The UK Programme – part 3 (Podcast)

Podcast number 9. This covers the Explorer and Network programmes which are quite similar and cumulate in the Queen’s Scout Award.

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Next podcast will be on the adult training scheme and Wood Badge.

An Odd Request

When I got home from work tonight I saw there was a message on our answer machine. Before listening to it, I thought it would probably be my Mum telling me something before she and Dad went away for the weekend. But no, it was our Cub Leader asking me to ring her ASAP. As Group Scout Leader that kind of request always sets the alarm bells ringing!

So I rang her and she told me she’d had a phone call regarding the Scientist Badge we’d run with the Cubs back in January (see here). We had been approached by a company in conjunction with a housing scheme (you’ll see why I’m being a bit vague in a minute) to do the Scientist badge. They would provide all the stuff needed and we would have a few photos taken for some publicity. Good deal we thought, so it went ahead.

The phone call was to tell us that one of the companies had withdrawn its sponsorship of the scheme and we were to stop using the names of the company and the housing scheme and any of their photos in any publicity material we had. The odd thing is, the company who had withdrawn their sponsorship was never mentioned to us!

The only publicity we had done was on the Group’s web site, so I removed the names of the other company and the housing association just to be sure. We never got any of the official photos, just the ones I took and they are staying put as they are mine! We also found out a story about it was in the local newspaper (although none of us noticed!), but the story is still on their website, with all names intact, for all to see.

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Ahh well, at least 25 Cubs were able to earn the badge!

Communication

clip_image002After sending a load of emails of to various people in my Group and the District I thought how much easier it is to communicate today. I can email any documents to my Leaders that they may need in a fraction of a second. I can also send information to multiple people in one go. Isn’t it great?

Also typing letters is so much easier, as I type it into Word, check the spelling(!) and send it to my printer. I can remember Dad typing letters to Cub parents when I was a kid and he’d use his typewriter and loads of carbon paper. Luckily he was good at typing, spelling and had a good idea of what he was going to type beforehand – unlike me!

The great thing is I can email my old Scout Leader when he is working at the South Pole on his telescope, all my other friends around the world, all my Group’s Leaders and Carol when I’m on my PC upstairs and she’s watching the TV downstairs!

However, I have to remember I can’t just rely on email. Some of our Leaders don’t have it and some don’t check it as often as others (unlike me as I’m on my PC at work all the time and the PC at home is rarely off). We would love to be able to send letters home to parents by email and then they don’t get lost or forgotten about.

So we still have to actually talk to each other, be it in person or by phone and sometimes that’s the best way to communicate. The written word sometimes cannot convey the meaning of a sentence the way saying it can.

Accepting Disabilities

483px-Wheelchair_symbol_svg As I work in a school for children with special needs, I guess I am slightly more aware than most, about people with special needs, whether they are learning or physical disabilities. I’ve written about this before (here and here) and I am quite confident that if anyone with special needs came to join my Group, we would be able to welcome them. Indeed one of my earliest memories of my time in the Cubs was that one of the other Cubs had his leg in ridged callipers all the time. He was never treated any differently from any of the other Cubs and I seem to remember he could run faster than me!

A couple of weeks ago, the BBC had a new presenter on its children’s channel CBBC. Cerrie Burnell was born without part of her right arm. This has lead to at least nine official complaints to the BBC that she was scaring toddlers! Apparently one parent wrote this on the BBC’s message boards –

I didn't want to let my children watch the filler bits on The Bedtime Hour last night because I know it would have played on my eldest daughter's mind and possibly caused sleep problems.

Some people need to join the real world! A person without part of their arm is not scary, honest!

My best friend’s Dad was born without a left hand and the first few times I met him I don’t think I even noticed! I remember asking my friend why his Dad didn't have a left hand and the reply was ‘Dunno’ & it was left at that. He never let the fact he didn’t have a left hand bother him and in fact he didn’t know what he was missing as he’d never had one. From my point of view he just lived his life and never let his lack of hand define him. As an aside, he was our Group Chairman for over 19 years.

People with disabilities are not scary and children will accept the fact that they may be slightly ‘different’ without batting an eyelid. So the parents who complained to the BBC need to grow up.

The UK Programme – part 2 (Podcast)

Podcast number 8. Finally got round to talking about the Scout section of the UK programme.

Explorers and Network section programme to follow soon (less than a month!).

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Pancakes at Beavers and Cubs

Our Beavers and Cubs had pancakes at their meetings last night, as it was Pancake Day on Tuesday and most of them were cooked by me!

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Action shot

The Beavers are too small to reach the cooker and to have them around hot oil is probably not a good idea either. It was a shame the Cubs weren’t able to make their own pancakes, but time was against us.

We did want to do pancakes with the Scouts last Tuesday, but a couple of our Leaders were not able to make it due to work commitments, so it was not to be. Next year maybe.

You can see that as I was cooking, I am wearing the high visibility safety neckerchief. We are nothing if not safety conscious! This was sent to us from a badge company and we all thought it is quite amusing.

Honesty

I forgot to bring my lunch to work today, so had to pop out to the local shop to get some. My food cost £2.19, so at the till I handed over £2.20 and received 81p in change! I told the assistant he’d given me too much and handed back the 80p. He told me I’d given him £3 and tried to give me the 80p back. No I said, I gave £2.20 and gave the money back, which he reluctantly accepted.

