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Everything posted by qwazse
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As long as, on the back pocket, you sew a leather patch branded, "Not official, but worth every penny," What will your position be while you're there? That may influence people's answers.
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My knee-jerk for any apparel the troop "gives": take up a collection from former or aging-out scouts. With our boys it's been automatic. Even if it's stuff they've bought on their own, they turned it in when they've outgrown it.
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@@RememberSchiff, which brand of tires? My venturers visited the Kelly-Springfield exhibit in Cumberland museum. It would be neat to show them a scout connection (if I can find a 6th ed HB). @@Krampus, why buy a neckerchief slide when it's the one part of the uniform that boys are allowed to custom-make? Have them where their Webelos or other cub slide until they design and build their own from leather, metal, rope, or the pizza boxes that would come from the $42 otherwise spent at the scout-shop?
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Did 1st class BoR last night. Favorite MB so far? Chess.
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I think it has something to do with drinking espresso from a tin cup with fancy 19th century etching on the outside. :?
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The MB pow-wows I attended as a scout were awesome. They were in the science building of a local college campus. Their point was for a boy to meet a counselor and learn how we could do the requirements, maybe practicing some of the skills required for the badge. (For example, in photography, we all got a crack at developing some film.) In doing that, we learned about the materials we needed to build our own lab (which many of us wound up doing), so that when we made our pinhole camera, we could develop our own film. We met a lot of our district's counselors. That made it easier, when the time came, to tell the SM who you wanted to see about earning the badge, and give the counselor a call and finish the badge. What was really and truly awesome, however, was the displays that the college's outstanding students had put together to fill the display cases in the halls of the building. (These included specimens from ecology, medicine, mathematics, etc ... intended to impress prospective students, not us scouts.) A burgeoning science geek couldn't be happier.
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You've heard my hypothesis elsewhere, that one blind spot in all these timelines is the national ban in the late 1960s on anyone over 18 (barring severe disability) from participating in rank advancement. The only published language I found on this from the time was from Boy's Life saying the requirements would be too easy for adults. Perhaps it was inconceivable at the time that adults might be incompetent at timber hitches, or the mechanics of citizenship. But, maybe it was deeper than that. Maybe there was an evolving perception that adults were needed to "lead" at a more conceptual level. Tying knots and knowing birds well just wasn't "good" enough. A pity, because some of these heated environmental debates could be communicated more readily give by a common grasp of ornithology. Clearly the prevailing notion is that boys can't learn leadership from a conceptual level. (Actually, I think it's more that they won't sit for hours straight being lectured at, bless them.) Therefore to some scoutcraft is a necessary evil, a means to and end. Not necessarily an end itself.
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I haven't had the opportunity, but with the venturers I wanted to share "The Gods Must Be Crazy".
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When our CO was in a tight spot, the troop offered to contribute toward the light and heat bill. They declined, noting that they had a full food pantry and several nice Eagle projects on the grounds thanks to us.
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Second hint: get the best de chief a troop can offer for your Webelos den.
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One hint: at wood badge make the Webelo-ree (or follow-up afterword) part of your ticket. It will consume a lot of your time and you will need to be managing goals and objectives anyway. You'll have plenty of time to sort the details out during your training weekends, so don't feel like you have to have a complete plan going in. But by thinking of Woodbadge as a synergistic tool rather than one more set of tasks, you will keep the chaos of life to a minimum.
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Durn it! @@jpstodwftexas, that was supposed to be a +1. Sorry for the thumb fail. I've always felt that the U.S. traditional/national dress was denims and a flannel shirt. (Possibly including a tool belt.) The old Arabs and Turks used to dread when their kids would start wearing them ... a sure sign of Westernization and the accompanying rot to come.
