that I have seen on some Scout bugles. Are there any guidelines or stipulations as to what should hang or how a bugle should be dressed for the official troop bugler?

A: There are no official BSA guidelines on how a bugle should or should not be dressed. This should be determined by the unit committee. The Scout bugler is required to wear the Scout uniform correctly, but that’s as far as national guidelines go.

Q: If I earn a fourth square knot, do I sew it to the uniform centered over the first row, or over the rightmost (wearer’s right) knot of the first row? Please help.

A: Short answer: Either! You can either center them in the row or keep them aligned to your right. The latter method means you won’t have to re-sew those knots if you get a new one, but you can do whatever you think is best for you.

Q: Hello, I am 13 years old, and I am an Eagle Scout rank in Scouts BSA, and my question is: Are 13-year-olds too young to be an Eagle Scout?

A: First of all, congratulations on earning the rank of Eagle Scout! This is a tremendous accomplishment, and you should be very proud. If you conducted a survey asking people whether or not 13 is too young to be an Eagle Scout, you would get a variety of answers. However, this would be my criteria: Did you complete the Eagle Scout requirements as defined in the BSA’s Guide to Advancement, embracing the true spirit of each requirement, while also following every aspect of the Scout Law and Oath, without rushing through everything just to get it done for the sake of getting it done? If so, then you’ve done it correctly, no matter your age.

Lions, Tigers, Bears – and sharks! How an aquarium overnighter enhanced this pack’s program

Looking overhead, the Cub Scouts of Pack 59 saw sharks. They didn’t watch them for long. They had had a busy day exploring and learning about aquatic wildlife at the Ripley’s Aquarium of the Smokies. Huddled in sleeping bags, the Cub Scouts soon fell asleep inside the aquarium’s underwater tunnel.

The overnighter at the aquarium provided an unforgettable outing for the pack from Knoxville, Tenn., last summer.

“We want them to experience the world in as many ways as we can,” says Cubmaster Rob Shomaker. “There are a lot more doors open than when I was a Scout.”

New experiences

The pack often plans a family overnighter every year. In the past, the Cub Scouts and their parents have slept at zoos and aboard an aircraft carrier. This was the first time they’ve stayed at an aquarium.

“We try to vary things and do things kids might not get to do and make it family-friendly,” Shomaker says. “It creates a unique experience. The kids tell their friends, and that helps with recruitment. It helps tell the story of Scouting.”

Scouting is fun. And much of it calls for youth to be active. Shomaker saw that during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“It’s hard doing a Zoom call,” he says. “There’s so much in Scouts that’s hands-on.”

While the pandemic presented that great challenge, it also opened a door. The pack’s adult leaders began looking at opportunities closer to home to appreciate what’s around them. That included the world-class aquarium, which features more than 10,000 sea creatures and was about an hour’s drive from the pack.

Inside the aquarium

When the pack arrived on a Saturday evening, the aquarium’s staff was ready. They escorted the Cub Scouts through the aquarium, stopping at the petting pool, where the Cub Scouts got to feel sharks, jellyfish and stingrays. They watched a diver swim among the fish and then talked with the diver about different species in the tank. The Cub Scouts also played games, went on a scavenger hunt and checked out an indoor playground.

“They had the kids going the entire time, which was fantastic,” Shomaker says. “The kids had a blast — and as adults, we had a blast, too.”

In the morning, the staff had classroom lectures about conservation and more opportunities for the Cub Scouts to pet animals. Some Cub Scouts were a little hesitant, but Shomaker says it presented an opportunity to remind them that “A Scout is Brave,” which was often followed by a Cub Scout’s triumphant remark of: “I did it!”

“The kids were able to be engaged and thrive,” Shomaker says.

Tips from Pack 59

Set the date in advance, so families can have plenty of time to prepare.
Be clear on the itinerary. This includes not only where to go and what everyone will be doing, but also what people should bring and what behavior is expected.
Get parents involved. A cool destination may attract parents, too.
Check with the venue on accommodations — including sleeping arrangements and menus — so people can adjust in case of any food allergies.
If your unit has a unique or fun overnight trip coming up, let Scout Life know via this form. Your unit might be featured in a future issue or on this blog. You can also use that form to share a trip your unit went on recently.

Subscribing to Scout Life can give you and your Scout ideas for planning your own overnight adventure. You can find some of these tips here, too, for a pack overnighter.

Scouts read about animal-focused overnighters in Scout Life‘s November issue. You can read that story here.

Cool Camps: Maine High Adventure Area still going strong after 50 years

Describing the BSA’s national high-adventure bases, the October 1984 issue of Scouting magazine had this to say about what was at the time called Maine National High Adventure Area:

More than six million acres of privately-owned woodlands, public waterways and parks await campers in this outstanding high-adventure area. Plan a hike along the Appalachian Trail and observe American wildlife such as moose, deer, bear and eagles. Canoe one of Maine’s beautiful lakes or shoot the rapids of a whitewater stream in a rubber raft. If you can’t choose between the two, combine them for a pack-and-paddle adventure.

Thirty-nine years later — and nearly 50 years since it was originally founded — the adventure continues. Now called Maine High Adventure Area (MHA) and operated by the Katahdin Area Council, the base still provides Scouts and adults with a unique backcountry experience.

The legacy program remains largely unchanged, offering fully outfitted 1- or 2-week backcountry canoe and hiking treks for Scouts 13 and older and their adult leaders.

Each crew is accompanied by a trained guide to provide instruction on outdoor skills along with environmental and historical interpretation.

“The thrill of running white water can be enjoyed, along with almost any other kind of outdoor experience,” wrote Boys’ Life (now Scout Life) when MHA was first established back in the 1970s. “The new wilderness base may be the most versatile of all the high-adventure areas.”

Photo by Joe Klementovich

Tons of options

The MHA programs are designed to give participants different options of exploring the more than 4 million acres of Maine woods and waterways.

Each trip is tailored to the group’s skills and preferences and includes a wide range of options, from flat-water lakes to whitewater rivers.

Interested in more of a slow-paced, laid-back journey? MHA can do that.

Looking for more of a challenging, fast-paced adventure? MHA can do that, too.

Crews can also add day hikes and other side trips such as climbing majestic mountains, visiting historical landmarks and discovering unique natural areas.

Photo by Joe Klementovich

And then there’s Katahdin

Towering above it all (literally) is Mount Katahdin, the highest peak in Maine and the northern end of the Appalachian Trail.

Interested in climbing it? MHA can provide that, too.

If you do it during an epic canoe trek, climbing Katahdin might be the most epic “side hike” ever.

“It was pretty intimidating,” 14-year-old Utsav Adhikari said to Scout Life when describing the 5,269-foot mountain shrouded in fog. “But we had each other’s backs on the water, and we had them on the mountain.”

MHA operates from late-June through mid-August. Minimum participant age is 13 years old by September 1st of the attending year. Contact them directly for availability on specific dates.

The base is also looking to hire staffers for this summer. This life-changing experience is open to anyone 18 years and older. Click here to learn more about working at MHA. (Interested in working at a summer camp near you this year? Click here to learn more!)

“Our mission as a BSA high-adventure program is to change lives through outdoor adventures that challenge young people to grow physically, mentally and spiritually,” says director Keith Nelson.

You can also follow MHA on social media for more updates.

What’s your favorite BSA camp or high-adventure base? Shoot us an email or let us know in the comments.

Another reason to attend the 2023 Jamboree: earning the Theater merit badge from a Broadway producer

There are lots of reasons to be excited about the 2023 National Jamboree, happening July 19-28, 2023, at the Summit Bechtel Reserve. Today, we look at one of them: the Theater merit badge.

For many years, John Paterakis was deeply involved in two worlds: Scouting and Broadway theater.

As a volunteer with the Greater New York Councils, Paterakis has served as district chairman and Cubmaster. As a supporter of theater, Paterakis has produced or co-produced five Broadway shows.

This summer, at the National Scout Jamboree, Paterakis’ worlds collide when he leads the Theater merit badge exhibit.

“The theater is fun,” Paterakis says. “It’s a wonderful, magical place. It’s exciting to be a part of.”

Movies are great (in fact, Paterakis was an executive producer on a 2016 film called Swing Away), but there’s something special about live theater.

And while the 3D in Avatar is great, nothing compares to the three-dimensional reality of being in the same room as the actors.

The perfect place to earn the Theater merit badge

After spending time in his youth as a Scout, Paterakis decided to re-engage with Scouting a decade or so ago because he was thankful for the opportunities it gave him.

“With my arthritis, my days of sleeping in a tent are over,” he says. “But I thought maybe there was a committee or something I could be a part of.”

Paterakis

When he realized his church didn’t have an affiliated Cub Scout pack, he started one from scratch.

It was at a 2020 Wood Badge course at The Summit Bechtel Reserve that he spoke to other Scouting volunteers about his background in theater. One thing led to another, and before he knew it, he was planning for the 2023 Jamboree, where he hopes to have materials such as costume drawings and set models for the Scouts to learn from.

He eventually connected with an old college friend and fellow Scouting volunteer, Thomas Shaw, from the Cradle of Liberty Council, who shares Paterakis’ passion for theater and also serves as a Theater merit badge counselor.

iStock/Getty Images

What’s a Jamboree?

The National Scout Jamboree is a gathering of thousands of the BSA’s adult and youth members, usually held every four years. The 2021 event, however, was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The 2023 Jamboree has adapted the theme of Forward, representing the Scouting journey. When Scouts encounter a challenge, they don’t stand still – they evaluate, plan and move forward. Scouting as a movement is always moving forward, reaching new generations of young people and equipping them to be leaders in their communities, nation and world.

Over the course of 10 days, participants will experience stadium shows, hikes, adventure sports, merit badges and more.

Click here to learn more and reserve your spot on the Jamboree Service Team.

Click here to learn more about joining the Jamboree as a participant.

What aspect of the Jamboree are you looking forward to the most? What should we cover next in our series leading up to the big event? Shoot us an email or let us know in the comments.

Research shows college students lack life skills; Scouting can help with that

The BSA’s primary goal is to help young people Be Prepared for life.

A handful of recent studies indicate that’s needed now more than ever.

Hat tip to Mike, a Scouting volunteer in North Carolina, who sent me this story, which indicates that young adults these days are struggling with their mental health, possibly in part because they never learned to be independent as children.

“Today’s 18-year-olds are like the 12-year-olds from a decade ago,” the article says. “They have very little tolerance for conflict and discomfort.”

Hmmm. … I just happen to know of an organization dedicated entirely to challenging kids to solve real-world problems!

Whether it’s Cub Scouting, Scouts BSA, Sea Scouts, Exploring or Venturing, the BSA’s programs are designed to help kids figure things out in a safe environment — before they leave home for the real world! — under the direction of a parent, Scout leader or peer.

The article goes on to link to several other articles and studies – which themselves link to even more studies and articles – that show that today’s young adults need the skills offered in Scouting now more than ever.

It’s a lot to take in, so I’ve broken it down here.

Scouting is problem-solving

I have a very distinct memory of sitting in a high school advanced math class and asking the teacher why it was so important that we learn all these complex equations.

“It’s not the equations themselves that are important,” the teacher kindly explained to us. “It’s the problem-solving skills that it takes to solve the equations that are important.”

I would argue that the same goes for Scouting. It’s not just about learning how to set up a tent in the woods. It’s about learning how to think for yourself, solve problems and find solutions. Even if you never go camping again in your life, these are skills you will use almost every day into college and adulthood.

“A growing body of evidence is beginning to suggest that the problems of ‘adulting’ and mental health in college students may be rooted, at least in part, in modern childhood,” according to this story from a California public radio station. “Research shows that young people are lacking in emotional resilience and independence compared to previous generations.”

Bingo! This is why Scouts BSA troops use the patrol method. A Scout patrol carries out a wide range of tasks that require pooling resources and working together to function successfully in all kinds of circumstances. If they get knocked down, they simply get up again and try harder.

A canoe trip doesn’t just teach kids how to paddle. It teaches them how to handle challenging circumstances. Photo by Blake Ferree

Adulting 101

The problem has gotten so bad that many colleges offer “adulting 101” classes to fill in the gaps of life skills these kids never learned.

At Kansas State University, for example, kids can take classes on personal budgeting (there’s a merit badge for that), car maintenance (we’ve got that covered, too) and getting involved in important community issues (Scouting is perfect for that).

I found other colleges that offer classes in cooking (we got you covered!) and fixing various problems around the house (hello!).

Chentsova Dutton, a professor at Georgetown, hypothesizes that when students have fewer opportunities to practice autonomy, they have less faith in themselves that they can figure out a risky situation.

“My suspicion is that low autonomy seems to translate into low efficacy,” she says. “Low efficacy and a combination of stress is associated with distress.”

People! This is literally exactly why it’s good for kids to participate in a program in which they’re asked to hike 8 miles in a day, set up camp, cook dinner, do the dishes … and then do it all again the next day, all while being supervised by trained adults!

Lessons learned

At one of my son’s first cold-weather Scouts BSA campouts, one of his fellow Scouts was clearly underdressed. While all the other kids had big, heavy winter jackets, this one young man showed up in only a lightweight hoodie.

I watched from a distance as an assistant Scoutmaster sat the young man down to discuss the situation in which he had gotten himself into.

“Why didn’t you bring your winter jacket?” the assistant Scoutmaster asked.

“Because my mom didn’t pack it for me,” said the boy.

“Is your mom the one who’s cold right now?” said the assistant Scoutmaster.

“No,” the boy sheepishly replied.

“Who’s going to pack your gear next time?” said the adult.

“I am,” said the Scout.

Lesson learned, the Scout was able to stay warm all weekend thanks to extra sweaters, pants and mittens donated by his fellow Scouts. Even if he never goes outside in the cold again, he learned the importance of personal responsibility in an uncomfortable situation.

A Scout learns how to start a fire in cold weather. Oh by the way, he’s also learning patience and persistence, two skills we can all use in life. Photo by Brian Payne

A not-so recent trend

I found some articles that are quick to blame the COVID pandemic on college kids not being prepared for life. But I also found this story from 2015 citing many of these same problems, well before the pandemic.

“Our students are no different from what is being reported across the country on the state of late adolescence/early adulthood,” one head of counseling at a university said eight years ago. “There has been a decrease in the ability of many young people to manage the everyday bumps in the road of life. Whether we want it or not, these students are bringing their struggles to their teachers and others on campus who deal with students on a day-to-day basis.

“The lack of resilience is interfering with the academic mission of the university and is thwarting the emotional and personal development of students.”

I’m just saying … click here to find a Scouting unit near you.

Passive recruiting: What it is, and how you can make it work for you

In a small town on the East Coast, a Scouts BSA troop volunteers at a big community event, helping people find seating, performing a flag ceremony and collecting donations for the local food bank.

As the group packs up to go home afterwards, a young couple approaches and tells them they were impressed with the job the Scouts did, so much so that they’re now thinking about signing their child up for Scouting when they’re old enough.

Congratulations! You just did some passive recruiting!

Meanwhile, in a city in the Southwest, a Cub Scout pack is pulling weeds in the garden at a busy local park. An older man approaches, notices the pack T-shirts and tells them he’s an Eagle Scout. He’s so impressed by the politeness of the Cub Scouts that he goes home and tells his daughter that he’s just found the perfect pack for her two children.

Congratulations! You just did some passive recruiting!

And finally, in a community in the Midwest, a Venturing crew is handing out emergency procedure brochures in front of the local supermarket. A teenager notices their uniforms, approaches, and says, “You don’t look like Boy Scouts!” The Venturers respond by telling the teen all about the BSA’s Venturing program.

Congratulations! You just did some passive recruiting!

Leading a flag ceremony is another way Scouts can be visible at community events. Photo by Michael Roytek

Recruiting year-round

Join Scouting nights are a big deal — and always will be. But the great thing about passive recruiting is you can easily work it into many of your unit’s regularly scheduled year-round events, with little extra effort from anyone.

The difference between passive and active recruiting is similar to the contrast between passive and active income.

Active income is your job — most of us have to go to work and do a good job every day to get paid. Passive income is a stream of money that comes in without active effort, though it might have required some time and effort up front to establish — like owning a rental property.

Likewise, active recruiting events are those Scout sign-up nights or other occasions that exist solely for the purpose of growing your unit.

Passive recruiting happens as you’re out in the community, doing the things Scouts do, representing the organization with pride. Yes, it took time and effort to plan those events, but once you’re out there, the recruiting happens naturally.

Scouts and Scouters from the Chippewa Valley Council volunteer each year at the Chippewa Valley Air Show. Photo courtesy of Tim Abraham Photography

Do’s and Don’ts of passive recruiting

Do participate in community events. Being visible in your community is not only good for your unit, but also for your Scouts. The BSA’s youth members are community leaders, and you can’t be a community leader if you aren’t an active part of your community. Leading flag ceremonies, picking up litter, hosting a recycling drive and handing out programs or bulletins at large gatherings are great ways to subtly remind your neighbors and friends that Scouting is alive and well.
Do wear your Scout uniform or T-shirt, whichever is more appropriate. A “uniform” look — i.e., a group of kids and adults all dressed the same — is what will draw attention to whatever you’re doing. The uniform is what says, “We’re Scouts, and we’re here to help.”
Don’t be pushy. Passive recruiting is great for the BSA, but it’s unlikely that any member of your community is attending these events with the intention of being recruited by your Scouts. The priority should be the work that you’re there to do. Be polite, say hello, be friendly … but don’t pitch the program unless someone asks about it.
Do Be Prepared in case someone does ask about joining. This might mean giving your Scouts a brief talk about how they should respond in case someone asks. Some units carry business cards with contact information and a URL for the unit’s website that they can give to anyone who’s interested. I know one Cub Scout leader who had a QR code on every Scout’s T-shirt that anyone could scan with their phones to get more information.
Do remember that the most important thing is not that someone joins your unit, it’s that someone joins any BSA unit. The advantage of an active recruiting event is that families are there because they’re interested in your unit. But when you’re approached at random in public, it might be by someone from the other side of town who can’t meet at the location where you meet. In this situation, you can direct them to BeAScout.org, the website that will help them find the unit closest to them.

Have any passive recruiting stories to share? Send us an email or let us know below in the comments!

The gear you need to survive: Survivorman shares his favorites

Les Stroud, TV producer, director, host and author of Survive!, a best-selling manual on survival, knows a thing or two about what to take into the backcountry.

