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Everything posted by qwazse
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Parents will complain if you let meetings run long. Speak to the boys (any girls?) directly and let them know that their ceremony is a little less fancy than the one you all did in October, but their achievement is just as significant and that you are very proud of them.
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Words of Wisdom to Youth Chapter Leadership
qwazse replied to FaithfulScouter's topic in Northeast Region
This sounds simple minded but ... Voice. Talking is a vital skill that the boys will need to get a leg up in their careers. Lodge reps not in the room? Phone them. Poor attendance? Call the house phone and leave a message that they were missed. Call the SM of the lodge reps who do attend and let them know how you appreciate their scouts' participation. Text/Email no more. Hand-written post cards are wonderful things. -
You're he one responsible for balancing time. You may be looking at your next pack meeting agenda and realize you can do a little more than just have the DL dole out the pins and shake hands, but you don't have time for a full-blown ceremony. You're allowed to improvise and perform the most meaningful parts of the regular routine. BTW we work with Eagle Scouts to do this for their ceremonies.some ask for big affairs, others want hardly any recognition at all.
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I have used the same mess kit for 40 years. Shortly after I said "never again" to my last meal of franks and beans, my brother ordered me a kit from an Amway catalogue his work gave him. It had two pots, two plates, a Teflon pan and grippers as a multi-handle. Add to that a tin cup that I "appropriated" from gear my oldest brother left at the house, and an egg poacher that mom was about to throw out, and I've been golden ever since. The pans were a heavier gague than most aluminum kits, so I could jury rig a Dutch oven or a double broiler with the thing. For the family, we have a patrol mess kit, a cast iron skillet, and a ditch oven.
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Troop adding/changing requirements for Eagle project
qwazse replied to Carbenez's topic in Advancement Resources
I thought they were boys from the same troop! This is different. I mean, if the beneficiary said to do the project on day x without saying that two other troops would also be doing theirs on this day, how would anyone know? One backhanded solution: call the other boys' scoutmasters and see if one of them will let your son transfer to their troop so he can do his project. It will set you back a dollar and some paperwork, and your son might not get along with the boys in the other troop -- but if push comes to shove ... -
Troop adding/changing requirements for Eagle project
qwazse replied to Carbenez's topic in Advancement Resources
I feel the SM is missing a great opportunity here. He could walk (ride?) around the grounds checking in on different projects, observing which scouts have the best plan for lunch, etc ... and free up time for lots of other activity. Ask your district advancement chair to have a word with your SM about this. -
Leadership Through Service and Togetherness
qwazse replied to LeCastor's topic in Open Discussion - Program
With all due respect to your concerns, @fred8033 there is no greater insult to a culture than listening to the voices that dare you to never honor them. The quotes you put around local nations implies that somehow the lodge really wasn't in touch with tribal leaders. Or that tribal chiefs waffle in their beliefs. Or that when a tribe confers membership to erstwhile arrowmen, they do so lightly. This wrongly resurrects the "Indian giver" stereotype. When a tribes endorses support, they don't do so lightly. And, when they withdraw support, it is rarely based on populist whims, but rather a specific violation of trust. Should lodges interact with NA leaders? Yes. What proof do you have that they don't? Football team names are a red herring. There is a difference between making money off someone's history and legends, and inspiring greatness through honoring someone's history and legend. -
Have you browsed https://troopleader.org/? It has a hodge-podge of materials that may fit. One of thier many links will take you here https://www.scouting.org/health-and-safety/forms/. One of the .pdf links is to a permission slip. For a while, BSA had a tour permit .pdf. Although it no longer is in use, I thought it would have been a great tool for patrol leaders.
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Scanned your troop book, but didn't have time to look at the video. Excellent work. I would suggest under activities, you add two forms: Permission slip. If you are using BSA's form, just include the link. Hike/camp plan of where, when, how (e.g. transportation, which adult leaders will be present/driving, who reviewed and approved the plan). This could be another page on your campout planner form, or it could be a separate page that the PLC or a patrol might use, for example, to get their event on the calendar. FWIW, not every SPL will be good with software like this. As long as your prepared to help a scout manage the same material using pencil and paper, you'll be fine. (Instead of documents, the scribe uploads pictures of his paperwork.)
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In prep for 2019, I call dibs on the first post of the new year in this forum!