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Welcome! What happened to you and your buddy was pretty much how I got my crew advisor patch. I'm not much for graphics, so just imagine a Steelers fan wearing a proud Sooner Boomer parent t-shirt right now. (I know those are fighting words in some parts of your state, but full disclosure ... )
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Percentage of Scouts Who Become Eagle and Mean or Median Age
qwazse replied to T2Eagle's topic in Open Discussion - Program
Like stosh said the mean is skewed. Be nice to see the funky curve ... or maybe know what percentage were at age 17.5 - 18. My suspicion is that boys are waiting until they can hop in a car and drive to wherever they needed to wrap up MBs and projects. That certainly was how my boys behaved. -
That was precisely my career as a scout. SM said there were a bunch of webelos crossing over and asked if I would like to start a new patrol with them. (By this time, I think I had been a den chief.) The only difference between them and your "NSP" was that we never applied the word "new scout". We were Wolf patrol from the first meeting. No allowances were made for lack of rank or skill. This was meant to be a patrol for as long as the troop would last. And we were meant to represent the troop well. No troop guides or instructors. If I needed help, I talked to my former PL or a JASM. I didn't need help, except for maybe a little time away from the patrol to learn how to convert mess kits into pizza ovens. (Well, I could have used some heads-up about a boys' innate desire to turn spray paint cans into flame throwers.)
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@@MattR and @@Stosh thanks for the exegesis. My specific point was that our culture is ingrained with a notion that leadership is more about "being" than "doing" or "earning". It's something you are expected to take on, not something you can imitate by following a series of steps. To scouts, I may say: "You are a leader. The patch for it comes when others notice you leading them."
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LOL! So many red flags. So little time to read them. If their boys want to join your troop let them visit a few meetings before committing. You might give them a "grass isn't any greener" talk. The mom (let's not even waste time calling her a CC if she's not on the same page as other adults in the troop or district)? Refer her to your CC. He'll thank you for it. For what it's worth, whenever I do multi-unit things, I prefer to get the SPLs (or Crew Presidents) communicating. My line to the other SM/Crew Advisor is "I'll have my guy talk to your guy." If they know are okay working with each other then we move forward.
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Percentage of Scouts Who Become Eagle and Mean or Median Age
qwazse replied to T2Eagle's topic in Open Discussion - Program
Having seen over a couple decades the numbers wax and wane, but the quality remain the same in he same unit, I would suggest that there's no statistical way to suss out High speed low drag units. You'd do just as well by judging the quality of thier coffee. -
"I am that I am" -- the Almighty. Perhaps (weather it's rallying your patrol or a nation), it starts from a sense being.
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Congratulations to your son! And props for his forward-thinking! His SM will be impressed when he asks for a blue card at his first conference. As these things go, he will general enjoy his time more if there is another scout who learns the badge with him.
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The CO gives us zero funds. A clean warm building with plenty of storage space and an industrial kitchen is plenty. If they want a report it's up to the COR to relay it. They are perfectly fine with each unit having its own checkbook and accountability. They loan us our tax ID so we can do just that. When our boys merged with another troop, we left a small part of our treasury to the CO. They are still letting the troop have access to the storage, and would like us to use their building for their annual fundraiser.
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How long is too long to wait for Board of Review
qwazse replied to andysmom's topic in Advancement Resources
Our EBORs usually get scheduled within 4-6 weeks of turning in the application. So the delay that you feel is par for the course here. -
Individual Scout Account ... When sufficiently large, a boy's fundraising in a given year could be seen as an individual benefit for his family as opposed to service for the group. Meaning that a boy earning more than a couple thousand might need to report taxable income.We say "might" because there is no specific case where the IRS has gone after a scout family on this, but it did make deferminations regarding kids sports teams who have required each member to raise tens of thousands of $ as a condition of membership.
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How much follow-up depends on the volunteers at council, So I can only tell you what our people do. They do not contact the donors in any way, either for the purposes of cross-checking or for soliciting in any way. They do ask the boy to solicit closed references from the folks he's listed on his application and have them sent to the SM, who then arranges for them to be available for the BoR. As a policy, I never write closed references so when asked I give it directly to the person who asked it and they may read or forward along without reading as they wish. It's an interesting question. Have your son call the district advancement chair and find out what he says. It would be interesting to know if your people are any different than mine..
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Those aloof and invisible CoRs! Catch one if you can. @@zuzy, valid though your concerns may be, you gotta take a step back. Likewise, your husband as UC should tread carefully. There is a whole lot to say against assigning commissioners to troops where their kids are members. Frankly, he should ask someone else in the district to take on the position, and only approach any issues in the troop as an ASM. Why? I would imagine a UC without entanglements would have called the SM immediately about how he was treating his fellow scouters. He would have gotten both parties in the same room to try and make peace. Then he would have encouraged those parties to reconcile with the TC about how one or both of them let things get out of hand and affirm that it will not happen again. Just saw your post. Your man is trying to do the right thing ... and calm mamma bear!