“When faced with the concept of surviving in the wilderness, it is very tempting to want to carry the ‘ultimate’ survival kit,” he writes. “However, knowing what to take with you is tricky, given the variables involved in outdoor adventure.

“So what do you grab? Well, it all depends.”

Get Survivorman’s advice by reading our story from the September-October 2018 issue of Scouting magazine.

1 million and growing: BSA membership is on the rise

We started 2022 with some good news on recruiting.

What do you say we start 2023 with more of the same?

I’ve been authorized to announce that BSA membership has exceeded its year-over-year numbers by more than 3%.

Around mid-December, the BSA’s youth membership surpassed 1,025,000, which was the organization’s goal for 2022. By the end of the year, the BSA was serving more than 1,042,000 members.

Coming off the COVID-19 pandemic and the bankruptcy proceedings, BSA officials knew that the 2022 recruiting numbers would go a long way toward determining the future of the organization.

So, they set a lofty goal: 1.042 million members was the result of nine consecutive months of membership growth and a retention rate of more than 70% across the board.

A team effort

The 2022 recruiting success story is the result of extensive collaboration between the local councils and the National Service Center, as each worked together to develop goals and plans for recruiting. As a result, 176 councils exceeded their year-end growth.

Of course, none of this would be possible without the dedicated efforts of our thousands of volunteers, enthusiastic parents … and all of the Cub Scouts, Scouts BSA members, Explorers, Sea Scouts and Venturers who invited their friends to join them on their Scouting adventures.

We encouraged our Cub Scout leaders to recruit new members in the spring, and they did. By fall, we could tell it was working.

Cub Scout youth membership grew by 10.24% over the course of the year.

We asked you to think about how you recruit older youth to the BSA, and you did that, too. Most notably, the BSA’s Exploring program grew by 17.35%.

Photo by Chuck Eaton

What’s next

Where do we go from here? One of the great things about Scouting’s programs is that, in lots of ways, they can recruit themselves during non-traditional recruiting seasons.

When you wear your unit’s T-shirts while picking up trash in your community, going on a hike, or attending a city council meeting, you’re signaling to your neighbors that the BSA is here, and we’re ready to provide kids with the skills they need to succeed in life.

Remember: Nobody ever gets tired of “Normal Friend Activities.”

And there’s a reason why this particular patch might be the most important patch in Scouting.

To all of the volunteers who made this happen, we say “thank you.”

To all of our youth: Keep inviting your friends to join Scouting.

We can’t wait to see what’s in store for the rest of 2023.

Photo by Michael Roytek

NFL strength coach, Eagle Scout helps fund Philmont scholarship program

When Joe Gibson, a longtime Scout leader in the San Angelo, Texas, area died last January, his family thought long and hard about the best way to memorialize his life.

Then, it came to them: a scholarship to help send Texas Southwest Council Scouts to Philmont Scout Ranch.

“It just fit,” says Monty Gibson, one of Joe’s three Eagle Scout sons. “We realized this is exactly what he would want us to do.”

That’s because sending kids to Philmont was one of Joe’s biggest passions. As a leader of Troop 332, Joe made sure all three of his boys, along with many other kids from both his and nearby troops, got to experience Philmont, often by focusing on fundraising opportunities to make sure no Scout got left behind.

Later last year, Monty, an assistant strength and conditioning coach with the Cleveland Browns, had an opportunity to participate in the NFL’s My Cause My Cleats initiative. And again, he found the perfect fit.

Monty designed a pair of shoes that he wore during an NFL game. They featured the image of a trail map resembling those used to navigate around Philmont. Those shoes are now up for auction, with the proceeds going to the Joe A. Gibson scholarship fund.

NFL coaches and players who participate in My Cause My Cleats are given the opportunity to record a video to speak about their cause. Monty had no problem writing his own script, speaking passionately about what Philmont meant to his dad, and to him.

Philmont memories

Monty remembers a lot of things about his first trip to Philmont Scout Ranch — the preparation, the scenery and of course the adventure.

But mostly, he remembers the joy of experiencing it with his dad, a former Scout who had never gone to Philmont as a youth.

“He was just enamored with it, and I was having a blast,” says Monty. “So much that I kept going back.”

So did his dad.

Joe was an assistant Scoutmaster for that first trip to Philmont in 1985. He would later become Scoutmaster and bring Monty’s two younger brothers to Philmont as well.

After all of his boys aged out of Scouting, the elder Gibson continued to help kids get to Philmont, often focusing on the fundraising and preparation that would give kids the chance to get there who might otherwise never go.

“When we got off the trail, he said, ‘You’re different boys now than you were when you started,’ ” Monty says. “The camaraderie … the sense of accomplishment … he really valued that. He enjoyed seeing that. And he wanted to make sure other kids got that same opportunity.”

A young Monty (left) and his dad at Philmont. Photo courtesy of Monty Gibson

A good cause

Monty developed an interest in weight training when he was in high school. It was another thing he and his dad could do together.

He spent 18 years on the strength and conditioning staff at Texas A&M, where, in addition to working with the football team, he was responsible for overseeing the strength and conditioning programs for the Aggie track and field men’s and women’s sprints and mid-distance runners, as well as the equestrian and men’s tennis teams. He took the job in Cleveland five years ago.

In addition to serving as a Scout leader, Joe Gibson was a policeman, working as a patrolman, detective, internal affairs officer and, eventually, chief of the San Angelo police department.

The scholarship fund helped a couple of Texas Scouts get to Philmont last season. With the added exposure of My Cause My Cleats, they’re hoping to send more next summer, and beyond.

“When I’m back in town, we’ll run into some guys who will say, ‘Hey your daddy did this,’ ” says Monty. “He realized there were some young guys who couldn’t have that adventure. He felt like those 12 days would stick with them forever.”

For Monty, recording that video was an emotional release. He jokes that it’s a good thing he was alone when he watched it for the first time.

“It was a hard year,” he says. “Daddy was such a blessing to us in so many ways. He was my hero in every sense of the word.

“Recording that video was healing. I just thought, ‘Dad we did it. We got it done.’ ”

Modern-day Monty, during his day job with the Cleveland Browns. Photo courtesy of Monty Gibson

BSA certified angler instructor extols the virtues of ice fishing

The only thing Mike McNett likes more than ice fishing is teaching other people about ice fishing.

McNett, a BSA certified angling instructor and world champion fisherman, caught the bug when he would go out on a frozen lake – he calls it “hard water” – when he was a kid. Now, he devotes much of his time to helping Scouts have some of those same experiences.

McNett is currently the freshwater sport fishing director for USAngling, the non-profit that supports competive USA fishing teams. As a certified angling instructor, he is committed to improving Scouting’s fishing programs in and around his hometown of Lombard, Illinois.

“It’s an infection you can’t get rid of,” he says. “And I want to give that back to the kids.”

Here is McNett’s advice on getting out onto the ice and catching some fish.

Safety first

Before you go ice fishing, check with local land managers or conservation officers for ice conditions. Many organizations recommend a minimum of 4 inches of new, hard, clear ice, but that number goes up depending on the number of people and the amount of equipment.

Like every BSA activity, your qualified adult supervisor should make the call on what’s safe.

“I’ll drill a few pilot holes to measure thickness,” he says.

Just because the ice is thick enough in one area doesn’t mean it’s thick enough everywhere. For larger groups, McNett sets up cones that designate the safe area.

(Think of it like a safe swim area at Scout summer camp.)

Be Prepared for winter

If you live in an area where ice fishing is popular, you’re probably already used to the cold.

Ice fishermen dress similar to snowboarders or skiers, wearing multiple layers of clothing with a rugged outer shell to protect from wind and moisture.

Hiking boots might be fine, but McNett suggests cleats to help beginners stay upright on the slippery ice.

“I usually bring extra cleats for parents, because if they fall, they don’t bounce back up like the kids do,” he says.

Photo courtesy of Mike McNett

You can drill by hand

McNett likes hand-operated augers, both for himself and for youth. He says it gives the kids something to do if they get bored and it helps everybody warm up.

“I’m a hand auger-exclusive guy,” he says. “I like to drill a hundred holes with the hand auger. It keeps me warm, and I don’t like to be cold.

“If the kids are cold, a hand auger is the easiest way to warm them up.”

Bring the right fishing gear

The standard outfit for an ice fisherman includes short rods; monofilament line; lures; a skimmer to dip the slush and ice chips out of the fishing hole; a bucket or box to sit on; and plenty of warm clothing.

Some ice fishermen use tip-ups, a device that suspends live bait at set depth through the hole. You can leave the tip-up mostly unattended, checking only to see if the flag tips up or down, signaling that a fish is on the line.

Not surprisingly, McNett prefers to have kids hold a rod in their hands. His rods are 16-24 inches long, with a spring indicator that will show when you have a bite.

“There’s no casting involved,” he says. “You just drop the line, jig and pull it back up.

“As long as they can get the right motion, it’s so easy to use. A lot of times we put a song on for them to get the right beat.”

Bring an expert with you

Being unprepared on an ice-fishing trip can, at best, be boring, and at worst, be dangerous. BSA guidelines require that your guide be adequately trained, experienced and skilled to lead the activity, including the ability to prevent and respond to likely problems and potential emergencies.

A BSA certified angling instructor would fit those requirements.

The first step is to contact your local council and ask to get in touch with a certified angling instructor in your area.

If you are unable to connect with an instructor, look for any ice-fishing clubs nearby who have a youth outreach program. (Keep in mind that these clubs might be experts on fishing, but not on BSA policies like Youth Protection.)

When Scouts in his area reach out to him, McNett goes out early to test the ice, drill some pilot holes and look for fish. He also sets up a pop-up tent on the ice and provides all of the gear, including a really cool underwater camera that Scouts can use to see the fish as they consider whether or not to strike at the lure.

“As a kid, ice fishing was the easiest thing to do,” he says. “You don’t need a $50,000 boat. You can just go out on any safe hard water in your community.”

Learn how to make your own ice-fishing tip-ups at https://scoutlife.org/hobbies-projects/projects/18131/how-to-make-ice-fishing-tip-ups/

Six New Year’s resolutions from the Personal Fitness merit badge

Searching for the right commitment to make to yourself, your body and your future in the coming year? The Scout Handbook and countless merit badges are full of perfect New Year’s resolution inspiration.

That’s why we took a look at the Personal Fitness merit badge to inspire six goals attainable for Scouts and adults who want to pay special attention to their health in 2023.

1. Get a physical

As soon as Scouts delve into the Personal Fitness merit badge, they’re tasked with heading to their doctors to have a routine wellness exam. As requirement 1a suggests, this is a great place to start for both Scouts tackling the rigors of a physically demanding merit badge and adults who are committed to starting or maintaining a healthy lifestyle.

2. Go to the dentist

It’s simple. It should be routine. But we know there are adults out there who skip heading the dentist twice a year.

Requirement 1b of the Physical Fitness merit badge asks Scouts to reflect on how they care for their teeth. And 2023 seems like a great year for you to do the same.

3. Walk or run a mile

Do it at regular intervals and map the time it takes you to complete the mile each time you tackle it. This is advice taken from page 48 of the merit badge pamphlet.

4. Conduct your own strength test

Requirement 6a asks Scouts to test their strength and fitness in a variety of ways, record it and reflect on where they can improve. We’re including an excerpt on how to conduct a strength test below. Use this to set your own goals for the year (and to formulate your longer-term fitness plan. More on that up next!).

Strength Tests

You must do the sit-ups exercise and one other (either push-ups or pull-ups). You may also do all three for extra experience and benefit. (Measurements should be in numbers and repetitions.)

Sit-ups — Record the number of sit-ups done correctly in 60 seconds …
Pull-ups — Record the total number of pull-ups completed correctly in 60 seconds …
Push-ups — Record the total number of push-ups completed correctly in 60 seconds …

Remember, you can make this test your own. If you need to use 30-second increments, that’s OK. If you’d rather do crunches than sit-ups, go for it. If you’re using this as a New Year’s resolution, you’re working to improve your 2023, not earn a merit badge.

5. Create a physical fitness plan (and do it!)

In requirements 7 and 8, the Personal Fitness merit badge asks Scouts to create a 12-week fitness plan that includes the following elements in each workout day:

Warm-up
Aerobic exercises
Strength exercises
Flexibility exercises
Cool-down

For you, this could look like blocking out 30-60 minutes on your calendar, three or more days a week. On each of theses days you may walk half a mile, jog a mile, do 20 push-ups, stretch for five minutes and walk another half mile.

The exercises, durations, distances, and repetitions are up to you. The goal is to commit to a fitness plan on paper. Execute it. And revise your plan as you’re able to do more.

6. Read this excerpt from the “Emotional Fitness” section of the Personal Fitness merit badge and put it to work

Also key in the Personal Fitness merit badge is mental health. Along with encouraging Scouts to seek help if they feel overwhelmed, the badge aims to get young people taking steps to cultivate a healthy family life.

Are you able to implement the below action into your own family? Truly, it’s easier for an adult in a family to accomplish this than it is for many youth.

Help plan family outings and activities. Spend quality time with your brothers, sisters, and parents. “Quality time” means sharing through communication and joint activity. If you talk about common interests, work together on a family project, plan for a special occasion, share a pleasant or meaningful experience, or play together, you are getting and giving healthy benefits through your family activity. Your family can be your most important possession.

Keep yourself physically strong and mentally awake

However you tailor your New Year’s resolution, don’t be afraid to focus on becoming the best you possible! While a physical fitness goal can pay dividends toward your mental health, maybe your goal is to start with your internal wellness before hitting the gym.

And speaking of gyms, we’ve heard they’re packed at the first of the year as many take on resolutions to spend more time exercising in a new year. The benefit of borrowing from the Personal Fitness merit badge? You never have to set foot in a gym to accomplish your fitness plan.

If you are taking on a mental or physical wellness goal for 2023, let us know what it is in the comments! If you’re taking on the fitness plan outlined above, what does your plan look like? Please share, as your plan will likely inspire others!

Greatest hits: The 10 most-read blog posts of 2022

Throughout my nearly two decades as a member of the BSA’s publishing division — from Boys’ Life to Scout Life and now On Scouting — the most common question I get from readers hasn’t changed: “Where do you get your story ideas?”

The answer: We get them from you guys!

I’m old enough to remember when we at the BSA used to get letters … in the mail! … Written by hand! (Nowadays, it’s easy enough to contact us or our friends at Scout Life electronically.)

But regardless of how we all communicate, you, the readers, are the most important part of what we do.

Thanks to you, our humble little blog has kept on humming, and we’re honored that you continue to click on our stories and send us ideas for things to write about in the future.

As we prepare to turn the page to 2023, we’re going to take one last look back on 2022. Here are the top 10 most-read posts of this year.

10. Celebrate the BSA’s 112th birthday by solving these 12 Scouting-themed Wordles

The Boy Scouts of America was founded at 11:03 a.m. on Feb. 8, 1910, meaning this great movement turned 112 on this day. To celebrate, we’ve created 12 Scouting-themed Wordle puzzles just for you. Read the post.

9. Incredible colorized photo shows Scouts meeting Civil War veterans at Gettysburg

For a few hundred Scouts in July 1938, the Civil War was more than a lesson in history class.

That month, exactly 75 years after the Battle of Gettysburg, 500 to 600 Scouts gathered in Pennsylvania to camp, meet Civil War veterans and commemorate the bloodiest battle of the war. To help bring that gathering to life, the Adams County Historical Society in Gettysburg, Pa., used technology from MyHeritage to colorize a photo from the event. Read the post.

8. Scouters to receive 2022 Silver Buffalo, Silver Antelope awards, Scouting’s top national and territorial volunteer honors

For Scouters whose work affects the Scouting movement on the council, territory and national levels, the BSA bestows what is known as the “Silver family” of BSA awards. This includes the council-level Silver Beaver, territory-level Silver Antelope and national-level Silver Buffalo. Read the post.

7. 2021 merit badge rankings: Return of summer camps shuffles the list again

After the pandemic forced most summer camps to temporarily shut their gates in 2020, these beloved Scouting destinations returned in full force in 2021. For proof, just look to the annual merit badge rankings, where a number of summer camp staples reclaimed their positions high on the list. Read the post.

6. Here’s an Eagle Scout congratulatory letter request template to use or adapt

Parents, guardians and Scouters have been contacting famous people for decades to inform them of their Scout’s accomplishment. This is often intentionally done without the Scout’s knowledge so they can be surprised with these letters at their court of honor. By sending a letter to a dignitary, these adults are creating potential memories for their Eagle Scout that will last for generations. Read the post.

5. Pandemic-prompted changes to Scouts BSA advancement requirements expire March 1

Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, Scout units modified their procedures to ensure that Scouts could have a safe, meaningful and memorable journey along the Scouting trail. Early in 2022, the BSA decided it was time for those adjustments to be retired. Read the post.

4. A Good Turn from afar: Eagle Scout helps Ukrainian Scout escape to safety

About a week before war erupted in her home country of Ukraine, Irina Segreevna Vasiliuk got a message from her friend Lucian Kugler. The two had met during the summer of 2017 at the BSA’s Camp Fiesta Island in San Diego. So Irina wasn’t shocked to see a message from Lucian last month — until she read what he had said. Read the post. 

 

3. Does picking up trash constitute conservation?

Scouts serve their communities in many ways. One popular way involves picking up litter, thereby keeping their hometowns, parks and local environments clean. This post from last summer stirred up a lot of (mostly respectful!) debate in the comments. Read the post.

2. Teach your Scouts how to enhance their cooking skills using a Dutch oven

The first-year patrol is planning its menu for the upcoming campout: cereal for breakfast, peanut butter sandwiches for lunch and hot dogs for dinner. It’s their third outing in a row with such simplistic fare. The answer? The Dutch oven. Read the post.

1. Update to Scouts BSA joining requirements opens the door to more young people

A change to the Scouts BSA joining requirements earlier this year made it easier for young people to join a troop alongside their friends and classmates. Effective April 18, 2022, the Scouts BSA joining requirements now state that a young person can be a member of Scouts BSA if they meet any of these requirements … Read the post.

Honorable mentions

Some posts were published before 2022 but still racked up a lot of views. Here are the top 5:

The Cub Scout Six Essentials
One surprising fact about anyone who earned Eagle before Oct. 1, 1965
Meet 112 Scouts who became famous
2019 merit badge rankings
How to request congratulatory letters for your Eagle Scout

My favorite post(s) of the year

Sometimes, the most important post of the year isn’t the most popular. But if you ask me which posts I’m most proud of, it’s the pair of posts we did back in March, the first announcing the opening of registration for the 2023 National Jamboree, and the second following up with more details.

