Boy Scouts of America 

Troop 165

McDonough, Georgia

  You are Visitor No.Hit Counter Last edited 05/28/2008 01:44:09 AM

Troop 165 HomeHome Click Here

   Camping

Plan...Practice...Be Prepared

 

We will be driving to Mt Arie, North Carolina...about 357 miles, 


 

Camping will be at:

 

Summer Camp 2008

Raven Knob Scout Reservation

Important Summer Camp Information Click Here...Due Dates

Permission Form

 

 

 

This is our camping and out door section... click onto a link for more information

Troop 165 plans an outdoor activity for every month.  Outdoors is what Scouting is all about combined with the weekly Troop meeting.  We prepare for outdoor adventure, we prepare to have fun, we prepare to be safe.  

When buying food for the patrol the grubmaster must turn in the food receipt and any extra money in an envelope to his Patrol Leader after purchasing groceries for his patrol.  The Patrol Leader must turn in this reciept and any extra money to his Senior Patrol Leader who must turn in reciept and any extra money to the Scoutmaster.  Any extra money will be saved and used for that patrol at the next camping trip.

Regular camping programs

Troop 165 believes the heart and soul of Scouting is found in the outdoors, so we get out as often as we can, in all types of weather. We schedule weekend campouts at least ten times a year.  We camp at  State Parks, Scout camps and on private land.

The troop meets at Harvest Point United Methodist Church on Friday evening so we can depart at 6:30 pm or when everybody has assembled. We return to the church Sunday afternoon usually around 12:30 pm to 1:00 pm.  On campouts far from home, leadership estimates our Sunday arrival time before we leave so parents have a general idea of when we'll return. If we’ve traveled an unusually long distance, we stop on the way back so Scouts can call home with our arrival time.

Troop 165 doesn't have a camping fee for weekend campouts unless there are unusual expenses to cover (like canoe rentals).  Scouts do pay $14 for the food they will eat. Each patrol plans its own menu and the Scoutmaster approves it.  One Scout in each patrol buys the food for his patrol and the buying responsibility rotates among patrol members.

Troop 165 provides gear for each patrol to take on campouts as we acquire it through fundraisers and donations . Basics are: tents, groundcovers, lanterns, stoves and a complete camp kitchen for each patrol. For regular troop campouts, Scouts only need to bring personal gear (sleeping bags, clothes, flashlights, etc.). Accordingly as the troop grows we will need to add additional equipment

Troop campouts are designed by the Patrol Leaders' Council to offer training in Scouting skills, advancement opportunities and to be FUN!  Over the course of a year, the troop regularly works on merit badge requirements for cooking, camping, hiking, canoeing, orienteering, pioneering, and many others.


 Buying food for a patrol in Troop 165

Buying food for your patrol is a very important job!  If you don't buy enough, your patrol members aren't going to be very happy.  At the same time, if you buy too much food, some of it will be wasted.

Managing the food buying task is very important.  Keeping track of who in your patrol is going, how much money they've paid in, setting your budget and managing your funds are a big part of being successful in this leadership task.

To start, plan the menu with your patrol.  Get a firm count of how many patrol members are going at the campout prep meeting. The best way to keep track of this job is to use our Campout Planning Guide.  You can get the form from your Patrol Leader or from this web site (Campout Prep Guide) Click onto this at the lower part of this message.  Once you know the number going camping, plan to only buy as much food as your patrol will need ... you want to be as close to the correct amount as possible.

Buying too much food costs extra money and is wasteful. Typically, leftover food is not sanitary by the time the campout is over and must be thrown out. Try your best to stay within your budget. If you have 10 patrol members, but only 7 have paid and said they are going, your budget is $72, not $100.  Plan your menu and purchases accordingly. After you have purchased the food, place the receipts in an envelope with the names of those who paid on the outside. Also put the total cost of the food, ice and supplies on the envelope.  If there is change, place it in the envelope.

Buying food for the patrol is supposed to be a break-even proposition. You should not keep any change, and you should not run out of money. When you are done, return the envelope to the Scoutmaster. He will keep any extra money in the envelope set aside for your patrol. This way, if you or the next person to buy comes up short, you or they will be reimbursed only to the extent that your patrol has returned their overages in the past. If it is found that you have purchased wastefully and are short on funds, monies to make up the shortage may not be available.  It is your job when buying the food to stay within your budget!

Once you arrive for the campout and turn in your envelope to the Scoutmaster, your job is not complete. After the campout, the person who bought the food (GRUBMASTER) is also responsible for removing all food from the patrol boxes and cooler and disposing of it in an appropriate manner. Disposal may mean splitting it between patrol members or giving it to one. Be careful, though ... if the food is spoiled or ruined, it should be disposed of in the church Dumpster located in the parking lot.

If you used a Troop ice chest for the campout, you are responsible for taking it home, cleaning it thoroughly, disinfecting it and bringing it to the next Troop meeting. If you brought your own ice chest, you are responsible for taking it home immediately.

 

Print out this Sheet...make copies for your patrol notebook so you will have them ready to use.

 

 

 

Camping / Hiking

Ten Essentials
Camping Equipment List

High Adventure / Wilderness Survival

High Adventure Equipment List
Wilderness Survival
Winter Camping
Winter Camp Gear
Winter Camping Skills
Winter Camping Planning
Winter Camping Personal cloths 01
Winter Camping 02
WINTER CAMPING ESSENTIALS
Shelters
Signaling
Direction Finding

Nature

Geology

Pioneering

Pioneering and Knots

 

Cooking

Dutch Oven Cooking
Recipes and Cooking Resources

Safety / First Aid

Wood Tools Safety Course (Totin' chip)
Fireman Chit
Wounds
7 Threats of Survival
Bites and Stings
Environmental Injury
Heat Casualties
Health Maint
Hypothermia - Cold Facts

Orienteering

Compass (doc)
How to Use A Compass - Compass By Itself
How to Use A Compass -Map  Interaction
How to Use A Compass - Declination
How to Use A Compass - Suggested Exercises
How to Use A Compass - No Compass
How to Use A Compass - Foggy Conditions

 

 


Plan, Practice, Be-prepared

 

  UNIFORM: Boys like to belong. The uniform is a symbol of belonging to a gang, in this case, a great gang called Scouting. The uniform creates an image and shows each Scouts commitment to the aims of Scouting. The uniform gives a Scout identity. It’s practical and easy to wear and provides a boy a chance to show (through his badges) many of his accomplishments in Scouting.