Monday, December 31, 2007
Day #5-Looe Key
Our meals have been interesting to say the least. We are encouraged to mix and match. Lunch today consisted of pork & beans, rice, and Spam. Viet made up some pancakes with hot chocolate powder and Cheerios too. Both were actually good!
The guys helped with some service and helped pick up some trash around the beach. After supper, the staff treated us all to an "island madness" campfire party complete with death match crab races. The staff really make this trip High Adventure!
Sunday, December 30, 2007
Day #4-Explore
Today is spent exploring Munson Island and learning about all of the history, plants, and animals. Snorkeling, rest, tree climbing, going through the mangrove maze, and shark fishing too. Ask Hogg about the one that got away!
Every evening we have a campfire and sit around and laugh until we cry. They call it "Key's Disease"and we have it bad.
The Key deer and vaca coons keep waking us up at night, but hey, it is their island too.
Saturday, December 29, 2007
Day #3-Deep Sea Fishing
Everyone caught some fish. It was a blast. We had the dolphin fish with some mac and cheese for supper and it was yummy and I normally don't like fish.
The guys close the day with some night snorkeling.
Friday, December 28, 2007
Day #2-Paddle Time?
Lunch and what is supposed to be a 2 hour paddle turns into a 4 hour zigzag to Munson Island.
Ours guys get settled in and enjoy catching crabs and critters to cook and eat.
Thursday, December 27, 2007
Day #1-Let's Go!
We leave Lex. early and finally make it to Key West. Nice place! After a short tour and a quick bite, we head out to the Briton Environmental Center.
Check in is quick and easy and we meet our Mate, Sam McWilliams from Illinois. Strange guy, but most of the staff so far are. Reminds me of my Maine days.
After supper, we are treated to a campfire and a slide show to introduce us to all of the plants and critters we are about to encounter.
Being up 36 straight hours without sleep is tough, but it is worth it. We are here!
Wednesday, December 26, 2007
Headin' South
Tuesday, December 25, 2007
Monday, December 24, 2007
Wish List
Baby Goff - any kind of hair cut
Alex Hill - just a good hair cut
Billy Zoellers - enough hard drive space to rule the world
Don Combs - enough votes to rule the OA
Will Hogg - enough sense to come out of the rain
Michael Shepherd - a finalized Eagle Project
Aaron Shepherd - a finished Eagle Project
Viet Pham - a fantastic Eagle Board of Review
All Scouts and Scouters around the world - Good Scouting in 2008!
Friday, December 21, 2007
The BIG Meetin'
I've never been to one of those, but from what I have heard about the youth National and Regional officer positions and how tough it is to serve, my hat is off to all of those who want the jobs!
The Southern Region O.A. site will have updates.
http://www.southern.oa-bsa.org/
Good luck Don! WWW
Thursday, December 20, 2007
Road Trip
This will be my first trip to Sea Base. Back when I was a Scout, most Councils would take a group to Philmont, but Sea Base, Sommers (Northern Tier), and Maine High Adventure were like new cult locations that would never make it. There used to be (LBL) Land Between the Lakes High Adventure Base over in western KY, but it failed.
I don't know which I'm more excited about? Christmas or Sea Base?
Oh OK, Sea Base!
Wednesday, December 19, 2007
Serious Hardware
Scouty Claus always makes his presence known to us in December. This year he gave everybody a special Merit Badge. Badges like Outhouse Tipping, Toilet Clogging, Pyro Maniac, and Fart Lighting. I got the Ebsa Ebay Bidding Merit Badge. Do I really buy that many patches on Ebay?
My big announcement at the close was, that I am retiring as Scoutmaster of Troop 12.
Tuesday, December 18, 2007
Award Time
I concocted this new candle thing. It has bronze, gold, and silver candles to represent the 3 Venturing awards. There really aren't any ceremonies for Venturing, so we are making our own up.
Awards should be presented in a meaningful and significant setting. I just hope the candles don't fall off!
Monday, December 17, 2007
Sunday, December 16, 2007
Chapter Party
13 different O.A. members braved the cold and flying snow to celebrate another year of brotherhood and cheerful service. It really looks like that we may have a serious Dance Team in the making, thanks to Glen Felty and Doug Ramy. We recognized our youth officers for their fine work and then we did, what we do best. Eat!