The theme of the Jamboree is “Forward,” representing the Scouting journey. I can’t think of a better thought to leave everyone with this holiday season.

We hope you’ll join us as we move forward into 2023 … and beyond!

Looking for Chanukah activities? The National Jewish Committee on Scouting has you covered

The word Chanukah (also spelled Hanukkah) means dedication. The Jewish festival commemorates the rededication of the Holy Temple in Jerusalem after a long and brutal fight more than 2,000 years ago. According to Jewish tradition, the vial of pure oil used for the ceremony was supposed to burn for only one day, but it miraculously lasted eight days.

The National Jewish Committee on Scouting’s Chanukah Program Helps guide provides activities suitable for campouts, unit meetings, den meetings or any observance at a religious institution.

The document, created by Rabbi Rachmiel Tobesman, a volunteer with the Baltimore Area Council, and further developed by the committee, is a treasure trove of activities suitable for families with kids of all ages.

Depending on how much time you want to spend, there are activities that range from fun, simple crafts, to more elaborate undertakings that really dig deep into the history of Chanukah.

Here are a few of our favorites:

Cut-up story game

Make two typewritten copies of a Chanukah story. (There’s one included in the PDF you can use.) Cut up one copy into as many parts as desired. Give one part to each player and keep a complete copy for yourself. The first part of the story is marked so that the participant holding that part begins to read aloud. The other players must listen carefully to determine when it is their turn to read. Since you have a copy of the complete story, you can check all mistakes.

Dreidel endurance

A variation on the usual dreidel game is one in which a record is kept of the time in which the dreidel remains in motion when spun. The player who can spin it for the longest period in a predetermined number of tries is declared the winner. It may be required that the dreidel spin within a given area, say, a circle about 2 feet in diameter.

Photo by iStock / Getty Images

A Chanukah connection game

A carton is filled with items that have a connection to Chanukah such as an olive, wick, a hammer. Each player gets a chance to pull out an item and tell how it connects to Chanukah.

Chanukah gelt treasure hunt

Pennies or nickels are hidden in various parts of the room, apartment or building in which the treasure hunt takes place. The treasure may also include a cruse (small bottle) of oil, a dreidel, menorah and box of candles. A limited time is allowed for the participants to search for the Hanukkah gelt. Each one keeps whatever treasure he finds.

Mattathias and Antiochus says

The leader issues orders to the participants standing in a row. He commands them to perform various acts, such as, “kneel,” “follow me,” “at ease,” or “stand at attention.” Each order is prefaced with either “Mattathias says” or “Antiochus says.” The orders of Mattathias are to be obeyed while those of Antiochus are ignored. Whoever fails to respond correctly and promptly is eliminated from the game.

Perfect for a den meeting or family gathering

In addition to fun games and activities, the program guide offers suggestions on Chanukah parties, decorations, songs and skits, along with printable puzzles and crafts. There’s even a section on special food you can prepare just for the occasion.

Check out The National Jewish Committee on Scouting’s website for more valuable information.

Eagle Scout researcher turning trash into treasure … and sharing his knowledge with Scouts

Two things have guided Eagle Scout Travis Williams throughout most of his life: science and Scouting.

Now, as both a professor of chemistry at USC and a Scouting volunteer, Williams is combining the best of those worlds, doing ground-breaking work on the recycling of plastic waste, and letting Scouts at a nearby council camp participate in and learn more about the process.

A paper published in Angewandte Chemie, a top chemistry journal, details how Williams and his team collected plastic waste from the shores of Catalina Island, treated it with a catalyst and ended up with materials that can be used in pharmaceuticals.

You can read the paper yourself, but the core is this: They’ve figured out how to convert trash into medicine.

In this case, the trash came from the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, a collection of litter that floats around the ocean and occasionally washes up on Catalina Island off the coast of California, southwest of Los Angeles.

The acknowledgements section of the paper includes a shoutout to the Boy Scouts of America.

That’s because also on Catalina Island is Camp Cherry Valley, a BSA camp operated by the Greater Los Angeles Area Council. Members of Williams’ research team teach science-related merit badge classes at Cherry Valley’s summer camp. And the Scouts collect trash from the beach for Williams’ lab.

Campers at Cherry Valley collected and contributed more than 20 pounds of ocean-sourced plastic waste to make the research project possible.

“We have reaped some really good scientific benefits from our relationship with Scouting,” says Williams.

Longtime Scouter and scientist

Williams earned his Eagle in 1994 when he lived in Houston. Four years later, he earned a Bachelor of Science from the California Institute of Technology. Six years after that, he earned a Ph.D. from Stanford.

Everywhere he moved, all along the way, he stayed involved with Scouting, holding positions such as Scoutmaster, council commissioner and district chair. He once ran an astronomy program at summer camp.

Now, he teaches organic and organometallic chemistry and operates the Travis J. Williams Research Group, dedicated to using chemistry to solve everyday problems.

“If we want to change the way the world works, we need new chemical reactions to do things that we are not currently able to do,” he says.

Williams works regularly with the National Science Foundation, an agency that works hard to engage young people in science and engineering.

“Where are the young people?” Williams says. “Well, they’re at summer camp. And Scouting has a wonderful curriculum we can utilize.”

Last summer, Williams paid two of his students to teach STEM-related badges at Cherry Valley with grant money from National Science Foundation under the category of public outreach.

Each week, Scouts from camp hiked around 4 miles to take a tour of the Wrigley Marine Science Center on Catalina Island.

“We have a great working relationship with the Wrigley facility out on Catalina,” says Cherry Valley camp director Matt Thornton. “All of those STEM merit badges became big, in-demand classes.”

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Changing the world

One of the camp staffers was Alexa Cueva, a USC undergrad student who took one of Williams’ classes. Cueva taught the Sustainability, Inventing and Entrepreneurship merit badges.

(An accomplished college archer, she also helped out as needed at the archery range.)

“We’d walk them out (to the marine science center) as part of hike day,” Cueva says. “They’d tour the facilities, and we’d show them some experiments.

“And on the way back, we’d do some trash pickup.”

(Thornton says they tried to get Cueva to come back and work at the camp next summer, but she already has a job: She’s currently on the district staff of the Western Los Angeles Council.)

“We show them the hyperbaric chamber … take them down 30 feet and pop their ears and show them how we do emergency medicine on dive accidents,” says Williams. “We show them how we deal with water preservation, how we treat endangered marine species, and how we work with hazardous materials.”

The trash collected by the Scouts got hauled back to Williams’ office, where he and his colleagues converted it into materials that can be used to treat cancer, Alzheimer’s disease and resistant infections.

Williams’ daughter is just a few months away from being old enough to be a Lion Cub Scout. When that happens, he says he’s leaning toward taking a break from his other Scouting duties and becoming a full-time Cubmaster.

In the meantime, he’ll have more camp staffers at Cherry Valley next summer … and beyond.

“I have a strong motivation to show young people what modern chemistry does,” Williams says. “It’s easily understood – it was trash on the beach, now it’s medicine. But you can’t just do a flyby. It has to be immersive.

“Philmont is a 10-day immersive experience. Summer camp is a 5-day immersive experience. This is an immersive experience with someone who’s deeply knowledgeable.”

Dr. Williams collects trash from the shores of Catalina Island. Photo courtesy of USC

Eagle Scout astronaut delivers powerful conservation message … from space!

Kjell Lindgren, Eagle Scout, assistant Scoutmaster, outdoor ethics advisor and NASA astronaut, has a unique view — literally — of Earth.

That’s at least in part why he’s so inspired to share with the rest of us the importance of taking care of it.

Last month, Lindgren took some time from his work on the International Space Station to send a video message to the volunteers at the BSA’s National Outdoor Ethics and Conservation Conference.

In it, Lindgren speaks passionately about the importance of conservation, shares how his time in space inspires him to Leave No Trace and thanks all of the conference’s attendees for everything they do to share the lessons of outdoor ethics and conservation with Scouts.

“As we look back at the Earth from this vantage point, we get to experience the vast beauty of our home planet,” he says. “It is indescribably beautiful, but it is also fragile. Our planet feels endless and inexhaustible, but from orbit it is clear that our planet has limits.”

Watch Lindgren’s message in its entirety below, and consider going full screen to best experience the remarkable video footage from space.

A long line of astronauts in Scouting

Lindgren was selected as an astronaut in June 2009 as part of NASA’s 20th astronaut class. He has participated in multiple space walks and more than 100 scientific experiments in space.

He is one of many NASA astronauts who were Scouts in their youth.

His passion for Scouting was clear earlier this year, when he took questions from Scouts live from outer space, and again with his message to the outdoor ethics and conservation conference.

In his video message, Lindgren draws some interesting parallels to his time on a space station to the time that Scouts spend in the outdoors.

“We … have the privilege of serving as stewards of the International Space Station, a vehicle that has survived the harsh environment of space for over 20 years,” he says. “We spend about 30% of our time taking care of this spaceship, conducting repairs and preventative maintenance, because it is profoundly clear that we cannot survive without it.

“The Earth — our spaceship — provides us with fresh air, food and water. The atmosphere protects us from radiation and temperature extremes. … And yet, most of us spend nowhere near 30% of our time caring for our home.”

Kjell Lindgren poses for a portrait inside a crew sleeping bag aboard the International Space Station. Photo by Shutterstock

Conservation is part of all Scouting programs

The Cub Scout, Scouts BSA, Venturing and Sea Scout programs all include outdoor stewardship, care for the environment and Leave No Trace as part of their programs.

The National Outdoor Ethics and Conservation conference is hosted by the National Outdoor Ethics and Conservation subcommittee, which provides resources for everyone teaching and promoting outdoor ethics in Scouting.

“So many of us that have the privilege to see the Earth from this vantage point return with a renewed desire to protect our planet — to conduct the maintenance and repairs needed to preserve our spaceship Earth,” Lindgren says. “The time that you have invested in conservation and education will preserve our open spaces, our environment and our beautiful spaceship Earth for Scouts, for our children and for generations to come.”

Flight engineers (clockwise from bottom) Samantha Cristoforetti, Bob Hines, Lindgren and Jessica Watkins. Photo by Shutterstock

This acronym is the secret to the strongest Cub Scout packs around the country

Imagine you’re on a 1-mile hike with your assistant leader and seven Cub Scouts. You feel a windchill picking up, and the temperature is dropping. Your group isn’t dressed for the impending weather. What do you do?

If your approach to Scouting events includes SAFE planning, you’re prepared and have properly assessed the weather forecast before heading out with your Cub Scouts. Your den brought layers and will be bundled up in no time.

But SAFE in Scouting offers much more than weather preparedness. This month on #CubChat Live, we dove into all the approach entails.

Use SAFE to prepare for all your Scouting activities

Let’s breakdown the acronym:

S stands for Supervision.
A stands for Assessment.
F stands for Fitness and Skill.
E stands for Equipment/Environment.

As you can see in the video below, director of Cub Scouts Anthony Berger dubbed this simple memory tool the “secret sauce of Scouting.” Read on to learn how the approach can strengthen your unit and volunteer team.

Supervision

First up, when planning for an activity, you must find adults who are qualified to supervise the tasks at hand. That doesn’t only mean ensuring you have two adults who are Youth-Protection trained (that should be a given and the bare minimum for any adult involved with your unit). It also includes finding adults who know about the subject you’re tackling and supervise actively.

If you’re taking on a lesson in knife safety, the adults supervising should have superb knife-handling etiquette. If you’re taking your den to the park, the adults on-site should be able to stay vigilant and keep track of youth at all times.

Assessment

Next, assess what you’ll be doing for your activity. It‘s key to ensure any planned activity is not prohibited in the Guide to Safe Scouting. You can also use the guide to find ways to ensure activities are performed safely and effectively.

Just because an activity isn‘t listed in the Guide to Safe Scouting, doesn’t mean it‘s prohibited. But it‘s crucial to use your skills as a trained leader to assess unlisted activities for risk.

The great news? Any activity listed in Scouting handbooks is on the table for activities that can be conducted safely. Just remember to follow the guidelines from the handbooks and the Guide to Safe Scouting.

Fitness and Skill

This is where the Annual Health and Medical Records you collect from participants is key! You’re always collecting those before any and all Scouting activities, right?

Thinking through fitness and skills means reviewing the records both adults and youth submit before each Cub Scout event. You want to ensure you know who needs to take what medicine, any allergies participants may have and any other important distinctions to keep in mind during the activity.

Equipment and Environment

Lastly, recheck your equipment before each outing. Check for damage. Clean anything that needs it. And ensure you have enough equipment for everyone to participate.

Additionally, think through the environment for your activity. How will you lay out the room? Where will you pitch tents? Is the space big enough?

Your goal is to think through every scenario you can come up with before you‘re on-site!

Let us know how you plan for Cub Scout activities

Leaders, how have you employed the SAFE method before Scouting events? How has your planning paid off? Leave your stories in the comments and we may share them on a future #CubChatLive

Want to have a great Scouts BSA program? Plan ahead

One of the most important factors in keeping your Scouts BSA program active is long-range planning. As that great philosopher Anonymous once said, “If you fail to plan, you plan to fail.”

The program planning conference lets your patrol leaders’ council brainstorm possibilities for a calendar full of exciting troop outings.

Learn more by reading our story from the May-June 2009 issue of Scouting magazine.

The importance of commissioner service

I got my start as a Cub Scout volunteer the same way many Scouting volunteers get their start: I showed up to the first meeting not knowing what to expect … a few weeks later, I was the Cubmaster.

I spent the next month or so in a fog. We had just lost a huge class of Arrow of Light Scouts to the BSA’s programs for older youth, our overall pack membership was down into the teens, and it was my job and my job alone — or so I thought — to fix everything.

I remember exactly where I was when I got the call that changed everything.

“Hello,” said the friendly voice on the other end of the phone. “I just wanted to reach out to introduce myself. I’m a commissioner, and I’m here to help.”

Boy, did he ever.

Just learning that I, in fact, did not have to fix everything myself was a huge relief.

Commissioners are volunteers whose job is to help ensure that every member of the BSA has a great Scouting experience. There are commissioners at the national, council and district level, and none of us could do what we do without them.

Larry Chase, the chair of the BSA’s national commissioners service team.

All about service

Larry Chase got his start as a Cub Scout volunteer the same way many Scouting volunteers get their start.

“I came home from work one night and my wife told me we were going to a meeting at my son’s elementary school,” Chase says. “We heard why our son should be involved in Scouting, and we found that our son wanted to be in Scouting. But we also learned that without volunteers, the pack can’t exist.”

Chase ended up becoming the pack’s treasurer. A few years later, he became a Scoutmaster, then a council commissioner.

Now, he is the chair of the national commissioner service team, reporting directly to Scott Sorrels, the BSA’s national commissioner.

The service team is responsible for supporting what commissioners do throughout the BSA.

“We are there to help them achieve the mission and vision of commissioners,” Chase says.

Just as Scouting leaders lean on commissioners for support, commissioners lean on the national commissioner service team.

“Commissioners are all about enabling unit leaders to be successful — and enabling units to be successful — so we can attract and retain more kids and more adult volunteers,” Chase says.

Like having a doctor who makes house calls

Rob Brodner, assistant district commissioner in the Circle Ten Council’s Iron Horse District, says unit commissioners are like doctors.

“When you are sick, you go to the doctor, and he diagnoses you and prescribes a plan for you to get better,” says Brodner. “He doesn’t wave a magic wand and you magically get better. When a unit is sick, a unit commissioner comes in, makes a diagnosis, and prescribes a plan to get the unit healthy again.

“To help from getting sick, you see a doctor for regular checkups. In the same way, a unit commissioner will regularly check up on their units.”

So where do all these commissioners come from?

Many of them are former Cubmasters, Scoutmasters or committee chairs. But that’s not a requirement.

The only requirement is a willingness to help others.

“Friendliness and outgoing personality are great traits to have,” says Brodner.

The BSA needs more commissioners

Chase has an important piece of advice he shares with all prospective commissioners.

“They’re not there to tell the leaders what to do,” he says. “They’re there to help unit leaders deliver the program successfully and to run the unit successfully.”

If you’re a unit leader and you have a question about BSA policy, your commissioner could be your best source. If you’re a unit leader and you need advice on recruiting new members, your commissioner could be your best source.

If you’re a unit leader and you’re just looking to talk about Scouting to someone who has been there, done that, your commissioner is who you should call.

There’s only one problem with commissioners: There aren’t enough of them. The BSA’s enrollment is on the rise, which is a good thing. That also brings with it the need for more commissioners.

“We’re looking for people who want to help Scouting grow and succeed,” says Chase. “If Scouting is growing every single day, then we’ll need more commissioners every single day.”

Click here to learn more about becoming a commissioner, or contact your local council to sign up.

Mike Leach, football coach and Eagle Scout, dies at 61

Mike Leach, Eagle Scout and revolutionary college football coach, died Monday night following complications from a heart condition. He was 61.

Leach, who earned the rank of Eagle in 1975 from Troop 58 in Cody, Wyoming, was an ardent supporter of Scouting.

In 2015, when he was coaching at Washington State, Leach was invited to speak at a breakfast fundraiser to benefit Scouts in Moscow, Idaho. There, he reminisced about earning his Eagle and had this to say about Scouting:

“I really do believe in Scouting. I’ve been in Scouting since I can remember almost, and I was thrilled to death when I put on my first Cub Scout shirt.

“(Scouting) is very American, I think it’s very important and it’s always been important to me.

“To get … Eagle requires a lot of support. It doesn’t just require parents. It requires people of the church, people in the troop. I recognize the fact that a bunch of people were involved in my success and then you understand what relationships with other people mean and how together you can do a little bit more.

“Now my son has his Eagle; that’s one of the things I’m most proud of.”

An entertaining personality

Throughout his coaching career, Leach was known for two things: his role in creating what is now known as the “air raid” offense, and his willingness to answer almost any question a reporter can come up with.

While some coaches just talk endlessly about schemes and strategies, Leach wasn’t afraid to comment on topics such as pirates, random wild animals and Vikings.