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YP bungled, 60 year old troop disbands
qwazse replied to RememberSchiff's topic in Issues & Politics
Not true. The logistics of tracking and maintaining registries is unwieldy. Even in the best possible circumstance, although the probability of any given unit having an offender pass screening through is extremely low, the probability that one of the thousands of units out there will somewhere is extremely high. Compound that with the possibility that someone who is exonerated may still be in a registry for some time, and you have a real mess. It's a litigant's dream. The more a large organization invests in a comprehensive procedure, the more likely it will fail at least once regularly. The larger the organization, the more likely the pay-out. In PA, volunteers have to renew their clearances every five years. A lot can happen in five years. -
YP bungled, 60 year old troop disbands
qwazse replied to RememberSchiff's topic in Issues & Politics
I think this post belongs under Council Relations or Wood Badge and Adult Leader Training. These bungles are more common than we would like to think. The paperwork often doesn't keep up with the person. That means that sometimes, someone somewhere is going to fall (creep?) through the cracks. Leaders aren't trained in how to communicate with parents. And parents aren't trained in how to deal with folks who appear on these lists. For my part (and this is from seeing a couple of young adult leaders close to home face accusations), I'd invite someone like that over to Sunday dinner and have him/her explain what happened in their own terms in front of my kids. Better the snake you know ... -
Mash, enjoy. Not gonna lie. The first freeze of the year is hard on this old frame, so brace yourself, and don't be afraid to cry "uncle" if anything doesn't feel right. But, once you adapt, it's sheer beauty! (Well, the burn scar will be sad.) When I get my official WSJ troop #, I'll PM you.
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Welcome, and thanks in advance for all you'll do for those girls! Regarding hammocks: the family that sways together, stays together (depending on available trees).
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It's not just you. It's broke. I think they are trying too hard. This interface could be one that spits out plain text and a map. But developers have fallen for this hand-held look and feel.
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My associate advisor made my crew!
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I agree this is mostly semantics. Since time-out-of-mind, in English, the singular was used to refer to the body of ordinances and the plural to refer to the collections of ordinances within the body. (E.g., Jewish religious law is made up of 613 laws. The one English word serves for the two Hebrew words that distinguish the sum from the parts.) But, it's also a reminder that scout commits to duty to God and country and obedience to the scout law. helping others, and maintaining one's self prepared. B-P has in mind an integral being of certain character. Not someone with a dozen (or more) responsibilities. God and country hold those long lists.
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I'm with @skeptic: one law (as referenced in the Oath) with 12 points.
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Why not a stove that sits on top of the canister? I understand that jet-boils have a small radius. But a a burner with a 4" diameter on a canister seems about as stable as one with all of those fold-out legs (which I've seen fail at some inconvenient times). Even with those pocket rockets, three choice rocks or tent pegs around the canister/burner give the added stability for larger pots. I just favor as small a footprint as possible to minimize tripping hazards.
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Don't ignore the phrase "if participating in a high adventure activity ..." WB is not a HA activity. Have you actually talked to your specialist about participating in weekend courses like WB? Do you monitor your own BP? Regarding troop leadership, they may mean well. But, they need to go pound sand. If you're a good leader, they aren't going to let you slip away over your apprehension about attending a course.
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Here is a little something I prepared for a peace dinner a couple of years ago. A friend asked if I would open a discussion on Christmas tradition with some international students ... mostly from Arabic countries ... a few weeks before the fall term closed. Sean's greetings to all!
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As we discussed in your prior post, a lot of great leaders serve their units well without taking WB. Give your primary physician time to look over the paperwork and decide if you need any restrictions.
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What? You don't hew to scouts should be seen and not heard? I guess it depends on what you are trying to accomplish. If your goal is to train adults (and maybe your SPL) to take a step back, and possibly to get patrol sites looking sharp throughout the day, being in view helps. If your goal is to get patrols to feel a little more private, then woodland are ideal. In some of our laurel thickets and hemlock stands, 50' is an eternity.
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Gloves give me an icky feeling, so no. Even in winter, I keep my gloves in my pocket until my fingers are too cold to work without them. Our SM, on the other hand, is all about those gloves, so he makes sure patrols have a set of cleaning gloves.
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Our Future is Still Bright...If We Allow It to Be
qwazse replied to LeCastor's topic in Open Discussion - Program
@Sentinel947, you definitely have a lot to look forward to. Graduate school is it's own kind of troop; and your class, it's own kind of patrol. Then, there's a family, or if you are so led, the ministry. And as you visit your troop, you can explain what's the same, different, etc.