The food this year would put most office parties to shame. Lil' BBQ wieners, hot wings, cheese, crackers, nuts, chips, pumpkin dip with ginger bread cookies, and of course a new tradition of deep fried twinkies. Yum, Yum. Thanks Glen and Juanita.
They guys played a couple rounds of the highly popular debate game "Murder". Don and Alex got killed a lot. Wonder why?
2008 will be an interesting year for our rag tag group. A new crop of young Arrowmen will take over the leadership roles. I'm guessing that they will do great.
Friday, December 14, 2007
Bookmarks
used by a master,
to build a better world.
Bookmarks for Dan O'Canna
Wednesday, December 12, 2007
Gone Home
Ireland 2008
The boys down in Miami got it bad! They are heading up a group to go over to the Ireland Jamboree in 2008. http://www.jamboree2008.com/jamboree.html
We camped next to the Irish this past summer and they were a wonderful group. The event should be a blast. If we weren't going to Philmont, Sea Base, and Northern Tier this summer, we would be on the plane to Ireland!
Tuesday, December 11, 2007
Get Certified
Available are the annual regulars like Youth Protection, Safe Swim Defense, and Safety Afloat, but you can learn about Troop or District Committees too. All of the trainings are excellent and worth the time!
I recently did the Venturing YPT and learned a great deal about teenagers.
Take the time, register, and take these classes at your leisure. When you are finished, you are undoubtedly certified and can print out a card to prove it.
Which makes us all a "certified card carrying _________". You fill in the blank!
Monday, December 10, 2007
Friday, December 7, 2007
Final In Phily
PHILADELPHIA, — For three years the Philadelphia council of the Boy Scouts of America held its ground. It resisted the city’s request to change its discriminatory policy toward gay people despite threats that if it did not do so, the city would evict the group from a municipal building where the Scouts have resided practically rent free since 1928.
Hailed as the birthplace of the Boy Scouts, the Beaux Arts building is the seat of the seventh-largest chapter of the organization and the first of the more than 300 council service centers built by the Scouts around the country over the past century.
But over the years the fight between the city and the Scouts was about more than this grandiose structure in Center City.
Municipal officials said the clash stemmed from a duty to defend civil rights and an obligation to abide by a local law that bars taxpayer support for any group that discriminates. Boy Scout officials said it was about preserving their culture, protecting the right of private organizations to remain exclusive and defending traditions like requiring members to swear an oath of duty to God and prohibiting membership by anyone who is openly homosexual.
This week the Boy Scouts made their last stand and lost.
“At the end of the day, you can not be in a city-owned facility being subsidized by the taxpayers and not have language in your lease that talks about nondiscrimination,” said City Councilman Darrell L. Clarke, who represents the district where the building is located. “Negotiations are over.”
Mr. Clarke said talks ended this week when the deadline passed for the local chapter to change its policy; on June 1 the group will be evicted.
“Since we were founded, we believe that open homosexuality would be inconsistent with the values that we want to communicate with our leaders,” said Gregg Shields, national spokesman for the Boy Scouts. “A belief in God is also mentioned in the Scout oath. We believe that those values are important. Tradition is important. Our mission is to instill those values in scouts and help them make good choices over their lifetimes.”
In 2000, the Supreme Court decided a case — Boy Scouts of America v. Dale — involving an openly gay scout from New Jersey who was barred from serving as troop leader. The court ruled in a 5-to-4 decision that, as a private organization, the group had a First Amendment right to set its membership rules.
The issue became a local concern in Philadelphia in May 2003 when the national Boy Scouts held their annual meeting in the city. During the conference, a local scout challenged the organization’s policies by announcing on television that he was gay and that he was a devoted member of the organization. He was promptly dismissed by the local chapter, which is called the Cradle of Liberty Council.
Municipal officials drew the line at the Beaux Arts building because the city owns the half-acre of land where the building stands. The Boy Scouts erected the ornate building and since 1928 have leased the land from the city for a token sum of $1 a year. City officials said the market value for renting the building was about $200,000 a year, and they invited the Boy Scouts to remain as full-paying tenants.
Jeff Jubelirer, a spokesman for the local chapter, said it could not afford $200,000 a year in rent, and that such a price would require it to cut summer-camp funds for 800 needy children.
