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| Backpacking, and Walk in Camping The art of comfortable backpacking and walk in camping. |
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I'll see if mum and dad have any pics from when I was a scout....
__________________
Dave "In a Landrover the other vehicle is your crumple zone." Fozzy, 2.25D SIII Ex DCA Ute The midlife crisis car Some D1 For spelling call Rogets, for mechanicing call me.
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Yes, well this one has been flat out doing stuff! Not much time to do write ups when you're organising the next outing. (can you tell it's a Jamboree year!)
I'm not sure what photos are up on the group website 1st East Ryde Scouts but I suspect that there are more Cub pics than Scout ones. Anyway I'll see if there are more about. ![]() Geoff |
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Yer jamboree coming up in 4 weeks, i'm not actually a scout leader, but a Rover, the other week our crew set about designing a gateway for the troop site. it was....interesting....creating something to stand on 2.5m off the ground and teaching some of the crew as we went. i'll try and find some photos of it, we didn't get it finished, but it stood up.
![]() Thanks Adam |
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Scout camps in Tasmania
Four types:
Overnight Hikes, maybe one or several nights, moving each day. Usually Venturers. Hike in carrying all, stay a few nights. Hike in via an overland route carrying all personal gear, meet up with vehicle delivered tentage etc, stay a few nights. Called a standing camp. Take all personel and gear in by vehicle. Also a standing camp. Standing camps can have wooden trestle (hinged leg sets) tables, or table tops on improvised legs, or pioneer tables (build all on site). Cold weather prevents a lot from camping from May till September - high cost of winter kit. Parents cover all costs. Most camps are of weekend duration during school term. Can be longer during summer vacations, but leaders not allways able to get the time off. Even then they prefer to spend the time with own families. Cubs not able to go "under canvas" till 10 years old. More and more use of gas for cooking. Girls and boys in Scouts. Can be mixed Patrols- separate tents. Some single Patrol camps. Usually whole Troop - Can be up to six Patrols. A minimum of twelve Scouts in a Troop. Between four and eight in a Patrol. A troop with girls must have a female in Leadership team. Fund raising always a problem, no business sponsorship. Uniform getting more like regular streetwear. Troops meet weekly. If a Sea Scout Troop, then weekend meetings more normal. Some meet midweek at their Hall and then also on Saturday morn at their boatshed. School/regular sport gets in the way of Scouting at weekends. Very few Troops meet after school. Usually at night 7 - 9p.m. (Schools start 8:30 or 9:00, finish 3:00 or so. Transport to home can take another hour or more). Scout Halls not necessarily near Schools, or even near home. That is a starter, to talk about. Rovers4. |
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Photobucket is working now. Here's a bunch of the boys in our Troop on an 8-mile day hike we did early last summer. Most had their fully-loaded packs on as this was a prerequisite hike for any wishing to go on the 50-mile hike that summer.
