Akela...........leader of a cub troop.
Bageehra .......means black panther and is a leader.
The uniforms are a bit like our old ones of many years ago.
My first plane flight was as a cub at Camden airport in the back of a Cessna 172.
The leaders names all tie in with a story of dog pack.....I think it is called jungle book story ?
Last edited by ohleaky1; 4th November 2009 at 07:28 AM. Reason: correction
1998 Defender
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Maybe in America, but Australia has always had a different uniform.
Ours was drasticly changed a few years ago. None of the changes were practical or inovative (nor were they intended to be) they were purely style changes which 99.99% of people disagreed with...
Old uniform was Khaki button up cotton shirt with traditional regalia/patches etc, brown shorts or drill trousers, long socks, boots, leather belt and akubra style hat. Smart, instantly recognisable and a source of pride.
New uniform is a blue shirt with ugly shoulder colours to denote cubs/scouts etc etc etc... A lot of the badges were done away with. Pants were no longer supplied - the kids wear jeans of whatever variety they like and sneakers. Hat is of the type your wheelchair-bound grandfather is made to wear when on a picnic. Sloppy, motley and no standardisation means no uniform inspections means noone has pride in their uniform.
The kids are called by their names or nicknames, but leaders up until Scouts have "scouting names". Cub Leaders are named after the characters from the Jungle Book, with the cheif leader taking on the name "Akela" (the wolf). Scout Leaders generally choose or have bestowed on them a name of cryptic significance, as per the example above. Some are a bit more obvious - we had a leader called smiley. It was because he was, well... smiley.
Once you hit venturers your leaders are called by their first name, or depending on the dynamic, all manner of other names...
In Australia, yes.![]()
[B][I]Andrew[/I][/B]
[COLOR="YellowGreen"][U]1958 Series II SWB - "Gus"[/U][/COLOR]
[COLOR="DarkGreen"][U]1965 Series IIA Ambulance 113-896 - "Ambrose"[/U][/COLOR]
[COLOR="#DAA520"][U]1981 Mercedes 300D[/U][/COLOR]
[U]1995 Defender 110[/U]
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
Interesting information on the uniforms. new to Scouting so not so intune with the older traditions.
On saying this, i was Bagheera for our cub pack and am now GL for Boxhill 9th, Victoria. Still stand in with the cub scouts when they are short of leaders tho.
Is excellent fun and loving it. I am hoping to start Joeys soon.... hardest thing is recruiting leaders tho
Chris
I didn't know whether to laugh or cry when I read that! "The type your wheelchair-bound grandfather is made to wear when on a picnic..." Beautifully descriptive!
Well, yeah, I saw some of the pictures of the Aussie Scouts in uniforms with different shoulder colors and thought it unique, but I wasn't exactly attracted to it. Perhaps because it's just so different. I'm just a traditionalist, I guess. I like a classic style.
Here in the States, we can wear any uniform we want so long as it was at one time or another an official BSA uniform. Is that the case with you too? My younger son could wear my old 1973 Cub Scout uniform (if I could find the darn thing!) It's quite a bit different from the current ones.
As for the hats here, most here wear an olive or khaki BSA baseball-style cap such as my son is wearing in the previous picture, but he also has a dark brown official BSA Stetson/Akubra type (sort of like my Akubra only with the sides rolled up a bit and made of a much more flexible and thicker felt).
Last edited by Binford; 4th November 2009 at 04:48 PM. Reason: clarification
I actually did get thrown out,although it wasnt for eating a Brownie.
We had an all day beach hike we had to do to get a badge.
It involved our pack and a few others,probably 100 kids on the hike.
What me and 2 mates did,both banished for the same crime as we were quite cocky about what we did,was to take a massive shortcut and spend the day body surfing.
We looked at the map,it was a long peninsular,we took a shortcut wich amounted to 500m across sandhills to end up at the finish point.What we didnt realise was there were 3 checkpoints which we didnt make.
Whilst they called in emergency services to search for us 3 we blissfully spent most of the day bodysurfing at the finish line.
They just didnt see it our way that we thought it was smart to cross country to get the hike over and done with.
We even made the news over it.
Andrew
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Now THAT's funny stuff! Reminds me of my advanced photography class in high school where we went on a field trip in downtown Seattle to photograph artworks. Two friends and I did some of that, then spent the rest of the day trying to get to the roof of one of the taller buildings. Never could, but did visit the spa at one of the nicer hotels in town. No one was using the hot tub, so the college girl working the place let us use it. Mind you, we had no swim suits. No one there, so no problem. She brought us water and took a picture of us all sitting in the tub holding our water cups up, "cheers!" I submitted that picture as one of my artworks pieces. Got an A. He was a cool teacher. But he wouldn't have been as cool about it had Search and Rescue been called to help find us!
So they kicked you out for that, eh? Too bad.
Instead, they should make you an adult Scout leader now and have you deal with these kinds of boys, eh?! Heh, heh, heh....
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