“With an epidemic of gun violence taking the lives of children almost daily in this city, it’s ironic that this administration chose to destroy programming that services thousands of children in the city,” Mr. Jubelirer said. He added that the organization serves more than 69,000 young people, mostly from the inner city, and that its programming focuses on mentoring and after-school programs instead of camping trips.
But Stacey Sobel, executive director of Equality Advocates Pennsylvania, a gay-rights advocacy group based in Philadelphia, said: “Allowing the Boy Scouts to use this building rent free sends a message that the city approves of their policy. We are not looking to kick the Boy Scouts out. We just want them to play by the same rules as everyone else in the city.”
Ms. Sobel said the city required that any organization that rented property from it agree to nondiscriminatory language in its lease. The Boy Scouts skirted the requirement by never having had to sign a lease because they were given use of the building by city ordinance in the 1920s.
Local scout leaders said they tried hard to find a compromise between the city and their own national office, and in 2005 they seemed poised to agree on a policy statement adopted by the Boy Scouts in New York, which did not renounce the prohibition against gay members, but affirmed that “prejudice, intolerance and unlawful discrimination in any form are unacceptable.”
But last year, city officials wrote Cradle of Liberty Council officials to say that suggested policy statement could not be reconciled with Philadelphia’s antidiscrimination ordinance.
On May 31, the City Council voted 16-to-1 to authorize ending the lease, though Mr. Clarke and other Council members continued trying to negotiate a settlement. Those efforts ended this week, Mr. Clarke said, adding that he had shifted his energy toward trying to see if there was a way the city could reimburse the group for improvements it had made to the property over the years.
Boy Scout officials said they do not have a cost estimate for the improvements, but Mr. Jubelirer said it would exceed $5 million.
Flipping through an aged book of fund-raising encouragement for construction of the building — from dignitaries like Helen Keller, Babe Ruth and Winston Churchill — Chuck Eaton, director of field service for the local chapter, noted how the past contrasted with the present.
Thursday, December 6, 2007
Wednesday, December 5, 2007
Image Is Everything
It was pretty cool to walk out to center court in uniform. The crowd of 1,000 + even cheered!
I believe that the image of Scouting is changing here in the "Hills". Several folks have commented to me that they "didn't realize that Boy Scouts did so many fun things" like whitewater, snow skiing, rappelling, and all of the really cool road trips like England, Sea Base, Northern Tier, and Philmont.
Some local opinions of Scouting may vary.
Here, we are the group that youth want to join and people want to support.
Tuesday, December 4, 2007
Too Much Haken?
We were the only ones active in 2005 at the end of the Todd, Todd, and Todd era. Heck, Don wasn't even going to run for Lodge Chief, but as fate would have it, he was thrust into it, and well, the rest is history in the making as he serves as our Section SR-6N Cheif and has even larger ambitions.
I was delighted to talk to Barby Newell and learn that she had 9 youth at the Banquet and things are starting to click in the Tecumseh Chapter. Cody Todd, from Gikino Ballet, had his guys there too with a book 15 inches thick full of OA info. They will be a big factor in 2008. Joel Medendorp has started a Dance Team in the Sheltowee Chapter and I expect great things from that group.
I've been told that if you look back over the history of Kawida Lodge, you will find that there has been a single strong group that has led. Right now, is our time. Nothing lasts forever, except the values learned through brotherhood, cheerfulness, and service.
Monday, December 3, 2007
2008 Vigil
As an adult leader, I am proud of my Scouts. I'm especially proud of them when they perform a flag ceremony, receive a rank advancement, but I am blown away when one of them receives the Vigil Honor! We had 3 called out for that honor Saturday night.
Andy, Billy, and Don all 3 transferred as Life Scouts when we started Troop 12. They could have easily gotten their Eagle and gone on and done other things, as some of their fellow Scouts did in old Troop 10. However, all 3 chose to stay in Scouting and have obviously excelled.
There will probably be 100+ Eagle Scouts awarded in our Council this year, and only 3 youth Vigil Honors. Have I mentioned lately how proud I am of my Scouts?
Sunday, December 2, 2007
Winter Banquet
The day started out early with Camp Promo, Staff Interviews, Leave No Trace, an impromptu Venturing meeting, Sea Base meeting, and finally the Banquet. A lot got done, but it all seems like a blur now. I just wish that we could have had more time to fellowship, but the show must go on and did it ever!
