Showing posts with label wilderness badge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wilderness badge. Show all posts

Monday, February 24, 2014

Boy Scout Troop 663

We always enjoy having the Scouts up at the camp. For this particular weekend Drew Prevost, who was one of the scouts, was the contact person and made all the arrangements. The day before they came we had a pretty good rain at the camp but during their stay the weather was nice. 
Five or six of the boys were here to earn their Wilderness Badge which involves them making their own shelters and providing their own food for a night. I was not able to get a picture of their shelters before it got dark as they were still in the process of completion. 
One of the instructors did build one as an example and went ahead and slept in it himself. 

They invited me over for dinner which was very good and plenty of it. 
There were demonstrations of building fires and various other things taking place during the day and I did manage to get a picture of one such time.



Monday, April 15, 2013

Survival in the Wilderness

The weather could not have been any more perfect for a weekend of survival training. Boy Scout Troop 633, led by David Smith, made their first visit up to the camp to do just that -- survival training in the wilderness. 
The boys were split into three groups of four, each with an Eagle Scout 'counselor'. The groups were each put in three separate spots in the camp and, with minimal supplies, had to use their training to set up camp.  The first night's objective was to set up shelter and make a fire.

The group at the bottom of the hill made short work of putting up a shelter and thought that the long grass up in the meadow might make a good thatched roof.

The second group down near the Hidden Path trail fared well, though they were down in the swampy low-grounds. Their evergreen thatching was smart looking!

The last group went down off the hillside past the obstacle course. They used an uprooted tree to help provide shelter (and it made a great windbreak, too).  They were a little tougher to get to, so there aren't any closeups of that group!

Let's make one thing clear ... this was NOT training for the adult leaders of the group!  They made their base camp around the pavilion camp fire ring and had a mighty fine little setup . . .
They had mighty fine food, too . . . the smell of which I'm sure was quite tantalizing to those in training.  The first night, while the groups got their shelter and fire situations figured out, the leaders sat around a great fire and swapped stories.  Darin Lightfoot (who had been up here before with his youth, from Morningside Baptist) happened to be up there for the first night, so he pulled out his guitar and strummed for a bit.  It made for a most pleasant way to spend a Friday evening!

On Saturday morning the small groups had to pass some training in order to 'find' some eggs to cook and eat.  At lunch time, provided they'd passed off on their fishing skills, they got some trout to prep and eat.  
I came up on a group of guys on the dock and they showed me their lunch . . .
Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime, right?!

The group at the bottom of the hill decided at some point that their thatched room wasn't quite going to cut it, so they switched it out.
The smart thing about their setup was that it was so close to water ...
Which definitely made the water-fetching a LOT easier.

The afternoon was fairly quiet.  I'm not sure what skills they were working on, but I do know that all the guys earned their supper ... a skinned rabbit and a couple of cans of vegetables!
Rabbit stew was what each of the groups decided to cook and serve.  All of them told me their dinner was quite tasty!

Saturday night was a little warmer than Friday night -- a fact I'm sure the boys all appreciated.  Troop leader David did relay a great story about their group camp fire time from that night.  Evidently at some point in the evening they had a little UFO encounter.  As they sat in the dark, they watched about 15 glowing globes of light flying up over the hill.  At first, because the globes of light were in a loose formation, the guys thought perhaps it was helicopters, but there was absolutely no noise.  Then, as they watched them climb higher and higher, they globes simply disappeared!

David said the guys were all a little stunned and very curious about the lights ... until one of the other adults remembered seeing something on YouTube about Japanese Floating Lanterns . . .
And they decided that was what they'd seen.  The guys had heard voices and music in the distance and had figured there was some type of party going on.

It just so happens that friends of ours own some of the property that backs up to the camp -- and they had hosted a wedding and reception that night ... where Japanese lanterns were let aloft.  UFOs, indeed!

The guys of Troop 633 made terrific guests and we hope this was just the first of many visits for them.

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Big First Camping Weekend of 2012

This past weekend we had our first two groups of the year up at the camp.  Early on Friday afternoon, Asbury United Methodist brought about 75 guys from their youth for the annual "Manly Man" weekend and did they have a time. 

They played football and frisbee and explored the trails and though the temps weren't too bad for February, it was still a bit cool for the shorts and tee-shirts they were sporting.  I guess that's what makes them manly men. 

I enjoyed meeting Peter Dahlin, their Director of Youth Ministries, and the other leaders were all very friendly and appreciative.  At suppertime they made their way to the pavilion where one of the leaders cooked steaks for everyone. 
I love the smell of steaks cooking in the great outdoors.   
 
Around 6:00 that evening, Boy Scout Troop 96 out of Epworth Methodist arrived. 
Their main purpose for the weekend was to earn their Wilderness Badge.  They spent the first night acclimating and receiving instructions and then put it all to the test on the second day/night. 

This involved them building their own shelters to sleep in and cooking their own dinners as well.  While the temperature was not too bad they did have to deal with some rain. 


I did not get to speak with the leaders at the very end to see if all had earned the badge or not, but I have a feeling they did.  We always enjoy having the scouts up here and especially Bob Drinsick and Mary Breeden.