Leach first made his first big splash in coaching in 1997, when he took over as offensive coordinator at Kentucky and lit the old-school SEC on fire. Leach’s performance was good enough to get him a job as an assistant at Oklahoma and, eventually, the head coaching gig at Texas Tech. It was at Tech that he once had this to say about the officials making some calls that went against his team:

“It’s a little like breakfast — you eat ham and eggs. As coaches and players, we’re like the ham. You see, the chicken’s involved, but the pig’s committed. We’re like the pig; (the officials) are like the chicken. They’re involved, but everything we have rides on this.”

In 2011, Leach took over as head coach at Washington State, where he made a struggling team relevant again in the Pac 12. At a news conference, he mentioned to reporters that he goes on lots of walks and sees all kind of interesting animals, especially in the winter. When asked what the most interesting animal he had seen was, he came back with this:

“Tracked a raccoon one time in the snow. I was in the neighborhood, and I was just curious where this raccoon lived. There’s some fresh raccoon tracks. He’d been digging at somebody’s garbage. So, I followed the tracks, and I don’t even know if these people know it, but he lives right in the back of their house.

“It was residential enough — I was curious where this sucker lived, so I walked about a half a mile out of my way to sort that out.”

Mike Leach breaking down a potential Pac-12 mascot fight.

He was one of a kind. RIP pic.twitter.com/KEp1FOnAip

— Mike Beauvais (@MikeBeauvais) December 13, 2022

Bigfoot? Aliens? Why not?!?

At a different news conference, Leach was asked if he believes in Bigfoot.

“Do I believe in Bigfoot? I hope there’s Bigfoot. I doubt there is. The reason I don’t think there is is we’ve found bones of dinosaurs and everything else, but we haven’t found bones – that I’ve heard of – of Bigfoot. It’d be fun if there’s Bigfoot. I hope there’s Bigfoot. But my guess is there is not.”

At the same event, he did say he “suspects” that aliens are real.

“I don’t think that they’re little green men. And I don’t know that they’re specifically in our galaxy. … To me, why only this planet? Why only us? On Earth, they always say, ‘We’re the only ones.’ Really? Why?”

Leach was asked once who would win in a battle between pirates and Vikings — assuming of course that they could exist in the same era:

“You have to go with the Vikings if it’s cold weather. If it’s at sea, you have to go with pirates because of course they have cannons and everything. …

“You could almost see them joining forces because the Vikings were a group that would go down those rivers and it wasn’t just like, ‘Well, the only place we can live is Norway,’ or something. I mean, they could go down those rivers all throughout Europe. And if they liked it better where they ended up – they might raid the place first – but if they liked it better, they’d stay. ‘Oh, this is nice. This is a nice place. And oh yeah, the people who live here, they seem nice. Maybe I can marry one of their daughters.’ It would be like that, you know.”

A loving father and husband

“Mike was a giving and attentive husband, father and grandfather,” said the Leach family in a prepared statement. “He was able to participate in organ donation at UMMC as a final act of charity. We are supported and uplifted by the outpouring of love and prayers from family, friends, Mississippi State University, the hospital staff and football fans around the world.  Thank you for sharing in the joy of our beloved husband and father’s life.”

We’re kind of amazed by the neckerchief slides carved by this veteran Scouting volunteer

As a Scout in Indiana in the late 1940s, Don Riley remembers always looking forward to getting the next issue of Boys’ Life (now Scout Life) magazine.

But it wasn’t the jokes, the fiction, the stories about Scout outings or the true stories of Scouts in Action that Riley looked forward to the most. It was Whittlin’ Jim’s instructional stories about carving neckerchief slides out of wood.

“As a boy, I could hardly wait for the next issue of BL to arrive,” he says. “I started carving with the first issue I received. I tried to copy it exactly as it was shown.

“Been carving them ever since and have no plans to stop.”

What started as a hobby in his youth continued after he earned the rank of Eagle, into his young adulthood and into his years as Scoutmaster, and continues to this day. Don, now 85, still serves as a volunteer in the Hoosier Trails Council.

The slides that he doesn’t give away are stored in display cases — made by himself of course.

He also carves canes — some for members of his church, others with Scouting themes that are auctioned off in fundraisers — and walking sticks.

“I started with walking sticks when I saw a picture of a Scout holding a long pole with his patrol flag attached,” he says. “I was impressed by how the leaders made theirs.”

The artist at work: Don Riley, Eagle Scout, longtime Scouting volunteer, and supremely talented wood carver.

Still carving

As a youth, Riley was a member of the Order of the Arrow and spent one summer on staff at Scout camp. He then served in the Indiana National Guard and the Marine Corps and married his high school sweetheart, Doris.

Later, as Scoutmaster, Riley carved slides one year for every boy that went to summer camp.

He remained active in Scouting as an adult volunteer until the mid-1970s, when his job requirements didn’t allow him to spend as much time volunteering as he would have liked.

But in 2008, one of his former Scouts reached out and asked him to help restore Camp Louis Ernst, where Riley had spent much time as a child. For a year or so, Riley helped out at the camp on his own, pitching in here and there when he could.

Soon, though, he organized a group of volunteers affectionately called The Geezer Patrol. As part of the Friends of Camp Louis Ernst, they now meet once a month to help oversee special projects on the property.

In 2018, a fund was established dedicated to maintaining the camp in honor of Riley and another longtime volunteer.

“I stay involved because the Boy Scouts of America is the greatest youth program there is,” Riley says.

A sampling of Riley’s work.

Keeping it fun

In the late 1980s, a heart issue limited Riley to what he calls “light duty.” That only inspired him to carve more.

“Making slides, walking sticks and canes was the answer,” he says. “I have a very understanding wife who allows me to do carving in the house.”

One of Riley’s more difficult projects was a walking stick depicting their four grandchildren.

“I always try to make each stick different from the last,” he says.

His advice for any aspiring neckerchief carvers out there: Use basswood (it’s soft, and its straight grain makes it easy to carve) and focus on the fun.

“Stop carving if it becomes a chore,” he says. “Put it aside for a while and do something else. Start again when it’s fun.

“Just take it as you enjoy it.”

An old copy of BL on Riley’s desk, from which the artist still gets inspiration.

Want to try wood carving yourself? Click here to learn how to make your own walking stick.

Yum! Here’s our favorite holiday-themed Dutch oven recipes

Option A: Take a recipe … any recipe. Make it at home, in your kitchen. Eat it at your dining room table. It probably tastes great.

Option B: Now take those same ingredients and alter the process only enough to make it in a Dutch oven while on a campout. Eat it outdoors by a campfire, surrounded by your family, friends and fellow Scouts.

It’s basically scientifically proven that Option B is going to taste better.

That’s why we thought it appropriate to present our favorite holiday Dutch oven recipes. (If you don’t know how to use a Dutch oven, we’ve got you covered here and here. Click here for information on charcoal safety, and here for information on keeping your food safe.)

Share your favorite recipe in the comments!

Roasted turkey

I come from a ham family myself, but turkey is among the most popular Christmas meats for most Americans.

Think you can’t roast turkey in a Dutch oven? Think again. This deliciousness comes from our friends at Texas Iron Chef.

You’ll need:

2 tablespoons canola oil
Three large onions: Two sliced into half-inch-thick rings and one quartered
Six large sprigs of fresh rosemary (can substitute 6 tablespoons dried rosemary)
Six sprigs of sage
Six sprigs of thyme
One 12-pound whole turkey, thawed, with giblets removed (size of turkey depends on size of oven)
One apple, quartered
1 tablespoon salt
1 tablespoon ground black pepper
2 cups chicken stock
Parchment paper, as needed

Then, you’ll need to:

Select a turkey that will fit in your camp-style cast-iron Dutch oven. You’ll want to leave about 1-inch space surrounding the turkey when placed in the oven. (We used a rare 20-inch Maca Dutch oven in the video above.) If you’re having a hard time fitting your turkey within the Dutch oven you’re working with, consider using a spatchcock method to roast the turkey.
Place the quartered onion and apple into the turkey cavity. Rub the turkey with canola oil.
Prepare the Dutch oven by covering the bottom of the oven with two onions sliced into half-inch-thick rings. Fold rosemary sprigs in half and lay around the outside edge of the bottom of the oven. Sprinkle fresh sage and thyme across the top of the onions.
Place turkey in oven on top of herbs and onions.
Sprinkle top of turkey with salt and pepper.
Add chicken stock and cover oven.
Roast turkey at 400 degrees for 30 minutes to brown the skin of the turkey. (We covered the 20-inch oven lid with hot charcoals and made a ring of 18 hot coals underneath.)
After 30 minutes, remove coals from oven lid and add fresh coals, reducing the temperature to 350 degrees. (We made a double ring of hot charcoal around the lid of the 20-inch oven.)
Using an instant-read thermometer, check the internal temperature of the thickest part of the turkey (breast/thigh) every 30 minutes. Rotate oven and lid in opposite directions and replace charcoal as needed. If one area of the turkey is browning faster than other areas, cover with parchment paper.
When the internal temperature of the turkey reaches 160 degrees, remove all charcoal. Let the turkey rest for 15 minutes before serving to allow internal temperature to rise to 165 degrees. Total roasting time should be about 2 hours.

Of course, the best part of any holiday dinner is the sides, which brings us to …

Stuffing

(Serves around 12)

Ingredients

2 tablespoons canola oil
One large onion, chopped
2 cups celery, chopped
One bell pepper, chopped
One loaf day-old bread, cubed and placed into large mixing bowl
1 cup pecans, chopped
1/2 cup raisins or dried cranberries
Two eggs, beaten
1 cup chicken stock
1/2 tablespoon pepper
1 teaspoon salt

Directions

Place a 12-inch camp-style Dutch oven over a pile of hot charcoal. Add oil, onion, celery and bell pepper. Sauté until vegetables are soft. Remove mixture from oven and place in the large mixing bowl that contains bread. Add raisins and pecans. Toss.
In a separate bowl, mix eggs, chicken stock, pepper and salt. Pour over bread and vegetables, tossing lightly until all ingredients are incorporated.
Pour mixture into Dutch oven. Bake at 350 degrees (16 coals around lid and nine coals in a circle beneath the oven) for 30-45 minutes until top is golden brown and eggs are set.

Dutch oven vegetables

Ingredients

8 cups vegetables of your choice, such as broccoli florets, butternut squash, carrots, mushrooms, onions or zucchini
¼ lb. butter
8 oz. sharp cheddar cheese, grated
8 oz. fresh Parmesan cheese, grated
Salt and pepper
Water

Directions

Chop vegetables into bite-sized chunks.
Pour water into 12-inch Dutch oven, filling the bottom to a depth of ¼ inch.
Add vegetables. Season generously with salt and pepper. Place slices of butter on top of the layer of vegetables.
Put Dutch oven on about 24 coals, lid off, until vegetables start steaming.
Using a stick, remove half of the coals from underneath oven. Allow vegetables to steam until tender.
Move oven off coals and remove leftover water in bottom of oven with a baster.
Cover the hot vegetables with grated cheeses and put lid on oven (no need to add coals on top) until cheeses are melted, about 5 minutes.

Cornbread

(Serves around 12)

Ingredients

4-5 Tbsp. canola oil
2 cups cornmeal
2 cups all-purpose flour
¼ cup sugar
1 tsp. baking soda
1 tsp. salt
4 tsp. baking powder
4 large eggs
1 1/3 cups whole milk
1 1/3 cups buttermilk
4 Tbsp. butter, melted and cooled

Directions

Pour canola oil into Dutch oven.
Preheat oven to 425 degrees by placing 21 hot charcoals on lid and 10 in a circle beneath the oven.
In a large bowl, mix together cornmeal, flour, sugar, baking powder and salt.
In another bowl, whisk together eggs, milk and buttermilk.
Create a well in the middle of the dry ingredients. Pour egg mixture into the well. Gently fold the egg mixture into the dry ingredients with as few strokes as possible.
Add butter. (It’s OK if there are clumps of dry ingredients. The goal is to not overwork the batter.)
Pour batter into the preheated oven. Bake for about 20-25 minutes until the top is golden brown and slightly cracked. Edges should also be pulling away from the sides of the oven. Remove from coals.
Using heat-resistant mitts, turn oven over to serve the cornbread on the lid.

Peach cobbler

(Serves around 15)

Ingredients

2 large (32-ounce) cans of peaches
¾ cup brown sugar
⅓ cup tapioca
2 tablespoons cinnamon
1 teaspoon fresh lemon juice
1 teaspoon lemon zest
1 teaspoon vanilla

Drain peaches, saving the syrup. Combine peaches, brown sugar, tapioca, cinnamon, lemon juice, lemon zest, and vanilla in Dutch oven.

Topping

1½ cups flour
1 package (3 ounces) peach Jell-O
1 teaspoon lemon zest
1 teaspoon baking powder
½ teaspoon salt
⅓ cup cold butter
½ cup honey
2 eggs, beaten

Mix flour, Jell-O, lemon zest, baking powder and salt.

Cut in butter until coarse. Add honey and eggs and stir in until just mixed (it will be very thick).

Drop topping mixture by spoonfuls onto peach mixture in Dutch oven (it will look somewhat like dumplings). Cook for 45 to 50 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into topping comes out clean.

Remove from heat and make sauce while cobbler cools.

Sauce

¼ cup flour
¾ cup peach syrup
¾ cup brown sugar
¼ teaspoon salt
⅓ cup butter
1 teaspoon lemon zest
¼ cup lemon juice

In a small Dutch oven, mix flour with peach syrup until smooth (no lumps).

Add brown sugar, salt, butter, and zest. Bring to a boil, stirring often until sauce thickens.

Remove from heat and stir in lemon juice. Pour the sauce over cobbler in the Dutch oven and serve with vanilla ice cream or half-and-half.

Baked stuffed apples

Ingredients

6 large Granny Smith or honeycrisp apples
½ cup raisins (you can also use dried cranberries)
⅓ cup slivered almonds
½ teaspoon cinnamon
½ teaspoon nutmeg
2¼ cups water
6 oz. orange juice concentrate, thawed
3 tablespoons honey

Directions

Wash and core apples, leaving the bottom of the core.
Mix raisins, almonds, cinnamon and nutmeg in a bowl.
Stuff each apple with mixture.
Add water, orange juice concentrate and honey to a bowl. Mix well.
Place apples in Dutch oven. Slowly pour orange juice/honey mixture over apples.
Place oven on coals, put on lid and arrange coals on the lid in a checkboard pattern.
Bake until apples are tender, 40-50 minutes.

In the market for some Dutch oven supplies and accessories? Scout Shop has you covered!

The 10 essentials — a 21st century update

The concept of the 10 essentials — that list of items you absolutely positively should not leave home without when entering the backcountry — dates back to the 1930s, when a group called the Seattle Mountaineers compiled the first known list.

Since then, as technology has improved, it has undergone some changes. But the concept remains the same: having these items in your possession greatly increases the chances of you surviving a few unexpected nights in the wild.

In this story from the September-October 2019 issue of Scouting magazine, we approached the 10 essentials more as a list of categories instead of a list of items (for example, think “navigation” instead of “map and compass”). Let us know what you think!

Unsung Heroes: Scout saves friend from possible tragedy

It was around 9:30 p.m. when Colton, a Scouts BSA member from Texas, gathered online with some friends — each from their own homes — to play videogames. During an otherwise routine call as the boys prepared to begin, Colton began to sense that something was wrong.

One of his friends was acting strangely and made a remark that made Colton think he could harm himself.

“My friend said he was going to OD,” Colton says.

The boy then abruptly hung up.

Some of Colton’s friends thought the boy was joking around. Colton wasn’t so sure. Colton and his friends tried several different ways to reach back out to the boy, but he did not answer.

“I didn’t like the way that conversation ended,” he says. “I couldn’t leave that alone.”

Colton begged his mom to call his friend’s father.

Colton’s mom was hesitant at first. It was, after all, kind of late on a school night, and it could be that Colton had misinterpreted the boy’s behavior.

But Colton insisted that the situation was serious, and soon enough, his mom agreed.

Recognizing a serious situation

Colton’s mom first reached out to the boy’s father via text. She told the man that Colton had been trying to reach his son and he wasn’t answering his phone, and she just wanted to make sure everything was OK.

The father called Colton’s mom, curious why they were so worried. He had just checked on his son not long ago and found him sleeping in his room.

“I was trying not to alarm him,” says Colton’s mom. “I was just asking if he could check on his son without saying why.”

Colton and his mom persisted until the man promised to go check on his son. About 30 minutes later, the man called back.

He had found his son unconscious in his room and called 911. The boy was being rushed to the hospital.

“I was worried about my friend and didn’t want him to die,” Colton says.

The man wanted to know if Colton had any more information on what his son had taken. Colton told him everything he knew, which was only that the boy had been acting strangely and made a reference to taking drugs.

Being prepared to respond

It wasn’t until the next day that Colton’s mom got an update from the boy’s father. He had survived “a miserable night” in the hospital but was going to be OK.

“He said his son is lucky to have a good friend like Colton,” says Colton’s mom. “He would not have known anything if it hadn’t been for Colton’s actions.”

Colton received the BSA’s National Certificate of Merit.

“Scouting continuously reminds us to always be looking out for one another,” says Colton. “I think, naturally people care about each other, of course, but Scouts prepares us for these emergency situations.”

According to the National Alliance on Mental Illness, about 1 in 10 young people have thought at some point about ending their life.

“I am thankful for our choice in enrolling Colton in Scouts,” says Colton’s mom. “I believe that Colton’s actions are a direct result of the Boy Scouts of America’s positive influence in Colton’s life.”

988 has been designated as the new three-digit dialing code that will route callers to the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline, now known as the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline. If you or anyone you know is having thoughts of suicide, you can call or text 988, or chat with them online at any time. There is also a dedicated number in Spanish: 1-888-628-9454.

Scouts work on Exploration merit badge by exploring iconic Manhattan location

How important is the concept of exploration to modern society? The BSA’s Exploration merit badge pamphlet puts it best: “Exploration is the key to discovery.”

For Scouts in the New York City area, there’s no better way to learn about exploring than by visiting the headquarters of The Explorers Club, the 119-year-old society dedicated to promoting scientific exploration and field study. The organization also played a major role in the creation of the merit badge itself.

During one jam-packed day, the Scouts talked with explorers who have uncovered scientific breakthroughs in environments such as underwater caves and dense jungles, from the highest mountains to the deepest oceans, and in fields such as aerospace engineering, animal science and rare diseases.

“We got to go from room to room learning from different explorers about the things they’ve explored,” says Shane Herzog, a Scout from Troop 2011 in New York.