![]() This is the group on their way to a one-night hike-in camp site along a river on the east ("dry") side of the Olympic Rainforest. Many ill-fitting packs as this was our short-hike "shake-down" trip to see how well the boys packed and how well their packs were adjusted, etc. Good thing we only went about a mile in! ![]() ![]() The untidy riverside camp itself! (My hammock under the tarp in the background left.) ![]() A dump camp from last spring at a state park about an hour away. It's an old military camp that was originally set up in the late 1800s as one of a series of forts with huge cannons to protect the inlet to Puget Sound, where Seattle lies. These forts were closed following World War II and soon after made into state parks. Great fun for boys to explore! ![]() And, quite appropriate for this forum, here is what I found parked there near the park's museum! ![]() If the hike-in is a mile or less from where the vehicles are parked, we'll bring our Dutch ovens. This is our dessert preparation at Resident Camp last summer. ![]() Quote:
Added to the 4 types, we also have "Resident Camp," which are camps owned by Boy Scouts of America with either cabins, adirondacks, or platform tents set up, along with tables, etc., where the boys go for a week of Scout activities. These camps usually have a dining hall, swimming lake, climbing towers, etc. Quote:
I'd like to visit the rest of your post, Rover4, but for now I've got to take off to some business appointments. I'll be back..... |
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Quote:
The boys and their parents cover the costs for our outings as well. We have a good group of parents who enjoy participating on the outings, most of which take place on weekends anyway. As a regional sales rep, I'm able to coordinate my schedule to allow me to go on quite a few of the outings as one of the adult leaders. And my son is on the outings as well, so the ones I go on I'm spending father-son time in a way too. And when my younger son crosses over in a couple years, Mom will get to enjoy lots of quiet time with her friends whose sons are also in the Troop! ![]() The last two years of Cub Scouts here are called "Webelos" (WE'll BE LOyal Scouts) where they start doing more Boy Scout-like things, including some campouts. ("Under canvas" is good! I hadn't heard that one before.) Our Cub Scout Pack has some family Pack campouts, but for all but Webelos (and with them only in certain conditions), at least one parent has to accompany them. A lot of families don't go camping and really wouldn't do it on their own, so it's a good opportunity for them to go with help and support from other families who are familiar with it. Yeah, lots of propane/butane and some white gas (unleaded petrol) stoves too. I've made a few alcohol stoves that I've used as well as a little "hobo" stove I burn finger-sized sticks in. Pretty effective and doesn't require carrying fuel, but it's a drag to have to sit there and tend the thing the whole time, adding sticks as needed. If feeling particularly lazy, I can set my alcohol stove inside the hobo and use it as a windscreen to boil my water for coffee, as I'm doing here: ![]() Quote:
The BSA asks the Scouts to sell popcorn every October for a few weeks. 70% of the sales price goes to support local Scouting with up to 40% going directly to the Pack or Troop itself. Some of that goes to the boys' account to pay for Resident Camp or such. Our Troop is going to sell coupons for a local fast food restaurant for a dollar each that the Scout gets to keep. Never been involved with that one myself, but the older leaders tell me it's worked quite well in the past. Scout gets to keep the buck; customer gets coupons for food, including one for a free 99-cent taco so his investment is immediately returned; and the restaurant gets more customer visits. It's really not a bad program! Each Pack or Troop is "chartered" by some organization--usually a church or school, sometimes a community or such. Often they will match funds raised by the Scouts. Between the popcorn sales and any matching funds, it's usually enough to cover the general costs with the boys paying for whatever the food and transport costs. (Adult drivers fill up their tanks before they leave then again when they return and submit the receipt to the Troop's treasurer for reimbursement.) I take it you're referring to the recent changes in the design I've read about in another thread? BSA is celebrating their 100th anniversary (right behind you guys!) and in preparation for that they've made a few minor changes. Mostly good, in my opinion. They went with a poly or nylon material, which is considerably better than the cotton before, and dropped the red in favor of green for the patches and such. Looks a lot better, I think. Quote:
Tell me about it! We don't see half our Scouts during (American) football season and my own son is in a select soccer club, so we have to balance his Scout meetings and outings with his soccer practices and games. It's not always easy, but we manage. Sports is a positive thing for the boys too, so Scouting is okay with it. The boys just don't advance as quickly, but there's really nothing wrong with that. Quote:
Excellent! Thanks! I find it quite interesting to learn how Scouting works in other places. Post up some pictures though, guys! Are you involved in Scouting currently, Rovers4? You may or may not be aware of it, but I'm the wacky Yank who has decided to take a vacation to Australia in February/March of 2012 and buy a One Ten to drive around there, then ship it home. Making Tasmania my destination, given the three weeks I'll have to spend, was the overwhelming recommendation by the AULRO members I queried about it. While we're there, one of the things I'd like to do is join a local Tassie Scout Troop for an outing of some sort along with my sons, who will both be Boy Scouts by then. I think it would be a hoot! And a great experience for them to tell about to their fellow Scouts when they get back home. |
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