His reaction and the look on his face said that he thought I was mad in giving the money back! He was most insistent that I was wrong. The odd thing was that I was getting the feeling that he and the other people in the queue were thinking that I was wrong in giving the money back!

A Scout is to be Trusted.

International Visits

During the summer of 2007 members of our local Explorer Unit went to Canada to camp with some Canadian Scouts. This year marks the return visit by the Canadians. This camp will have been in preparation for 12 months when it actually happens.

Last year I was asked if I could help out arranging the camp and I said yes.  So last night we met and were discussing where we are at the moment. There are about 20+ Canadians coming over in the summer and we have one of our local camp sites booked and also one in London. Some transport is arranged (I’m borrowing a minibus from work) and so is the catering. The main thing to do is fundraising. These type of camps cost a lot as our visitors want to see a lot of attractions and we will have quite a lot of people from this side camping as well. However, plans are well advanced and money shouldn’t be an issue!

It looks like our guests and our Explorers are in for a good time.

I suspect there will be more on this subject as the year progresses. Stay tuned.

A New Podcast is Coming (honest!)

I’ve just realised that it is nearly a month since I did a podcast talking about the Beaver and Cub programmes. The Scout one will hopefully be coming this weekend.

I know that you’ve all been desperate to hear the next instalment!Nerd

A New Badge

During our Centenary last year, we decided to have a badge to commemorate the fact (you can see my original post here). These badges were given out to all members of the Group and any old members we knew about.

We decided that the badge was too good to only use for a year so we have decided to keep it.

The two Leaders who originally designed it have have done a slight redesign to reflect the fact that it is no longer our Centenary, but it still pays tribute to our beginnings in 1908.

 

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This new version of the badge will be given to our new members from now on.

A Visit to Gilwell

Carol and I have just come back from a visit to London and one of the things we did was to visit Gilwell, the spiritual home of Scouting.

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Considering how often I visit London, I’ve never been before, so I decided to make amends this time. The site itself was quite quiet with one group of Scouts doing some water activities and another doing some climbing. There didn’t seem to be anyone camping, which seemed odd as it was half term and all the schools were off.

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Anyway, we saw the bust of BP that the Mexican Scouts gave to Gilwell, BP’s caravan, the Bronze Buffalo which the BSA presented to Gilwell to commemorate the Unknown Scout who inadvertently helped start Scouting in the USA, the Buddhist Temple presented by the Scouts of Thailand and the window to commemorate 100 years of Scouting, which has my parent’s names on it. We also saw the Gidney Cabin which the Copeland Cabin at Kibblestone is modelled on.

The slight downside was that I couldn’t buy myself a Gilwell neckerchief as the chap who had the keys to the store was off site!

Later in the week we had a trip around Westminster Abbey and among the thousands of important and famous Britons buried and commemorated there is a memorial to BP and his wife.

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Photo from Johnny Walker’s Scouting Milestones Pages

I hadn’t realised there was a memorial to them there, but the memorial on the floor and the Scout and Guide flags make it quite obvious! You are not allowed to take photos in the Abbey, which is why I’ve borrowed the above photo.

Today is Founder’s Day

Today, 22nd February, is Founder’s Day for Scouts or Thinking Day for Guides and Girl Scouts. It marks the birthday of Baden-Powell and, coincidentally, his wife.

Today is the day we remember BP, his life and work. The WOSM have issued a small video of BP to mark Founder’s Day (it’s quite amusing too!).

International Scouting

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This week has had a bit of an international flavour for me. I’ve have an Email from Scouter Jeremy in Canada, a couple of emails from Lotta who is a Cub Leader in Sweden (and I’m going to send her some badges tomorrow), I had a good chat (hooray for Skype!) with SM Jerry in the States, read and contributed to the blogs listed on the right and Tweeted and used instant messaging to ‘talk’ to a few other people in the USA.

None of this would have happened if I was not a Scout – ‘A Scout is a Member of the World Wide Family of Scouts’ – indeed.

However, one thing does slightly bother me. Emailing Lotta made me realise that she speaks and writes excellent English. I, however, do not know a word of Swedish. I did know a few when I camped with some Swedish Scouts in 1992, but these were mainly the more ‘colourful’ phrases and I’ve forgotten them now. I don’t have any working knowledge of any other languages to be honest Embarrassed.

But looking at the list of blogs on the right, they are all written in English. I do come across blogs and web sites written in languages other than English and Google’s translation site is very useful here. But this doesn’t always translate correctly. The idea of a site or blog can be got, but it’s not the same as being able to read it in the native language.

English is spoken by so many people around the world, that there is little need for people in countries that speak it natively to learn any other language, sorry if that sounds arrogant.

So to anyone reading this whose native tongue is not English, thank you for reading and I hope I’m not being too obscure some times.

Anyway, back to the positive, I’m able to speak to, chat, read and interact with lots of people from different countries and cultures. What could be better and more enlightening?

Badges

Just recently we’ve been having issues getting hold of badges for the sections in the Group. Our local supplier hasn’t paid their bills to the Division, so they haven’t been supplied with any more badges.

To get round this problem, one of the Assistant Scout Leaders in the District has offered to be the District’s Badge Secretary. This means that once a month we place an order with him and he gets the badges for us.

I collected our first order last night. It amounted to over 700 badges for the three sections at a cost of £120! WOW! I knew we were getting a bit behind as we couldn’t source them, but that was quite impressive. The thing is the Beavers, Cubs and Scouts are earning more awards and I know there will be another big order at the end of the month. This proves the kids are working hard at the moment which is very impressive.