In addition to checking off multiple requirements from the badge, the Scouts learned just how important exploration really is.

Without exploration, there would be no medical breakthroughs, no advances in technology and basically no innovation in science, economics and business.

Exploration — in short — is the search to discover new information and resources.

People can explore using various modes of transportation to get to the most remote areas on our planet. They can also explore using a powerful microscope in a lab.

The Explorers Club

The Explorers Club has been supporting scientific exploration since 1904. Though its headquarters are in New York, it has chapters all over the world.

(Click here for a list of chapters.)

Its members are among the most famous explorers in the world, including Sir Edmund Hillary, Neil Armstrong and James Cameron (yes, that James Cameron).

At the NYC headquarters, Scouts got to see the actual flag that made it to the moon, ice axes used by Hillary when he became the first person to summit Mount Everest, artifacts from the Apollo space missions, and the table Teddy Roosevelt used to plan the Panama Canal.

“The coolest thing was the animals,” says Shane.

That would include a polar bear, cheetah, lion and antelope.

Eagle Scout Stephen Daire spoke to the Scouts about his multiple cave-diving expeditions. Steve Elkins talked about how he used laser technology to discover a long-lost prehistoric city Mosquitia region of Honduras. Eagle Scout James Sisti, explorer and mountain climber, talked about drawings in exploration.

“We learned that exploration is important so we can learn more things and make new discoveries to help the future,” Shane says.

Others presenting at the session were Bonnie Wyper from Thinking Animals United, Ilan Moss from the Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative, dogs and eels researcher Jeanne Wilcke, Milbry Polk from WINGS WorldQuest, and Roberta Kravette from Destination: Wildlife.

Photo courtesy of the Greater New York Councils

What qualifies as exploration?

The Exploration merit badge was released in 2017, in large part thanks to what started as an innocent conversation between Explorers Club member Lee Berger, paleoanthropologist, archaeologist and Eagle Scout; and Michael Manyak, vice president of the National Eagle Scout Association.

The rest is history.

After learning about the history and importance of exploration, the Exploration merit badge requires Scouts to plan, prepare for and go on an actual expedition to somewhere of interest to them.

As the merit badge pamphlet explains, there’s a difference between an adventure and an exploration. An adventure – a sailing trip, a hiking trip or a guided tour of ancient ruins – isn’t necessarily an exploration.

An exploration involves the collection and sharing of information, like analyzing the animal population or plant species at a state park, or studying the effects of drought on an area that you visit.

Though humans have now visited almost every area of our planet, legendary explorers such as caving expert, Explorers Club member, and Eagle Scout Bill Steele (who has a tarantula named after him!) believe we are just now entering a golden age of exploration, thanks to new technology — and a new generation of explorers, many of whom could be inspired by the Exploration merit badge.

“It will take many lifetimes before all of the caves on Earth are explored and mapped,” says Steele. “Some even await new technologies to be able to explore them.”

Scouts can become yo-yo masters with this cool Duncan program

We’ve told you before about the Cub Scout Yo-Yo Preview Adventure. But did you know that Duncan Toys also offers a fun yo-yo program for older Scouts, featuring an awesome set of badges?

Scouts advance through the skill levels from Level 1 to Master in the Teen Program, earning badges along the way. The process is straightforward: Scouts study the free tutorial videos available at Duncan’s program page. They learn how to do the yo-yo trick in each video. Then they film themselves completing the tricks and upload their video to YouTube or Vimeo. They fill out the form on this page to submit their videos. Finally, they’ve earned the badge and move on to the next level.

For more than 90 years, Duncan Toys has been showing youth the joy of yo-yoing. It’s a fun sport that requires concentration and determination, yet some tricks can be picked up very easily.

The Yo-Yo Preview Adventure, which is available for Wolves, Bears, Webelos and Arrow of Light Cub Scouts, shows Cub Scouts how to use the timeless toy while teaching them concepts of physics.

The Teen Program leads older Scouts through simple tricks, like the “gravity pull” and “walk the dog,” to advanced moves like “split the atom” and “Eli hops.” After your Scout masters these top tricks, they’ll be able to make a yo-yo seemingly float in the air or spin flawlessly around their fingers.

The right stuff

Duncan Toys sells the Duncan BSA Hornet yo-yo, retailing for $14.99, which is made just for Scouts. It’s balanced perfectly for looping tricks, and its ball-bearing axle helps the yo-yo spin for a long time. More yo-yos are available on Duncan’s site or at the Scout Shop online.

These high-performance models allow for longer “sleep” times than models you may find at your local superstore. The longer a yo-yo “sleeps” (spins at the bottom of the string), the more time you have for tricks.

You can also teach your Scouts by getting Scout Leader Case Packs, priced well below retail, each featuring assorted yo-yos in multiples of 12. These case packs are perfect for group activities and recruiting events.

If you’re planning a big event, consider Duncan’s customizable packs, where you can add logos, graphics or even your unit’s number on the yo-yos. Choose from among three quality yo-yos, add your image and pick your color, and you’ve got a really cool custom toy for your next meeting or recruitment event.

Our favorite holiday-themed content from the Scout Life website

Winter break is right around the corner. With the kids at home when they would normally be at school, you could be the one expected to provide entertainment.

Have no fear. Scout Life is here.

The Scout Life website has tons of stuff to keep you and your family (and maybe also your Cub Scout pack?) going this holiday season.

From fiction to fun and games, here are my favorites.

Holiday sugar cookies

One time I made some homemade peppermint bark, brought it to the BSA office for our holiday party, then proceeded to drop most of it onto the floor.

Don’t be me.

Instead, check out this recipe for sugar cookies, with extra tips (including videos!) on decorating them to make them look just right.

A family that bakes together bonds together … and also might argue over who gets to eat the last of these delicious cookies, but that’s fine.

The Cowboy’s Christmas Eve

This piece of short fiction from writer Jack Schaefer (best known for his novel Shane, which was later adapted into the legendary Western movie of the same name) tells the story of young Stubby Pringle, a “19-year-old, 10-foot-tall cowhand” who sets off on a Christmas Eve adventure and ends up learning the true meaning of the holiday season.

The story first appeared in the December 1963 issue of what was called at the time Boys’ Life. The Cowboy’s Christmas Eve was reprinted in our magazine three times over the next 40 years, and for good reason: It’s a timeless classic that’s as every bit as entertaining today as it was back then.

It takes a few paragraphs to get used to Schaefer’s sparse language (One example: “He has shape of bear in dimness, bundled thick against cold.”) but we promise it’s worth it.

Click here to enjoy a version of the story specially formatted for Scout Life’s online fiction collection.

The perfect hot chocolate

Technically, you can drink hot chocolate all winter, but doesn’t it taste better during the holidays?

This hot chocolate mix is giftable — it consists of seven different and equally delicious dry ingredients that won’t go bad as long as you give your gift away in a reasonable amount of time.

And when you add the ingredients to hot water? Yeah, it’s delicious.

(I recommend making two jars, one to give to someone else and to give to yourself. You deserve it.)

Click here to get the recipe.

Homemade snow globe

I was fascinated by snow globes as a child, and based on our observations, they’ve lost none of their appeal over the years.

This guide will help you and your child create a homemade snow globe. You’ll need a glass jar, glitter and a small toy or figurine (bonus if it’s holiday themed) small enough to fit inside.

(The figurine has to be glued to the inside of the jar’s lid. Hot glue is best, and it’s best if it’s applied by an adult.)

The end result makes a great gift, unless you just want to keep it for yourself (which is probably what I’d do).

Click here for step-by-step instructions.

Homemade winter wreath

Wreaths with ivy and berries date back to several hundred years BC. At some point, they became associated mostly with the holiday season, and we aren’t complaining.

They still look great.

This homemade wreath is cheap and easy to make, but also just challenging enough to allow a child some creativity. This is another craft assembled with hot glue, so adults will likely want to take over that step.

Click here to learn how to make yours.

Holiday song lyrics quiz

Do you think you know holiday music? Take our quiz either with your family (as teammates) or against your family members (in a friendly competition.)

I got 8 out of 10.

(Are you sure it isn’t “roll the ancient yuletide carol”?!?)

Click here to see what you get.

Jokes, jokes and more jokes

As a longtime writer for Scout Life, it never bothered me once when people told me their favorite part of the magazine was the jokes and the comics.

I agree!

And now, the editors of Scout Life present to you, 100 funny holiday jokes and comics. Brought to you by the best joke writers of them all: Scout Life readers.

Click here to make your family laugh.

The Scout Life holiday gift guide!

When my kids were younger, the Scout Life managing editor used to let me … er … my kids … test some of the toys for the annual gift guide.

My kids are too old now, but trust us: These gifts are still being tested by real-life kids!

My favorite … I mean, uh … the kids’ favorite … from 2022 is the new Batmobile. Cooool!

Click here to see the gifts that got tested by other people’s kids in our most recent guide.

You know what else makes an excellent holiday gift? A subscription to Scout Life! Click here to gift one to the Scout in your life.

Another reason to attend the 2023 Jamboree: the Cultural Showcase

There are lots of reasons to be excited about the 2023 National Jamboree, happening July 19-28, 2023, at the Summit Bechtel Reserve. Today, in the first of what will be a series of stories, we look at one of them: the Cultural Showcase.

Most experts believe the earliest Americans came from Asia, crossing a land bridge that no longer exists. In the 16,000-plus years since then, humans from all over the world have come to America, bringing some elements of their home culture — food, language, customs and traditions — with them.

The National Jamboree will celebrate the different cultures of the United States in an area called the Cultural Showcase.

“We want to celebrate humanity and all of its richness,” says Andrew Miller, a longtime Scouting volunteer at the local, council and national level who’s helping to lead this section of the Jamboree. “One element of humanity’s richness is cultural richness – especially in America, where so many different cultures come together in our nation.”

The Cultural Showcase, which is part of the Jamboree’s larger Celebrating Humanity program, will have designated spaces for different cultures. Each space will feature activities and displays such as games, attire and more.

The Jamboree Service Team

Like most areas of the Jamboree, the Cultural Showcase will rely on volunteer staffers to help present the program — in this case, a combination of Jamboree Service Team members and anyone from a council contingent who can come by when it doesn’t interfere with their other obligations. Haven’t yet decided if you’re attending the Jamboree? Consider attending as a member of the Jamboree Service Team! Have you already signed up to attend with a council contingent? Stop by the Cultural Showcase in your free time and share a story or two with participants about your own cultural background.

As a member of the Jamboree staff, you will deliver the Jamboree experience to the youth participants.

Speaking from my own personal experience, working at the Jamboree is a blast. No matter your skillset, there’s a place for you on the team.

Miller says his team in particular is looking for volunteers who would be excited to share their own culture, whatever that might be, with Jamboree participants. The team has representation from Jamaica, Greece, the Philippines, Ireland and India, and is looking for anyone else who is willing to share their culture.

“We are looking for Scouts and Scouters who would like to showcase their culture in an effort to highlight our core Scouting ideals of kindness and friendliness to all,” says Antonio del Rosario, diversity chair of the Greater New York Councils and a volunteer on the Cultural Showcase team. “Think of it as an international potluck under the tent of Celebrating Humanity — we want a taste of your culture.”

 Click here to learn more and reserve your spot on the Jamboree Service Team. If you’d like to work for the Cultural Showcase, be sure and choose the option for Celebrating Humanity. If you’d like to learn more about the Culture Showcase, click here to shoot them an email.

The purpose of the Cultural Showcase is to “celebrate humanity and all of its richness,” says Scouting volunteer Andrew Miller. Photo by iStock/Getty Images

What’s a Jamboree?

The National Scout Jamboree is a gathering of thousands of the BSA’s adult and youth members, usually held every four years. The 2021 event, however, was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The 2023 Jamboree has adapted the theme of Forward, representing the Scouting journey. When Scouts encounter a challenge, they don’t stand still – they evaluate, plan and move forward. Scouting as a movement is always moving forward, reaching new generations of young people and equipping them to be leaders in their communities, nation and world.

Over the course of 10 days, participants will experience stadium shows, hikes, adventure sports, merit badges and more.

Click here to learn more about joining the Jamboree as a participant.

What aspect of the Jamboree are you looking forward to the most? What should we cover next in our series leading up to the big event? Shoot us an email or let us know in the comments.

Council’s winter camping program raises awareness about the dangers of opioids

Choosing not to use drugs (along with tobacco and alcohol) is a perfect example of ethical decision-making in how you care for your body and your mind, and it starts with getting educated.

Scouts who attended winter camp at the Andrew Jackson Council’s Hood Scout Reservation over the Thanksgiving holiday got the chance to learn from the experts themselves. As part of the Scout Out Opioids program, Scouts and their families learned about the dangers of opioids abuse and misuse from the Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics.

“Starting early with educating young children and adolescents about the dangers of opioids and the importance of staying away from their misuse is vital to saving lives,” says Mississippi attorney general Lynn Fitch. “I am grateful to our partners at the Boy Scouts of America and the Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics for helping us convey this message to not only these young Scouts, but also their families.”

Bureau of Narcotics director Steven Maxwell, staff members from the attorney general’s office and a recovering addict from Stand Up, Mississippi, all spoke to the Scouts and their families about the dangers of opioid addiction and abuse.

“It’s critically important to be well informed and educated about the drug culture, as a matter of success in life,” Maxwell says. “Being informed and educated provides an effective knowledge base for making sound decisions and exercising prudent judgement.”

Yesterday, my office, in collaboration with the Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics and the Andrew Jackson Council of the @boyscouts hosted Scout Out Opioids, a program to raise awareness about the dangers of opioids. To read the full release, click the link in my bio. @MissDPS pic.twitter.com/0Ls37OKFe0

— Lynn Fitch (@LynnFitchAG) November 21, 2022

What are opioids?

Opioids are a class of drugs used to reduce pain. Prescription opioids are prescribed by doctors to treat moderate to severe pain. Synthetic opioid pain relievers are the most powerful opioids used to treat the most severe pain.

Both have serious side effects and risks when used without the care of a doctor. And both can result in physical dependence — meaning you have symptoms of withdrawal when the medication is stopped, increasing the urge to continue taking the drug.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that 75% of drug overdose deaths in the United States involved opioids.

“In Scouting, every week a Scout pledges to themselves that they will be physically fit and mentally awake, and to be clean – in mind and body,” says Andrew Jackson Council COO and assistant Scout Executive Larry Cagle. “For these Scouts to hear of the dangers that abusing opioids can cause to them, their families and their neighbors is extremely important.

“We want our Scouts to be upstanders, not bystanders, and we hope that our Scouts will be able to take what they learned and share it in the communities that they live in and serve.”

Scouts at Winter Camp at Hood Scout Reservation in Hazlehurst, Mississippi, received a special Scout Out Opioids patch.

What can you do to Be Prepared?

Anyone who takes prescription opioids can become addicted to them, including friends and family members who might find them in medicine cabinets or the trash.

Scouts at Hood Scout Reservation went home with a packet from DisposeRX, a company dedicated to decreasing the risks of overdoses, suicides and accidental poisonings by helping people dispose of leftover medications properly. The packets include a substance that, when mixed with water and unused opioids, deactivates the drugs.

According to the CDC, signs of an opioid overdose may include small, constricted pupils; falling asleep or loss of consciousness; slow, shallow breathing; choking or gurgling sounds; limp body; and pale, blue, or cold skin. If you aren’t sure if someone has overdosed, seek medical care immediately to be safe, and do not leave the person alone.

Scouts and their families also received family safety kits from the National Child ID program, including a fingerprinting kit, tools to collect a DNA sample, and a place for physical identification information and a recent photo. The kits are designed to be provided to law enforcement should a child go missing.

“It is not only important for our Scouts to know how to identify the danger of opioids,” says Cagle, “but how to handle the danger if they encounter it.”

Packets like this one from DisposeRX allow consumers to properly dispose of prescription drugs.

Extreme Makeovers, Round 46: Eagle Scout project before-and-after photos

This is the 46th in an occasional series where we share Eagle Scout project before-and-after photos. See the complete collection here and submit your own here.

To fully understand the impact Eagle Scout projects have on communities, you need to see to believe. That’s why I asked to see Eagle Scout project before-and-after photos — the same photos prospective Eagles are asked to include with their post-project report.

The latest batch of 11 projects — from 9 different states — includes installing new signage at a local park in Missouri, improving access to outdoors areas at a rehabilitation facility in Ohio and installing new outdoor games at a middle school in Kentucky.

What’s great is that you can multiply each individual act of stupendous service by roughly 50,000. That’s how many Eagle Scout projects get completed every single year.

TIP: Click/tap and drag the slider below each image to see the change.

Alexander from Michigan

Who: Alexander W., Troop 256, Washington Township, Michigan

What: Alex and his volunteers installed new landscaping around the school sign. Alex wanted to give back to the Beck Centennial Elementary School that he used to attend.

Nathan from New York

Who: Nathan, Troop 279, Latham, N.Y.

What: Nathan and his crew removed a myriad of old markers and re-stablished a trail system with new markers at his town park. He also designed two new trail signs and had them manufactured to replace the old wood ones.

Zack from Missouri

Who: Zack H, Troop 4002, Cape Girardeau, Missouri
What: Zack and his volunteers installed a new sign for the county park. Scouts from four different troops participated in this transformation.

Landon from California

Who: Landon, Troop 699, Rancho Cucamonga, California

What: Landon and some fellow Scouts cleaned out a church storage room that was unorganized and unusable. Then they painted the walls, installed new shelves, organized it and made it usable.

John from Ohio

Who: John G., Troop 252, Oregon, Ohio

What: John’s project involved building a pergola for patients at the Genicross Lutheran Services Rehabilitation Center. The pergola gave the patients the opportunity to sit outside and talk while enjoying the outdoors. Prior to the project, there were no shaded areas to sit outside.

Ian from Louisiana

Who: Ian, Troop 67, Donaldsonville, Louisiana

What: With the help of volunteers, Ian painted math-inspired hopscotch games for a local primary school playground.

Tristen from Kentucky

Who: Tristen, Troop 829G, Boston, Kentucky
What: Tristen and her troop built and installed a gaga ball pit, giant tic-tac-toe, giant Jenga game, giant Connect Four game and provided a storage box and balls for her elementary/middle school.

Evan from California

Who: Evan Y., Troop 243, Santa Ana, California

What: Evan and his teammates built a beautification planter out of wood for Orchard Hills school for all they did for the students during COVID pandemic.