Our Tomahaken Chapter once again attained the status of Quality Chapter for the 3rd year in a row. That speaks volumes of what the leaders and Scouts from the "Hills" are doing to embody the values of the Order of the Arrow. Thanks guys!
The 2008 Lodge Officers were inducted and we have a big job ahead. 2007 was a good year.
Friday, November 30, 2007
Boys' Life
I really like "Boys' Life". I used to try and get all of my Units to get it when I was a D.E. As a volunteer, I have always found a way to be 100% Boys' Life every year. I think it is very important to encourage reading and bring Scouting into each and every home.
Plus, the jokes are great!
Thursday, November 29, 2007
Quest Award
In Venturing, Scouts can work on several different areas of study, and get their Bronze Award. Gold and Silver Award requirements are not really related.
Bronze Award Areas ---------- Advanced Study Award
Sports ----------------------------------- Quest Award
Religious Life ---------------------------Trust Award
Arts and Hobbies ---------------------- n/a
Outdoor --------------------------------- Ranger Award
Sea Scout -------------------------------- Quartermaster Award
The really strange thing that hits me about Venturing is, that it is like Cub Scouts in a way. Venture Scouts carry around their books and when they complete something, you date and sign their book. It works.
Wednesday, November 28, 2007
2008 Schedule
I'm setting here looking at our 2008 calendar and it is booked solid. Not many blank squares left and that is O.K.. That is how we like it.
A wise old man once told me, "Troop 12 squeezes 3 years worth of Scouting into 1." So how old does that make us in dog years?
Tuesday, November 27, 2007
Camp Promo Meeting
December 1, Stamler Dining Hall, Camp McKee.
Summer Camp Kick Off 10:00 am
Camp Staff Interviews 11:00 am
Lunch Break (Cathy's Country Kitchen!)
Leave No Trace Workshop
OA Unit Elections
Help set up for Banquet
Sea Base 2008 Meeting 5:00 pm
OA Winter Banquet 6:00 pm
BUSY day!
Monday, November 26, 2007
Changes
Tenderfoot Rank
Revised requirement 9:
Explain the importance of the buddy system as it relates to your personal safety on outings and in your neighborhood. Describe what a bully is and how you should respond to one.
Second Class Rank
New requirement 8b:
Explain the three R’s of personal safety and protection.
First Class Rank
New requirement 12:
Describe the three things you should avoid doing related to use of the Internet. Describe a cyber bully and how you should respond to one.
Friday, November 23, 2007
World Politics
Basically, it meant no World Jamboree for us at Sweden in 2011! Not a good thing.
Last week, things got straightened out and seem to be on the right track now. I find it strange that all of the Scouts at the World Jamboree got along great, but the adults have to bang heads just to agree.
I guess after this Blog Post, I won't be getting the Silver World Award square knot any time soon?
Thursday, November 22, 2007
Wednesday, November 21, 2007
New Eagle Scout
Andy passed and is our latest Eagle Scout!
"Pikeville Andy Smith" is becoming a Staff legend at McKee working in the "Andy-Craft" area. Don't let the long hair and his quite nature fool you. He leads our Troop in nights camping and is an excellent teacher with new Scouts.
Congratulations ANDY!
Tuesday, November 20, 2007
Ink Pen
I've carried around this same ink pen, every business day, for the last 21 years. It has seen several big dollar deals and still signs some good size checks.
I got this BSA Cross pen from my Field Director, Jim Kesterson, for being in his wedding. I told him that I would keep it as long as he was married. Things got a little bumpy in that marriage after a while and I offered it back to him, but he thought things could be worked out.
They had moved back home to TN and Jim was again working for the Sequoyah Council. He was happy.
The place they were living in caught fire and they got out, but he went back in for something or some reason. He died.
Jim Kesterson was a great friend of Scouting, a good professional Scouter, and a wonderful friend. I miss him.
Monday, November 19, 2007
Dance Team?
Items discussed included: AC 5, completion of Quality Chapter status in 2007, Chapter website http://www.oa-tomahaken.org/ ,
Winter Banquet, McKee Staff and CIT jobs, Service flaps, our December Christmas Party, but our main focus was watching a beginners Indian Dance video.
Glen Felty and Doug Ramey are passionate about starting a dance team for our Lodge. They and a few youth are going to the Ittawamba American Indian Seminar next month.
As long as I have known Glen and Doug, whatever they set out to do, it gets done and it is always awesome. Let the drum beats begin!