Monday, September 30, 2013

A Century of Honor

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints is celebrating that they've been a part of Boy Scouts of America for 100 years now!  They are having a celebration titled "A Century of Honor" on October 29th with a program that's going to be awesome!

They have a Eagle Scout Choir of 394 Eagle Scouts that will be singing songs written for the event, and lots of awesome stuff!  I just found out that I get to be on that choir!  I'm pretty excited!

For more information, go to:
http://scouts100.lds.org/

Jamboral

We went to the council camp Jamboral last weekend and had a blast!  There were so many troops there!  They gave each boy a set of 15 trading cards that were all the same, and challenged them to go out and trade cards with the other 14 districts to get 15 different cards!  The cards were different Scout Handbook covers through the years, so it was fun to see what they looked like back to 1910!  And it got the boys talking to other scouts from other troops!
Lots of scouts, and this is just one camping area out of 20!
At the Jamboral they had tons of booths with stuff to do, some of the ones that looked the most fun were the slack line, BMX Racing, Bike Riding on the racetrack, and the color run. 

The color run was an obstacle course (probably close to 1/2 mile long) that had places where they threw colored chalk at you as you ran by.  We were covered in chalk by the end of the course, and we had a blast!  We had to climb over walls and hay bales, crawl thru tunnels, climb nets to ring a bell at the top, climb ropes, swing across things, pull a spare tire across a gravel yard and back, etc.  It was really well done, and a lot of fun!

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

National Outdoor Award

So our troop is working on the National Outdoor Award through BSA right now.  I put together all the camping nights and miles hiked, and requirements necessary to get the badges, and we should have 5 boys earning the Camping Segment at our Court of Honor at the end of the month!
The badge requirements are:

The five National Outdoor Awards badges recognize a Boy Scout or Varsity Scout who demonstrates knowledge and experience in camping, hiking, aquatics,riding, or adventure. Scouts earning the National Outdoor Awards badges have demonstrated that they are knowledgeable, safe, and comfortable in the outdoor activity covered by the badge.
National Outdoor Awards badges may be earned in the following areas:
Camping. A Boy Scout or Varsity Scout may earn the National Outdoor Badge for Camping upon successfully completing the following requirements:
  1. Earn the First Class rank.
  2. Earn the Camping merit badge.
  3. Earn two of the following three merit badges: Cooking, First Aid, Pioneering.
  4. Complete 25 days and nights of camping—including six consecutive days (five nights) of resident camping, approved and under the auspices and standards of the Boy Scouts of America—including nights camped as part of requirements 1 through 3 above.
A gold device may be earned for each additional 25 nights of camping. A silver device is earned for each additional 100 nights of camping. The Scout may wear any combination of devices totaling his current number of nights camping.
Hiking. A Boy Scout or Varsity Scout may earn the National Outdoor Badge for Hiking upon successfully completing the following requirements:
  1. Earn the First Class rank.
  2. Earn the Hiking and Orienteering merit badges.
  3. Complete 100 miles of hiking or backpacking under the auspices of the Boy Scouts of America, including miles hiked as part of requirement 2.
A gold device may be earned for each additional 50 miles hiked. A silver device is earned for each additional 200 miles of hiking. The Scout may wear any combination of devices totaling his current number of miles hiking.
Aquatics. A Boy Scout or Varsity Scout may earn the National Outdoor Badge for Aquatics upon successfully completing the following requirements:
  1. Earn the First Class rank.
  2. Earn the Swimming and Lifesaving merit badges.
  3. Earn the Mile Swim BSA Award.
  4. Earn at least one of the following merit badges: Canoeing, Kayaking, Rowing, Small-Boat Sailing, Whitewater. Complete at least 25 hours of on-the-water time, applying the skills that you learned in the merit badges.
  5. Complete at least 50 hours of any combination of swimming, canoeing, kayaking, rowing, small-boat sailing, or whitewater activity under the auspices of the Boy Scouts of America, including time spent in requirements 2 through 4.
A gold device may be earned for each additional 25 hours of aquatic activity. A silver device is earned for each additional 100 hours of aquatic activity. The Scout may wear any combination of devices totaling his current number of hours of aquatic activity.
Riding. A Boy Scout or Varsity Scout may earn the National Outdoor Badge for Riding upon successfully completing the following requirements:
  1. Earn the First Class rank.
  2. Complete at least one of the following:
  1. Cycling merit badge and 100 miles of cycling; or
  2. Horsemanship merit badge and 50 miles of horseback riding.
  • Complete 200 miles of riding activities, either on a non-motorized bike or a stock animal, under the auspices of the Boy Scouts of America, including the miles in requirement 2.
A gold device may be earned for each additional 100 miles of riding. A silver device is earned for each additional 400 miles of riding. The Scout may wear any combination of devices totaling his current number of miles of riding.
Adventure. A Boy Scout or Varsity Scout may earn the National Outdoor Badge for Adventure upon successfully completing the following requirements:
  1. Earn the First Class rank.
  2. Complete the Wilderness Survival, Search and Rescue, or Emergency Preparedness merit badge.
  3. Complete 10 of any combination or repetition of the following adventure activities under the auspices of the Boy Scouts of America:
  1. A backpacking trip lasting three or more days and covering more than 20 miles without food resupply
  2. A canoeing, rowing, or sailing trip lasting three or more days and covering more than 50 miles without food resupply
  3. A whitewater trip lasting two or more days and covering more than 20 miles without food resupply
  4. A climbing activity on open rock, following Climb On Safely principles, that includes camping overnight
  5. Earn the National Historic Trails Award.
  6. Earn the 50-Miler Award.
  7. Attend any national high-adventure base or any nationally recognized local high-adventure or specialty-adventure program.
Items 3a-g may be repeated as desired. A single activity that satisfies multiple items in 3a-g may be counted as separate activities at the discretion of the unit leader. Similarly, a single activity that doubles an item in 3a-d may be counted as two activities at the discretion of the unit leader. A gold device may be earned for each additional five activities. A silver device is earned for each additional 20 activities. The Scout may wear any combination of devices totaling his current number of activities.