Caleb from Ohio

Who: Caleb Troop 263, Toledo, Ohio

What: Caleb and his crew installed a preschool playground for his grade school and church, Christ the King.

Daniel from Florida

Who: Daniel, Troop 713, Loyce Harpe Park, Lakeland, Florida

What: Daniel and his helpers built an incline bridge as a new mountain biking feature for a trail called Razors Edge in Loyce Harpe Park. The project will help cyclists ascend the ravine and hill safer for a drop on the other side.

Christian from Illinois

Who: Christian H., Troop 8093, Glen Carbon, Illinois

What: Christian and his helpers built a gaga ball pit in the city park for the city of Breese, Illinois.

Eagle Before & After FAQs

How can I see more in this series?

By going here.

How can I submit my project (or my Scout’s project) for consideration?

Go here to learn how to send them to us.

Are awards available for outstanding Eagle projects?

Yes! The Glenn A. and Melinda W. Adams National Eagle Scout Service Project of the Year Award honors outstanding Eagle projects.

An Eagle Scout, their parents or any registered BSA volunteer (with the Eagle Scout’s permission) may submit the Eagle Scout service project for consideration. Click here to learn more.

How can I see even more great Eagle projects?

Check out the Scout Life Eagle Project Showcase.

Who owns the photos used in this series?

Unless otherwise listed, all photos are courtesy of each Scout and their family.

Kids are losing their ability to see far away — here’s how Scouting can help

I can see clearly now … another benefit of Scouting!

Nearsightedness — the ability to see well up close but not at a distance — is a rising problem among children, according to the American Academy of Ophthalmology (AAO).

Interestingly enough, Scouting can help.

Pediatric ophthalmologist Noha Ekdawi says spending time outdoors — specifically, in the sunlight — is the best way to prevent myopia, or nearsightedness, in children.

What do most Scout units do several times a month? Go outside!

“It’s a deceptively simple response to a growing public health crisis, but it works, and not enough people know about it,” according to a recent article on the AAO website. “Nearsightedness in children has increased at an alarming rate over the past 30 years. … Although genetics play a role in who develops myopia, the sharp increase suggests that environmental factors may be at play.

“Many experts point to the combination of increased screen time and less time outdoors as factors that may put children at higher risk for developing myopia.”

What is myopia?

Myopia is the result of faulty structure in your eyes. When your eyeball is too long, it can’t focus the light that it perceives correctly. Instead of the focus being directly on the retina, as it should be, the focus is shifted to an area in front of the retina.

The result is that it’s easy to see things up close, like a book or a smartphone, but difficult to see things far away, like a street sign or the TV when you’re on the other side of the room.

Glasses or contact lenses fix the problem by shifting your focus to where it belongs – directly on the retina. However, research shows that severe myopia puts children at risk of potentially more serious problems down the road, according to the AAO.

“It is estimated that about 40% of children ages 6 to 19 years are nearsighted,” the article says. “If nothing is done to help slow the increase, half the world’s population may be nearsighted by the year 2050.”

Photo by Michael Roytek

How can you prevent it?

One basic, simple remedy appears to be going outside and spending more time in the sunlight. Why does this help?

One theory is that kids who spend more time outdoors are more active and having more fun. This results in your brain releasing more dopamine, a chemical that’s important for everyone’s health.

Another theory blames all the time that kids spend on screens – focusing on objects just a few inches from their eyes – instead of outdoors, where they focus on the sky, the trees, that mountain in the distance, or maybe even each other.

“The time to intervene is in early childhood because the earlier a child develops myopia, the more likely they are to develop severe myopia later in life,” says Ekdawi. “So, the goal is to delay the start of myopia and to slow the rate of progression so the child can avoid the worst complications of myopia, like retinal problems.”

Scouting works!

Ekdawi says she sends her children outdoors as often as possible, so they’ll get the dopamine hit that comes with it and spend time focusing their eyes on things other than screens.

Of course, being active in Scouts would achieve the same thing.

Most Cub Scout packs go camping for at least a day or two at a time, and many have regular den meetings outdoors. Scouts BSA units usually camp once per month. And Venturing and Sea Scouts? Getting outdoors is what they do best.

The AAO is quick to point out that screens — just like potato chips and soft drinks — only become a serious problem when we overindulge. Everybody likes to binge TV shows and make video calls with friends. That’s fine, as long as you mix in a little outdoors time — maybe for a Scout outing — as well.

Ekdawi echoes the sentiment of the Cub Scout motto: Do Your Best.

“You don’t have to be 100% perfect,” she says. “Just be pretty good.”

Photo by Shutterstock / Monkey Business Images

‘Tis the season to overeat … but it doesn’t have to be!

Swedish meatballs, broiled scallops wrapped in bacon, carved HoneyBaked Ham, fresh rolls, roasted turkey breast, olives, pickles, hot peppers filled with mozzarella and prosciutto, apple pie, walnut roll, chocolate-dipped cream puffs.

Getting hungry?

Learn more about surviving the holiday buffet without packing on the pounds by reading this story from the November-December 2009 issue of Scouting magazine.

Counting down the 3 things we’re most thankful for: No. 1

“A Scout is thankful” — not officially part of the Scout Law, but certainly worth making it part of our lives this week. So much so that I’ll be publishing three consecutive posts leading up to Thanksgiving about the three things we at On Scouting are most thankful for.

On Monday, we told you how thankful we are for our Scouting volunteers across all the Scout programs.

On Tuesday, we paid tribute to our Scout parents.

Today, we’re moving on to No. 1 …

All of our Scouts!

Whether you’re a Cub Scout, Scouts BSA member, Sea Scout, Venturer or Explorer, we say thank you!

If you stuck with the program through the coronavirus pandemic, we say thank you. If you’re one of our many new members who have joined since, we say thank you.

If you joined to get outdoors and go camping, hiking, sailing, backpacking or whitewater rafting, we say thank you. If you joined to learn more of the skills you’ll need in life, or if you joined to learn more about a particular career, we say thank you.

Whether you’re a Lion or Webelos, whether you’re a Tenderfoot or Eagle Scout, whether you’ve earned the Discovery rank or the Summit rank, or whether you’ve earned the rank of Apprentice or Quartermaster, we say thank you.

Photo by Michael Roytek

It’s all about our youth members

Everything we boring adult BSA employees do is for our youth members.

And everything our much-less-boring adult volunteers do? Also for our youth members.

Whether it’s a high-adventure trip, Pinewood Derby or on-the-job experience with a local business, every Scouting adventure helps our youth learn a little more about themselves. Every BSA program is designed to build the foundations for humility and compassion, and to strengthen character through actions, to prepare youth for a lifetime of leadership.

And what makes it even better is that Scouting is something the whole family can experience together. We designed our program so that anyone —brothers, sisters, mothers and fathers —can have fun and make an impact.

If you’re already a member of the BSA, we say thank you, and happy Thanksgiving!

If you’re thinking about signing up, click here to find a BSA unit near you.

‘The Fabelmans’ features a heartfelt, authentic depiction of Scouting

When it comes to Hollywood’s efforts to depict Scouting on screen, you never know what you’re going to get. More often than not, Scouts in movies are shown as mostly friendly and likeable, but also the butt of jokes about their dedication to things like safety, the outdoors and the earning of merit badges.

(See Moonrise Kingdom and Pixar’s Up, both tremendous movies that poke friendly fun at some of the ideals of Scouting.)

You’ll find no such attitude, however in The Fabelmans, the semi-autobiographical drama written and directed by Steven Spielberg, the legendary director and Eagle Scout who in real life discovered his love of filmmaking while working on the Photography merit badge.

As we learned from the trailer, the film tells the story of Spielberg’s life from ages 7-18 and very much covers how his time in Scouting shaped the filmmaker he would eventually become.

I’ll get into some very minor spoiler-ish details below (Spielberg’s Scouting journey is entirely contained in the film’s first half, so I won’t be revealing any major plot points), but otherwise, here’s what you need to know: The Fabelmans is a very good movie.

You won’t find any action scenes (other than the ones Spielberg films in the movies within the movie) or over-the-top villains. But if you enjoy coming-of-age stories that move at a slow pace with a main character that’s easy to root for, then The Fabelmans is for you.

It’s rated PG-13, but there’s nothing too scary for younger viewers. Kids under 13 are more likely to be bored by the movie’s adult pacing than anything else, though the family does eventually deal with some intense, adult issues.

Read on for a more detailed look at how Scouting fits into the film.

How Scouting is depicted in ‘The Fabelmans’ (minor spoilers)

Of the movie’s 2-hour, 31-minute runtime, Scouting is featured prominently for around 30 minutes.

The movie begins with Spielberg, named Sammy Fabelman here, as a 7-year-old child going to see the first movie of his life. He’s both fascinated and horrified by the image of a literal train wreck, with what at the time would have been considered ground-breaking special effects.

A short time later, the Fabelman family moves to Phoenix, the action jumps ahead a few years, and we immediately see Sammy (now played by a slightly older actor) as a Scout. He and a handful of other Scouts ride their bikes, talk about girls and, of course, see a movie, all while wearing their Scout uniforms.

(Why they’re wearing their uniforms at this point is unclear, but it’s a minor quibble. The vintage clothing looks great, complete with bandanas and what seems like accurate patch placement and everything.)

At one point, one of his fellow Scouts tells Sammy, “It’s called the Photography merit badge, not movies.” This is a nice little inside joke. In real life, Spielberg was able to convince his merit badge counselor to count his efforts to make a homemade movie toward one of the requirements for the Photography merit badge. Then, at the 1989 Jamboree, Spielberg helped introduce the BSA’s brand-new Cinematography merit badge, which would later become Moviemaking.

Sammy Fabelman (Gabriel LaBelle, center) with members of his Scout troop in a scene from ‘The Fabelmans.’ Photo by Merit Weismiller Wallace/Universal Pictures and Ambling Entertainment

Sammy Fabelman got a lot of help from his fellow Scouts

The Fabelmans shows young Sammy making two movies with the help of his fellow Scouts. First, he films a Western-style shootout set in and around a stagecoach. Later, he films a World War II-themed action movie that he calls Escape to Nowhere that looks like it could have been a precursor to Saving Private Ryan.

What’s really great about this section of the movie is how Sammy’s Scout friends serve as actors, cameramen and assistant directors. They support Sammy every step of the way, with no complaints whatsoever. They are his friends. They are there to enthusiastically help however they can. Like true Scouts.

There’s a great moment when Sammy is directing the star of his movie to react more emotionally to the death of his squad mates. Both Sammy and his Scout friend get emotional in the process.

These Scouts are not the butt of any jokes. They are the true heart of these scenes.

When Sammy shows the movie to his troop, they hoot and cheer. They congratulate each other and slap high fives. They ooh and aah at Sammy’s use of fake blood to simulate gunshot wounds and camera flashes to simulate the gunshots themselves.

(This is also a true story. Spielberg has said in multiple interviews that the positive reaction he got from showing his early movies to his Scout friends is one of the things that inspired him to make more movies.)

After seeing one particularly exciting special effect in Sammy’s movie, a Scout asks Sammy, “How did you do that?” It’s the same real-life reaction moviegoers around the world had when they first saw special effects-laden Spielberg movies like Jurassic Park and Ready Player One.

In the car ride on the way home, Sammy gazes proudly at his Photography merit badge card and patch.

A few more notable Scout references

There’s a really good scene where Sammy’s sisters are prepping him for the Lifesaving merit badge. Sammy, with a beach towel around his neck, appears to be getting ready for his swim test.

(This isn’t the first movie in which Spielberg references the Scouting swim test.)

Eventually, the Fabelman family moves to California, and it seems at this point that Sammy is no longer a Scout. Incidentally, this is also the point in the movie that Sammy encounters bullies and bigotry for the first time.

At one point, one of Sammy’s sisters, noting that Sammy is grouchy and stressed, says, “More like the misery merit badge.”

And later, during a rather intense conversation between Sammy and his mom, Sammy’s mom apologizes for a past act that she mistakenly thinks prevented him from earning the rank of Eagle. Sammy responds with something along the lines of, “No, Mom, I did get Eagle Scout.”

There’s one, last inside Scouting joke in the film’s final minutes, which involves a cameo from our second-favorite Eagle Scout movie director.

The Fabelmans has received almost universal praise from film critics. It’s out now in theaters everywhere.

Sammy’s mom congratulates him for earning the Photography merit badge. Photo by Merit Weismiller Wallace/Universal Pictures and Ambling Entertainment

Counting down the 3 things we’re most thankful for: No. 2

“A Scout is thankful” — not officially part of the Scout Law, but certainly worth making it part of our lives this week. So much so that I’ll be publishing three consecutive posts leading up to Thanksgiving about the three things we at On Scouting are most thankful for.

Yesterday, we told you how thankful we are for our Scouting volunteers across all the Scout programs.

Today, we’re moving on to No. 2 …

Our amazing Scout parents!

When it comes to choosing how to spend time with their families, the parents of today’s youth seemingly have more options than ever before.

There are no “seasons” when it comes to sports — almost every sport nowadays is year-round.

Band, orchestra, choir and performing arts practice is often both before and after school.

Academic clubs can take up several hours every week.

And that doesn’t even account for studying and homework.

We are so thankful for the parents who choose to spend some of that time in Scouting.

At the Cub Scout level, it is the parents who help their child put on their uniform and get to meetings on time. It’s the parents who bring snacks to one meeting and craft supplies to another. It’s the parents who take their kids camping — sometimes for the first time! — and it’s the parents who help their kids build those super-fast Pinewood Derby cars.

Photo by W. Garth Dowling

Being a parent of an older Scout

The transition into the BSA’s programs for older kids can be just as tricky for parents as it is for the Scouts themselves. Used to sitting right next to their kids during meetings and sharing a tent during campouts, at Scouts BSA, Venturing, Sea Scouts or Exploring events, parents are much more likely to take a back seat as Scouts rely on their buddies to be partners on campouts and get advice from older Scouts who have taken on the leadership roles within the unit.

But the guidance that parents provide to these Scouts is still invaluable.

It’s not unusual at all for an aspiring Eagle Scout to have moments when they aren’t sure they’re going to be able to make it. To those parents who encouraged their kids to stick with it, we say an extra-special thank you.

From parent to volunteer

Want to take your involvement as a parent of a Scout to the next level? Consider becoming a registered BSA volunteer.

There are volunteers who help Scouts directly on an ongoing basis, such as unit leaders and assistant leaders. There are volunteers who help with specific events, like a camping coordinator or Pinewood Derby coordinator.

And there are volunteers who do their work behind the scenes, like a committee chair or member, or a Youth Protection Training coordinator.

Click here to learn more.

Counting down the 3 things we’re most thankful for: No. 3

“A Scout is thankful” — not officially part of the Scout Law, but certainly worth making it part of our lives this week. So much so that I’ll be publishing three consecutive posts leading up to Thanksgiving about the three things we at On Scouting are most thankful for.

Starting with No. 3 …

Our amazing volunteers!

Put quite simply, Scouting wouldn’t exist without our volunteers. Whether you’re volunteering at the unit, district, council or national level, let me just take a moment to say something we should probably say more often: thank you.

It all starts in Cub Scouts, where the show is truly run by our Cubmasters, assistant Cubmasters, den leaders, assistant den leaders, committee chairs, committee members and everyone else who helps out however they can.

Without them there would be no camping trips, no fishing expeditions, no arts and crafts, no day camps, no Pinewood Derby and no blue and gold banquets.

In other words, there would be no Cub Scout program whatsoever to help boys and girls in kindergarten through the fifth grade Be Prepared for what comes next.

Photo by Dan Bryant

The programs for older youth rely on volunteers, but in a different way

Things change a little bit when our youth members join Scouts BSA, Venturing, Sea Scouts or Exploring. Those programs are youth led and youth run, but still rely on adult volunteers to serve as role models and to provide an ideal learning experience for the youth.

This is when the Scouting program shifts away from activities such as carving cars out of blocks of wood to things like performing maintenance on a real car, and when car camping for the weekend becomes backpacking for the entire week.

At this level for sure, every one of our volunteers has something valuable to offer. Do you know about cars? There’s a merit badge for that. On any given outing, Scouts might work with an adult volunteer who teaches the Fishing merit badge, a Scout mom to learn orienteering, another leader to go on a 5-mile hike, only to end the day learning how to clean and cook fresh fish from someone else.

Volunteers learn, too

Over the years, volunteers have told us that the time they’ve invested in Scouting helps them be better citizens, better parents, better managers, better employees, more patient and tolerant of others, and more open to new ideas and opinions.

Given all you’ve done for us, it’s the least we can do for you.

Once again, I’d like to send a hearty thank you to all of our volunteers, across all of our programs.

Scouting for Food is one good turn that benefits everyone

Scouting for Food began in St. Louis in 1985 as a council-wide service project. Starting in 1988, it became a national BSA program. Today, many councils across the country participate, collectively gathering hundreds of thousands of pounds of shelf-stable goods for food-disadvantaged residents of their local communities.

Learn more in this story From the November-December 2018 issue of Scouting magazine.

What to do when your child is no longer a Scout: A Wood Badge participant weighs in

“When my son left Scouts, I was left with an empty feeling,” writes Charles Brown, a longtime volunteer with the Shenandoah Area Council. “What do I do now?”

As part of his Wood Badge training, Brown pledged to write an article addressing this very topic.

And guess what? He nailed it!

Brown lays out a compelling argument of why you shouldn’t give up on Scouting after your child earns the rank of Eagle, ages out of the program or leaves for any other reason.

“Participating in Scout activities was just as much fun for me as it was for my son,” Brown writes. “Given that I’d learned multitudes of information through Scouts, I wondered what to do next.”

Brown lays out three broad options for parents who’d like to stay involved in Scouting.

Assistant Scoutmaster

There isn’t a Scouts BSA unit out there that couldn’t use an extra volunteer willing to share their experience and knowledge of the program.

(We’d add that the same goes for any Venturing crew, Sea Scout ship and Exploring post.)

“You can help Scouts know that other adults care about them and what they are doing,” writes Brown. “More than once, I heard parents relay to me what their children said to them. ‘Well, Mr. Brown told me I need to …’ Parents were perplexed, because they’d told their child the same thing, but my influence as a Scout leader was stronger.”

Scouts BSA units, Venturing crews and Sea Scout ships might need trained adults to go on outings as well.

“Here is your opportunity to train the next group of adults in the art of drinking coffee, contemplating future goals around a campfire and supporting each other while learning survival techniques,” writes Brown.

Another role you can fill at the Scouts BSA level is that of a merit badge counselor.

“This job allows you to give back only occasionally rather than weekly, and you can choose your area of interest or expertise,” he writes.

Photo by Olivia Ogren-Hrejsa

Volunteering at the Cub Scout level

If your child leaves Scouting after earning the rank of Eagle or going off to college, it’s probably been a long time since you’ve been a Cub Scout volunteer.

Why not give it another shot?

“Your knowledge of what Scouts BSA members can achieve will help the younger ones,” Brown writes. “Sharing this information with the Cub Scout parents will be helpful and inspiring.”

Does your place of worship sponsor a Cub Scout pack? Consider volunteering as chartered organization representative. Or consider becoming a member of your local pack’s committee, where you can weigh in with thoughts and opinions as needed.

Are your high-adventure days behind you? Consider volunteering at the district or council level instead. Photo by Blake Ferree

Working with a district or council

To effectively support local Scouting programs, the Boy Scouts of America provides a charter to a community board of volunteers to be responsible for providing the Scouting program to a defined geographical area. These geographical areas are called councils.

Within each council are districts, designed to provide more localized support.

“When I was backpacking at Philmont, I found it hard to keep up with the youth,” writes Brown. “My old knees weren’t happy with my adventures. That is why I started to look at working at the district level.”

Councils have a volunteer board, plus other volunteers that keep things running smoothly under the guidance of the professional staff. Districts have a volunteer committee that provides support to local programs in the areas of membership, finance and program.

Click here to find the council closest to you.

And the No. 1 reason to stay involved after your child leaves Scouting? The BSA needs you!

“You have a wealth of knowledge that needs to be shared,” writes Brown.

Click here to learn more about how to become a Scout volunteer.

Incident reporting in the BSA: How it works, and why it matters

Accidents happen.

It’s how you respond to them that matters.

To ensure the safety of its participants, the Boy Scouts of America expects leaders to use the four points of SAFE:

Supervision: Youth are supervised by qualified and trustworthy adults;
Assessment: Activities are assessed for risks during planning;
Fitness and skill: Leaders have confirmed that prerequisite fitness and skill levels exist for participants to take part safely; and
Equipment and environment: Safe and appropriately sized equipment, courses, camps, campsites, trails or playing fields are used properly.

However, incidents can occur even when the program is being delivered as designed. That’s when the BSA’s incident reporting process comes into play.

Here’s how it works:

What is an incident?

The BSA defines three categories of incidents:

Incident/general liability: This is an allegation of bodily injury, illness or property damage.
Membership infraction/youth protection: This is an incident that relates to behavior that puts a Scout’s safety at risk, such as youth protection violations, allegations of abuse, self-harm, etc.; or one that calls into question a registered leader or youth member’s continued registration with BSA.
Near miss: This incident was an unplanned event that did not result in injury, illness or damage, but had the potential to do so.

What do I do in the event of an incident?

The BSA calls for a four-step process in the event of any incident:

Provide care for the injured person and get medical attention immediately if needed. Make sure everyone is safe and OK.
Notify your local council, if representatives are nearby. This could include the campmaster, health lodge or the event leader if the incident occurred at a council camp, for example. Otherwise, let your local council know about the incident as soon as you can, and inform them that you’ll be filing an incident report shortly.
Gather the facts, preserving and documenting the evidence. Utilize the incident reporting tools (more on that below) for the type of incident that has occurred.
Complete an incident report and report it to your council.

Based upon your answers, choose which reporting tool is needed to document your incident.

What are the incident reporting tools?

There are three different reporting tools, depending on the type of incident. Each are fillable PDFs that you can fill out within your browser, through a PDF editor (such as Adobe Acrobat or Apple’s Preview app) or by downloading, printing and filling out by hand.

The Incident Reporting Tool is for events that fall under the incident/general liability category;
The Youth Protection/Membership Infraction Reporting Tool is for membership infractions;
and the Near Miss Reporting Tool is for near misses.

Each of the tools at the above links will guide you through the step-by-step process of gathering the facts — the who, what, when, why, where and how of the incident itself. Follow them! It’s important!

Why is this important?

Timely and complete incident reporting provides the BSA with an opportunity for analysis of incidents that occur and promotes continuous improvement of our programs. The sooner a clear, concise and complete incident report is made, the sooner an appropriate response to the incident can occur.

It’s essential to include all the information you can in your incident report, including providing a detailed incident description, filling out all the forms in their entirety and providing additional attachments — such as photos of the incident, the unit’s participating roster, release and waiver forms, witness statements, etc. — when required.

Once your incident report is complete, please submit it to your local council. If you aren’t sure which council you’re in, click here to find the right one.

You can use this BSA Safety Moment to share the importance of incident reporting with other adults in your unit.

Ask us anything! We answer some of your most frequently asked questions

Have questions about the BSA? We’ve got answers.

And if we don’t have the answers, we’ll find someone who does.

Below are a handful of questions we’ve recently gotten from readers (some of them, multiple times), along with the best answers we can provide.

Leave your question in the comments below, or send us an email, and we’ll answer in a future post.

Q: Can a committee member from one troop sign off on an Eagle Scout project and a Scoutmaster from another troop sign off on the same application?

A: Technically, yes. This would be appropriate in a situation in which the Scout was a member of one unit when the project was approved and/or completed, then transferred to a second unit prior to submitting an Eagle Scout application.

Q: Could you please provide an update on whether virtual camping nights during the pandemic can be counted towards the Camping merit badge?

A: Virtual camping nights were allowed to count toward rank requirements and the Camping merit badge if they occurred during the pandemic and before March 1, 2022.

Q: I see that the BSA website says Lions are not eligible to earn the National Summertime Pack Award pin. If we have a kid who joined in June and participates in events all three months leading up to his/her kindergarten year, why can we not recognize him/her like we do the other Scouts?

A: While Tigers, Wolves, Bears, Webelos and Arrow of Light Scouts are allowed to join a Cub Scout pack in the summer as soon as they complete their previous grade (i.e. Tigers can join as soon as they finish kindergarten; Wolves can join as soon as they finish first grade, etc.), Lions cannot become an official member of a Cub Scout pack until they have started kindergarten, which for almost everyone is going to be in the fall, hence making them ineligible for the Summertime Pack Award (until they become Tigers the next summer!).

Q: I have been looking forward to helping my daughter earn a conservation-related award for some time. Which award should we work on?

A: The BSA Distinguished Conservation Service Award Program is the award program you’re looking for. It is for Scouts, Sea Scouts and Venturers who design, lead and carry out conservation projects that are based on sound scientific principles and practices. Good luck!

Q: Is there a site we can go to that has a listing of previously asked / answered questions?

A: Yes! Click here to see them all!

Worth reading: Acclaimed Explorer got his start in Scouting

Growing up in New York City in the 1950s, J.R. Harris developed a love of exploring when he got to go to work with his dad, a waiter in the dining car of a long-distance train.

He developed his love of the outdoors, however, in Scouting.

“I basically learned how to live outdoors,” he says of his first time at Scout camp. “And the idea that I could just live with whatever I was carrying in my pack was such a different concept from the life I had back in New York City. It fascinated me.”

Harris, now 78, is one of the world’s most prolific explorers. Not only has he hiked all over the United States, he’s also backpacked for weeks at time in remote locations in faraway lands like Greenland, the Amazon, the Andes, Tanzania and Tasmania.

But it was at Ten Mile River Scout Camp near Narrowsburg, N.Y., that Harris first experienced the backcountry. He would go on to spend multiple summers there, at a camp that felt it was on a completely different planet from the Queens neighborhood where he lived.

According to an article in Afar magazine:

He mastered Scout things: how to track animals by their footprints and scat; how to tie bowline, timber hitch, and sheet bend knots; how to keep a fire alive in the driving rain; how to orient himself without a compass. These were not arbitrary skills, accumulated for some far-off time. No. There was a goal in mind: to get three merit badges — one each in Camping, Cooking and Pioneering — which encompassed the skills he needed to be outdoors and in the wild.

Harris at Baffin Island, within the Arctic Circle, in 1989. Photo courtesy of J.R. Harris

A drive to explore

Harris has written a book and founded a research and consulting firm.

After graduating from Queens College, where he studied psychology, in 1966, he immediately felt the need to go on an adventure. So, he drove his Volkswagen to a town called Circle, Alaska, a journey that ended up taking two weeks.

It was during that time that he decided he wanted to be an explorer.

“Since 1966, I’ve done more than 50 multi-week treks,” he writes on his website. “During that time, I have faced terrible weather, hair-raising river crossings and wildlife encounters, but I’ve also beheld the awesome majesty and pristine beauty of our incredible planet.”

Sometimes, Harris will befriend people who live in remote areas, learning everything he can about their lives.

“People can’t believe that somebody would come all the way from New York City, for no other reason than because they were curious about their culture and wanted to see it firsthand,” he says.

Harris at Gros More National Park in Newfoundland, Canada, in 2008. Photo courtesy of J.R. Harris

Influencing a new generation of explorers

In 1993, Harris was elected into The Explorers Club, a prestigious community that has been supporting scientific expeditions of all disciplines since it was formed in 1904. Its members include Eagle Scout paleoanthropologist Lee Berger, Eagle Scout astronaut Scott Parazynski, marine scientist Ellen Prager and renown scuba diver Karin Lynn.

(The Explorers Club is also a major contributor to the BSA’s Exploring merit badge.)

Harris is now on the club’s board of directors.

In 2018, he was added to The HistoryMakers, a non-profit dedicated to telling the stories of both well-known and unsung African Americans.

When he’s not exploring or running his business, Harris spends much of his time speaking to students in low-income areas to inspire them to get outdoors and, who knows, maybe become an explorer themselves.

“Until they actually see somebody who’s done it,” he says, “a lot of them don’t believe that it can be done.”

Being prepared for Cold-Weather Camping

Staying inside all winter shouldn’t be an option for Scout units.

Sure, it might be cold. But as long as it’s safe to go outside, you should make every effort to get out there. Check our list below to Be Prepared for cold-weather outings.

Make sure everyone stays loose, both in clothing and in state of mind. Loose clothing is critical in maintaining good circulation, which, in turn, is critical in keeping you warm. Patience and a good sense of humor will also go far in making your cold-weather adventures successful.
It’s not necessary to get the most expensive cold-weather clothing. It’s only necessary to get the right materials. No cotton! Make sure your Scouts dress in layers of fleece, wool and other materials that can insulate even when wet.
Check your head! Heat loss from an uncovered head can be enormous. Stocking hats made of wool or fleece work great. Combine that with a scarf or other neck warmer, and your Scouts will be good to go.

Photo by W. Garth Dowling

Make sure everyone has good shoes. Again, they don’t have to be the most expensive pieces of footwear. A decent pair of hiking boots — when paired with winter-weight socks — will likely be fine. Just keep everyone’s feet dry and insulated, and make sure the shoes aren’t so tight that they restrict blood circulation.
Mittens vs. gloves: Either can work. Most people find that mittens keep their hands warmer, because their fingers share warmth through direct contact. However, gloves are better for manipulating gear. Whatever your Scouts go with, make sure they have extra pairs — mittens and gloves are the clothing item mostly like to get wet.

Photo by Michael Hanson

Drink up! Drinking fluids is just as important in winter as it is in hot weather. Remind all Scouts to take a sip of water on a regular basis.
Eat up! Your body is a furnace, and food is the fuel that feeds it. Hot foods — think soups and stews — are easy to make and will help keep everyone warm.

Photo by W. Garth Dowling

Plan, plan, plan. Remind Scouts about having the correct gear months in advance. Then remind them again as you get closer to your winter outing. In the days before the trip, check the forecast regularly. There’s no reason to tough out a winter campout in extreme conditions. On the other hand, if the weather outlook looks about normal for your area, go for it!
Check out the BSA’s Safety Moments on Winter Activities, Winter Sports, Hypothermia and Frostbite, and incorporate them into all your cold-weather outings.
Did we miss anything? Tell us in the comments!

The secret of their success: Venturing crew focuses solely on conservation

All Venturing crews focus on building adventure, whether it’s backpacking, whitewater rafting, an epic bike trek or all of the above.

For Venturing Crew 3111 in Minneapolis, however, the adventure is conservation.

“We’ve defined our adventure as saving the world,” says Advisor Joseph Barisonzi.

If you think conservation can’t be an adventure, then wait until you hear about Crew 3111. At least once a month, the group leads a conservation-related project at which around 60 or so members of their community show up, eager to help out.

Invasive species removal, trail restoration, water quality testing, studying the impact of fungi … all are part of Crew 3111’s programming. When they aren’t out working amongst the trees, soil and water, they’re meeting to plan their next project.

“We have identified a real need: to get involved in environmentalism in a practical, tangible way,” Barisonzi says. “Conservation is something that kids care about. It’s what gets them outside.”

Crew 3111 is young — after months of planning, it officially launched just over a year ago. The idea was born as Barisonzi was driving with his daughter to Scouts BSA summer camp.

“We thought, ‘Wouldn’t it be cool to have an environmental Venturing crew to help make Scouting more green?’ ” says Hannah Barisonzi, a Life Scout currently working on her Eagle Scout service project with volunteers from Crew 3111. “So that’s what we did.”

The Green Crew sponsors Scouts and Venturers working on their Eagle, Summit or Distinguished Conservation Service Award projects. Photo courtesy of Minnesota Valley Izaak Walton League/Crew 3111

A different kind of chartering partnership

Chartered organizations have been critical to the BSA’s success for more than a century. Whether it’s a place of a worship, a school or a community group that has the same interests as the BSA, the chartered organization relationship is the cornerstone of the Scouting program.

You’d be hard-pressed to find a better example of that than Crew 3111.

“Our goal was to find a partner that needed us as much as we needed them, where our existence would be fulfilling their organizational mission and meeting critical goals,” says Joseph Barisonzi.

A major goal was to be non-political, like the BSA itself.

“We wanted our expression of environmentalism to be in line with the BSA’s,” he says. “We know there are groups out there that protest and go in front of the legislature and things like that, but that’s not what we’re here to do.”

“We’re here to roll up our sleeves and get our hands dirty,” says Griff Pugh, the crew’s vice president of programming.

Enter the Izaac Walton League of America (IWLA), a 100-year-old environmental organization that promotes natural resource protection and outdoor recreation — and already has a relationship with Scouting. The Barisonzis approached the local Minnesota Valley Chapter about sponsoring their Venturing crew.

After significant conversations with the Isaac Walton League of America’s national office and the Northern Star Council, the Minnesota Valley Chapter launched a youth program called the Green Crew — a community of conservationists and environmentalists that’s open to all members of the community, whether they’re involved in Scouting or not.

“The Green Crew is a new way for the League to do youth programming — not led by adults for youth, but led by youth for everyone,” says chapter president and crew committee chair Ted Suss. “The Green Crew promises a new generation of environmental leaders for the Izaak Walton League.”

The leaders of the Green Crew? That would be Crew 3111. It’s the Venturers who research the best scientific evidence for how to address environmental issues, plan and develop the projects, spread the word and recruit volunteers.

“The opportunity to develop our leadership skills and be able to work on something we are passionate about is a rare opportunity,” says crew president Camille Morton. “It’s also great because all of our projects have a huge emphasis on fun. Whether we are pulling invasive species or taking pictures of the local fungi, we are also listening to music and chatting with the other members.”

Crew 3111’s relationship with the Minnesota Valley Chapter of the Isaac Walton League has been so strong that Camille and vice president of administration Suryash Rawat were elected in August to serve on the Minnesota Valley Chapter’s board of directors.

Director of science Sophia Peterson (left) and chief science officer Grace Filkke staff the Green Crew booth at the Minnesota State Fair to help spread the word about their projects. Photo courtesy of Minnesota Valley Izaak Walton League/Crew 3111

Youth leaders for the whole community — not just other Scouts

The BSA produces leaders, and that’s exactly what Crew 3111 does by leading the Green Crew.

When they plan their next conservation project, they aren’t just planning it for themselves. They’re planning it for their entire community.

“The Green Crew is a vital organization for the community because the foundation of the organization is based around student voice and passion,” says crew secretary Ingrid Koehler. “The Green Crew is welcoming to people at any point of their development and is supportive of any effort made by the individuals in their community.”

Suryash Rawat, the crew’s vice president of administration, estimates that of the nearly 800 youth who have participated in Green Crew service projects, less than 20% were registered Scouts.

Members of the National Honor Society that need service hours? The Green Crew can help with that. Parents who want to teach their kids the value of protecting the environment? The Green Crew can help with that, too.

“I first heard about the Green Crew by asking about environmental-focused volunteering opportunities at my school,” says Grace Flikke, the crew’s chief science officer. “I signed up because I wanted to do environmental work that would make a meaningful difference and I wanted to learn more about the environment and what positively and negatively impacts it.”

The Green Crew’s youth-led project teams prioritize science-based strategies, which often requires them to bring in subject-matter experts. Photo courtesy of Minnesota Valley Izaak Walton League/Crew 3111

An environmental resource for schools and Scouts

As part of their goal of serving the broader community, the Green Crew has worked closely with area schools.

“We have members from schools throughout the metropolitan area,” says crew treasurer Joshua Berger. “We have designed programming that can be used in the classroom for youth of all ages.”

Many Green Crew participants first worked on monthly projects through their schools.

“We have done Leave No Trace educational events at schools, and we have had fourth-grade classes come to our site for one-day ‘water camps,’ ” Griff says.

The Green Crew can also help Scouts BSA members who need service hours for advancement. In fact, in a short amount of time, Crew 3111 has proved to be a valuable resource for Scouts and Scouters in the Northern Star Council.

If a Scouts BSA member is looking for Eagle Scout service project ideas, Crew 3111 can help them out. If a Scout or Venturer is interested in earning the BSA’s Distinguished Conservation Award (DCSA), Crew 3111 can help with that, too.

“The IWLA chapter can serve as the beneficiary, and Crew 3111 can provide a skilled, trained support team,” says Nicolette Johnson, the crew’s vice president of advancement, who earned Venturing’s Summit Rank by leading a trail restoration project with the Green Crew in April.

Crew 3111 also offers training in outdoor ethics and Leave No Trace. Joseph Barisonzi is a member of the council’s conservation committee and a DSCA advisor, while Eagle Scout Dilshan Rajan, the crew’s director of BSA outreach, is a DCSA winner whose job is to coordinate the crew’s sponsorship and support.

Hannah, now serving as the crew’s vice president of training, says the crew’s certified Leave No Trace trainers have provided outdoor ethics training to 1,150 youth since April, which includes Scout units, camp staff, schools, local clubs and other community members.

This week, several Green Crew members with prior Scouting experience are presenting at the BSA National Outdoor Ethics & Conservation Conference, led by Hannah, Nicolette and Dilshan, and joined by associate Advisor of BSA outreach Tom Ries and associate Advisor of administration Jessica Hahn. Both Ries and Hahn are former leaders of Scouts BSA units who joined the Green Crew to continue their own Scouting journey after their youth aged out.

Early evidence suggests they’re meeting a need among the youth in their community.

“The Green Crew model is working,” says Camille, who estimates that more than 2,300 hours of conservation service has been conducted in the crew’s first 10 months.

“The youth and adults who get involved in 3111 want to make a difference in the environmental health of the planet,” says Joseph Barisonzi. “We are environmentalists who really want to do something.”

Of course, Scouting is supposed to be fun, too, and this is never lost on the leaders of Crew 3111.

“Every adventure,” says Hannah, “ends in ice cream.”

The Green Crew’s first big project was the restoration of a .6-mile trail weaving through the dry-mesic oak forest on the Isaac Walton League property. Photo courtesy of Minnesota Valley Izaak Walton League/Crew 3111

Share your “success” stories

We’re always on the lookout for Scouting success stories. Know any units or leaders who have gone above and beyond expectations? Email us and let us know! We might feature them in our next “secret of their success” story.

Movie star’s comments remind us why Scouts still perform in front of each other to this day

One of the most recognizable, iconic action movie stars of our time wasn’t born being comfortable performing in front of a crowd.

It was in Cub Scouts that Bruce Willis first honed his craft.

In comments from an older interview that resurfaced last month, Willis says his time in Cub Scouts was when he caught the acting bug.

Q: When was the first time you performed?

A: Some Cub Scout show. I did little skits you would probably find in the Cub Scout handbook. Little tricks, like a vaudeville gag where you pretend to show the audience that you’re mixing up something, and then at the last minute it’s like you’re going to throw it on the audience, but it’s just the oatmeal — not the oatmeal and the paint and all that. It got a big laugh, and I thought, “This is it.”

Performing in front of others — whether it’s acting in a skit, playing a musical instrument or putting on a puppet show — has been a part of Scouting for decades, and for good reason: It’s another thing that helps kids Be Prepared for life.

Sadly, Willis has been in the news recently due to the announcement by his family that he has been diagnosed with aphasia, the loss of ability to understand or express speech caused by brain damage.

(Coincidentally, Willis was once in a movie called Moonrise Kingdom that featured a fictional Scout troop on a fictional island off the coast of New England. He was also in a movie called The Last Boy Scout that really wasn’t about Scouting at all.)

Actor Bruce Willis credits Cub Scouts with igniting his love for acting. “I thought, ‘this is it,’ ” he says. Photo by Shutterstock

Why we do it

“The Cub Scout years, I had a terrible stutter,” continues Willis. “But then I did some theater somewhere … and when I memorized words, I didn’t stutter, which was just miraculous. That was the beginning of the gradual dispelling of my stutter.”

Just like completing an epic hike can build confidence, so can performing a skit or doing a magic trick that elicits cheers from the crowd.

“Hearing the audience clap at the end of the show is an incredible feeling,” Brian Olkowski, director of a kids’ drama club in California, said in a recent interview. “The kids are like, ‘Hey, this is for me!’ That instant positive feedback is really rewarding.”

Additionally, performing in front of a live audience helps kids learn to think on their feet. Everything isn’t going to go 100% smoothly 100% of the time. Making mistakes as a kid in front of a roomful of cheerful, positive Scouting families will help them Be Prepared for that presentation they have to do in the company boardroom 30 years later.

A Cub Scout performs a magic trick. Photo by Brian Payne

How performances are built into the Cub Scout program

Requirement No. 5 of the Tigers in the Wild required adventure is to sing a song or act out a skit with your Tiger den as part of the campfire program.

“Skits are funny little scenes that you can act out to tell a story to the group,” the Tiger Handbook says. “Singing songs and telling stories in a circle of Tigers are fun ways to entertain your pack.”

Requirement 1 of the Curiosity, Intrigue and Magical Mysteries Tiger elective is to put on a magic show in front of an audience.

Requirement No. 2 of the Beat of the Drum Bear elective adventure is to build a diorama, write a story or present a skit related to the history and culture of American Indians or other indigenous people.

Things get serious in the Webelos and Arrow of Light elective adventures, which include Maestro! (performing a musical instrument) and Moviemaking (creating a movie and sharing it with your family, den or pack).

Know a Cub Scout who’s nervous about performing in front of others?

The Tiger Handbook has some great advice: “A Scout is brave. … Acting can feel scary. Just Do Your Best, and have fun with your friends.”

Study confirms what we already know: Scouting is good for you

A new analysis of an old study corroborates what we’ve been saying for decades: The benefits of Scouting really do last a lifetime.

“Children who took part in (organizations) such as the Scouts … were more likely to report higher levels of general health at age 50, compared to their peers, a study has found,” says one news report.

“As children, being a Scout … famously taught you to be prepared. Now it seems the benefits last a lifetime,” says another.

“Duh,” we say.

All kidding aside, we always welcome yet more evidence that Scouting is good for you.

(And no, this isn’t the first time the benefits of Scouting have been confirmed by science. A 2016 study confirmed that Scouting builds character in six areas. One year later, a different study linked Scouting with better mental health later in life.)

The latest study, conducted by scientists from Scotland’s University of Edinburgh, who were in turn analyzing data from a study that started in the 1950s, shows that adults who were Scouts as children in the 1950s and 1960s were 35% more likely than their peers to report being in excellent health after they turned 50.

Where the data comes from

The Aberdeen Children of the 1950s study, conducted by the University of Aberdeen in Scotland, is a fascinating study in and of itself. It captured data from more than 12,000 families with kids born in the 1950s in Aberdeen and looked at how they lived, what they did for fun, how they did in school and generally how healthy they were.

At least some of them, it turns out, were Scouts.

In the 1990s, a study followed up with more than 7,000 of those kids-turned-adults to see how their lives were turning out. Again, they were asked about their current health, along with many other topics.

The same group of people have contributed to multiple tests in the years since.

The goal of the original study was to discover the causes of learning disabilities. But the data is so expansive and so wide ranging that other researchers have used it to investigate all kinds of other aspects of life.

As far as we can tell, it was the University of Edinburgh researchers, however, who were the first to crunch the numbers on Scouting.

Page 16 of the Aberdeen Children of the 1950s questionnaire asked if boys belonged to “Cubs” or “Scouts.” Photo from of the University of Aberdeen

What the data tells us

Over the years, participants in the Children of the 1950s study were asked to rank their health over the previous 12 months as either excellent, good, fair or poor. Those who were active as kids in Scouts or Girl Guides were about 35% more likely to rank their health as excellent at or after age 50, compared to their peers who took part in different activities as kids.

“Given the importance societies place on ensuring good health in later life, supporting youth programs that are delivered by charities and supported by volunteers may represent a cost-effective way of improving population health,” says University of Edinburgh professor and researcher Chris Dibben.

“Skills learned while a Scout or Guide – such as leadership, confidence and working as a team – were transferrable to work in later life,” according to one article. “This in turn, had beneficial effects on health.”

You can pore through the data yourself, as the most recent study was published in the European Journal of Public Health. Or, if you prefer, you can browse the data collected in the original Children of the 1950s study.

Data from the University of Edinburgh study on Scouts in the Aberdeen of the 1950s study. We don’t know exactly what it means, other than “club membership” is where Scouting comes in, and it increases the chances of you ending up with improved general health. Photo from the University of Edinburgh

Find your next adventure at BSA council camps

You often think of your council camp for summer or winter camp, but many councils offer camping opportunities throughout the year, providing the same fun activities Scouts enjoy during weeklong camps.

And we’re not just talking about camporees, which invite many units for a weekend of outdoor fun. Check with your council about what’s available for units year-round.

Take D-Bar-A Scout Ranch, a Michigan Crossroads Council camp, for example. This 1,300-acre property north of Detroit accommodates weekend programs for both Cub Scouts and older Scout units. These programs include shooting sports, swimming, boating and horseback riding.

At D-Bar-A, Cub Scout packs can sign up for corral rides while older Scouts can do trail rides and work on the Horsemanship merit badge while they camp there for the weekend. The camp has more than two dozen horses in addition to mules that Scouts can pet.

Other councils also provide weekend horse-related adventures, like the Cascade Pacific Council. For any equestrian activity, whether it’s through a BSA program or not, make sure you follow safety guidelines that can be found here.

You can create a unit-specific adventure at a council camp. Check out these stories covered in Scout Life magazine for some inspiration:

Alabama troop’s “Woods Women” campout
Colorado troop’s Survivorman campout

Also check with your council about council-level awards, like the one offered by the San Diego-Imperial Council, which may prompt fun outings for your unit.

If your unit has a cool outing planned, let Scout Life know. Click here to learn how you can possibly have your unit featured in the magazine.

D-Bar-A Scout Ranch in Michigan.

Can packs, troops or crews participate in political rallies?

The BSA might be the most patriotic organization in the U.S.

But we don’t endorse any one political party. You could say that rather than being pro-left or pro-right, the BSA is pro-America.

The same applies to your pack, troop, post, ship or crew. You and your Scouts should Do Your Duty to Country but not by endorsing any one candidate.

During election years, the line between patriotism and political favoritism becomes thin, making it important to remind you of the BSA’s official policy on Scout participation in political rallies.

Fact is, Scout units like the one pictured above are permitted to provide a color guard flag ceremony, in uniform, at political events. Troop 605 from Rocky River, Ohio, provided that service at a political event in Cleveland. (Nice job, Nick S., Tristan A., Grayson N. and Erik H.!) The troop served as color guard and then immediately left the stage and the premises. They provided a patriotic service and departed before things got political.

Here are some Frequently Asked Questions and the BSA’s official answers:

Q: Could a pack, troop or crew provide a color guard flag ceremony for a candidate’s public speaking event or rally?

A: Yes. But, BSA Policy requires our adult and youth members in uniform to leave immediately after the presentation of colors and the Pledge of Allegiance. Should they want to stay they must do so as individuals, not Scouting representatives. That means they would have to change out of their uniforms.

Q: So Scouts and Scouters can’t stand on the platform for the remainder of the speech or presentation?

A: No, they should not remain on the speakers’ platform or in a conspicuous location where media could construe their presence as an endorsement or symbol of support.

Q: What about parades?

A: Scouts are allowed to participate in parades designed to recognize holidays or special occasions, such as Veterans Day or Memorial Day. They should not, however, participate in a parade designed to support one particular candidate for a political office, or any particular political movement, other than, as stated above, to provide a color guard flag ceremony. Should they want to stay and participate in the parade, they should change out of their uniforms and do it as individuals, not Scouting representatives.

Q: Why is this the rule?

A: The policy is meant to prevent someone from using our brand to convey support of a candidate or ideology. This prevents Scouts from being used by any party in campaign advertisements or materials.

Q: So then why is it OK to even present the colors or lead the Pledge of Allegiance at all?

A: Those are displays of loyalty to the nation, something the BSA has always endorsed. Regardless of the outcome of the political race, the candidate and supporters pledge allegiance to the U.S. Because of this, it is always acceptable and deemed to be a part of the civic process. Also, this “service” is offered to any party, regardless of political affiliation.

Q: Can Scouts and Scouters pose for photos with political candidates at these events?

A: Technically yes, but proceed with caution. Photos of political candidates with Scouts in uniform (or any BSA marks and logos, for that matter) are not allowed to be used in political campaign materials of any kind. Scouts should not appear in photos with any campaign signs, stickers or paraphernalia that appears to endorse a candidate for office. It’s important to be aware of how easy it is for a photo to go “viral” these days and appear in a publication or website where you had no intention of it appearing. If you haven’t previously cleared any photo opportunity with a representative from your local council, it might be safer to say no until you get official permission.

Q: Can adult leaders or Venturers who are old enough vote in elections?

A: Not only can they — they should! This policy isn’t meant to limit the freedom of thought or action of any official or member acting as an individual. Scouters and Venturers shouldn’t wear their uniform to the polling place, but they should vote for whichever candidate they prefer. That’s all part of being a good citizen — something the BSA has taught for more than a century.

Q: What can Scout leaders do to support this policy?

A: Volunteers (and professionals) must be alert to situations that would imply that the BSA favors one candidate or party over another. Strict observance of our long-standing policy against the active participation of uniformed Scouts and leaders in political events is mandatory.

Q: Does Scouting still teach patriotism and citizenship?

A: Yes! The BSA teaches the ideals of patriotism and good citizenship as required to fulfill its purpose.

Photo via John K. Fabsits, director of field service for the Greater Cleveland Council.

Editor’s note: This post was originally posted in March 2012 and was updated in 2016, 2018 and 2022.

The EPIC conclusion to National Geographic’s Explorer Academy ​book ​series

Cruz Coronado is back for a final exciting adventure in National Geographic’s Explorer Academy book series.

In this book, The Forbidden Island, Cruz is faced with another shocking surprise even after completing dozens of high-risk missions and traveling to all seven continents. 

The series, written by Trudi Trueit, incorporates scientific and cultural elements, exploration of important ideas and values, critical skill-building and examples of upstanding characters. It follows 12-year-old Cruz as he leaves his home to attend the prestigious Explorer Academy, where he will train to become a great explorer.

You can read an excerpt from the latest book in the October 2022 issue of Scout Life magazine.

The series

We introduced you to the Explorer Academy series a few years ago when the first book, The Nebula Secret, came out. Scouts became Explorer Academy Ambassadors, got a free book and pin and shared how much they loved the new book. Boys’ Life subscribers were treated to an excerpt from The Nebula Secret in the August 2018 issue.

Since then, more action-packed books have been released. You can find all of the titles on Amazon:

The Nebula Secret
The Falcon’s Feather 
The Double Helix
The Star Dunes
The Tiger’s Nest
The Dragon’s Blood
The Forbidden Island

The series appeals to youth, especially middle-grade readers, who want fun, well-written fiction stories that are exciting and different, but rooted in real-world facts.

Readers will enjoy the light overlay of nonfiction concepts and careers, like STEM, exploration, photography, world travel and cultures, right alongside the diverse cast of characters, both boys and girls, that can give them someone with whom to identify.

Parents and leaders will appreciate that every science and exploration concept that characters encounter is based on the actual, ongoing work of world-class explorers and scientists in many fields, photographers, and journalists. Interactive aspects in the books engage readers with codebreaking and puzzles, deductive reasoning and problem-solving.

The “​Truth Behind the Fiction” section in each book and on the Explorer Academy website draws readers deeper into nonfiction topics, including profiles of real National Geographic Explorers who inspired the series. The site also features exclusive videos, puzzles, and other educational resources that serve as excellent teaching aides and activity ideas.

How this BSA digital safety awareness video fits in with Cybersecurity Awareness Month

There are two kinds of people in the world.

There’s the kind who use a password manager and have different unique, complex, impossible-to-guess passwords for every website they visit.

And there’s the kind who use the exact same combination of their kids’ or pets’ names for every website they visit.

(FYI: “password123” is not a good password either, everybody.)

For Cybersecurity Awareness Month, the U.S. Cybersecurity & Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), a division of the Department of Homeland Security, is encouraging more people to try to be the former, and not the latter.

The initiative ties in nicely with what the BSA is already teaching its older youth members: How to stay safe online in part by securing your passwords.

Four things you can do to be cyber secure

The CISA lists four action steps that everyone can take.

Use strong passwords: Use passwords that are long, unique and randomly generated. Use password managers to generate and remember different, complex passwords for each of your accounts. A password manager will encrypt passwords and keep them secure for you.
Enable multi-factor authentication: You need more than a password to protect your online accounts, and enabling MFA makes you significantly less likely to get hacked.
Think before you click / recognize and report phishing: If a link looks a little off, think before you click. It could be an attempt to get sensitive information or install malware.
Update your software: Don’t delay. If you see a software update notification, act promptly. Better yet, turn on automatic updates.

Photo by Getty Images / Istockphoto

The BSA’s Personal Safety Awareness videos

The BSA’s current youth members don’t know of a world without the internet. That’s why the BSA includes cyber safety as a core part of all its programs.

Scouts BSA and older youth are old enough to learn about the importance of being smart with online passwords. Just like with everything else they learn in Scouting, building the right habits now increases the chances of them becoming smart, responsible adults.

The BSA’s Personal Safety Awareness videos may be used in place of the Cyber Chip requirement for the Scout and Star ranks of Scouts BSA. They cover topics such as bullying and sexual abuse.

But one in particular — the digital safety video for the Star rank — covers online passwords.

“This video illustrates how your life can be impacted by simply sharing passwords,” it begins.

Inspired by true events

Yes, some teens think it’s perfectly fine to share passwords, not just for services like Netflix, but for email, cloud storage and other online services that might contain sensitive information.

The BSA’s video tells the story of a young woman who shared her email password with a friend, who in turn was pressured into sharing that password with school bullies.

The bullies then logged into the young woman’s email and sent inappropriate messages to other students that appeared to come from her.

“Since it came from my account, everyone thought I really sent it,” says our main character who, although fictional, is based very much on the kind of things that happen to teens in real life. “I thought it was safe to share my password with my best friend. Now I know you can’t.”

Using common sense with passwords

And, of course, if your Netflix password is also your email password and also your banking password and also your credit card password … well, you can see where this is going.

“Make sure you have a strong password,” our video advises. “Strong passwords have letters, numbers and special characters. Make sure you change them often. And don’t let anyone use your passwords.”

The reason many people choose to use the same password for every site is because it’s easier that way. Long, random, unique passwords, on the other hand, are difficult to remember, especially if you have a different one for each site.

The solution is a password manager, an app that creates and saves all your passwords for you, requiring you to remember only one “master password.” Additionally, many modern browsers will offer to save passwords for you. This is safe as long as your computer itself is protected with a password, and as long as that password isn’t your kids’ names … or … password123.

Photo by Getty Images / Istockphoto