Woods of Wisdom, Troop Program Features

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Aquatics
Boating Canoeing
Athletics
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Camping
  • Winter Camping

  • Ceremonies
  • Campfire
  • Cross Over
  • Courts of Honor
  • Eagle Scout
  • Flag
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  • Citizenship
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  • Dutch Oven
  • Utensilless Cooking

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  • Stoves

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    Flag Ceremony

    (The Us. and troop flags are placed at the end of the room. Scoutmaster stands between flags; senior officers line up behind him. Small table with three lighted candles is set before the Us. flag. Scouts form a semicircle with an opening in the center of the line. Senior patrol leader stands inside the circle. The guide and candidate stand in the rear of the room. Lights are out.)

    Guide (knocking from outside): I have a boy with me who desires to become a Scout in Troop
    Senior Patrol Leader: Has the candidate completed his Scout requirements?

    Guide: He has.
    Senior Patrol Leader: Bring him inside our circle. (Pause) Does some member of the troop recommend this candidate?

    Boy Scout: I recommend that he be admitted to our troop.
    Guide (to Scoutmaster): Candidate ________ (name) is now ready to become a member of our Scouting family.

    Scoutmaster: You may proceed with the installation.

    Guide: The flag of the United States stands before you, made visible by the light of the three candles representing the three parts of the Scout Oath. In taking the Scout Oath and making it a part of yourself, you will have a clearly lighted path that leads to good citizenship. Please grasp the flag staff in your left hand, raise your right hand in the Scout sign, and repeat the Scout Oath.
    Candidate (give' Scout Oath): On my honor ...

    Guide (to Scoutmaster): Sir, Candidate ________ (name) is now ready to be invested as a Boy Scout of Troop ____________ Scoutmaster (to candidate): Please face the audience. (Scoutmaster presents card and insignia, asks candidate's parent to present the badge, and says a few appropriate words). (To senior patrol leader): Senior patrol leader, I now turn over Boy_______________
    Scout (name) of the _______________ Patrol to you as a member of the troop.

    Senior Patrol Leader: Patrol Leader __________________ (name) of the ________
    Patrol will receive you as a member of his patrol. (Patrol leader receives new Boy Scout, presents him with patrol emblem, and closes circle with new Scout in his patrol. Lights are turned on. Patrol members welcome him.)

    Investiture 1

    The notable thing about this investiture is its simplicity. There are many more elaborate, more impressive ceremonies, but they can be unsuccessful. Many fail because a Scout forgets his lines or the staging is too complicated. Note how this ceremony is kept simple and natural, yet impressive from beginning to end.

    (The troop is lined up along two sides of the room, troop officers are at the front of the room, parents are seated. The patrol leader accompanies the candidate to the shadowy room. Only one candle is burning.)

    Patrol Leader (replying to the Scoutmaster's chal-
    lenge): I bring Candidate , who
    has completed his Scout work and is ready to be received into the fellowship of our troop. (The two walk together across the room and stop in front of a table holding a rough log candelabram. The Patrol leader steps back a pace and the candidate stands there, his eyes gradually adjusting to the iim light, aware that there are Scouts on either side and his parents and others in the darkness ,ehind him. But his eyes are on the Scoutmaster md troop leaders who face him across the burning candie's glow.)

    Patrol Leader (steps from his position behind the table, picks up the lighted candle, and speaks directly to the candidate): This candle represents the spirit of Scouting. As we welcome you into the Followship of Troop,__________ we want you to stop and think about what it means to be Boy Scout.

    Sure, it's a lot of fun, but more than that it's getting along with other people. It's doing your part, helping others all the time, learning to lead, too. It's living up to the Scout Oath and Law- and believe me that's a man's job! It's a Good Turn daily and the motto "Be Prepared." That's -" what the spirit of Scouting means to us in Troop _______ . Now, listen to the Scout Law. Patrol leader hands burning candle to a Scout who steps up to the table.)

    Boy Scout (lights the first candle on the log and
    turns to candidate);________________ (name), a
    Scout is trustworthy. That means that everybody you live and work with can always trust your word. (The Scout hands the spirit of Scouting candle to the Scout next to him and that boy lights the second candle, turns to candidate, and speaks simply but impressively about the meaning of loyalty. So it continues, through 12 points of the Scout Law. Each Scout says only one or two sincere, forceful sentences. There should be none of the groping for words that so often spoils ceremonies. The twelfth Scout returns candle to the senior patrol leader.)

    Patrol Leader:
    _____________________(name), you
    have heard the Scout Law. Will you do your best to live up to it?
    Candidate (his face glowing in the light of 12 burning candles): I will.

    Patrol Leader:
    You will now be given the Scout
    Oath by our Scoutmaster, Mr. __________________
    (name). Please raise your right hand in the Scout sign.

    Scoutmaster: Repeat each part ofthe Scout Oath
    with me,_____________________ (name), because
    it's your oath, your promise to live the life of a Scout. On my honor ... (Candidate picks up the words with him As they repeat the Oath, the Scoutmaster lights the three candles that represent the three parts.)

    Candidate is asked to face the audience. The Scoutmaster steps forward, pins the badge on candidate's shirt, and, in a few words, tells what it means to be a member of the Boy Scouts of America. The assistant Scoutmaster then puts a new troop neckerchief around the candidate's neck and says a word about what is expected of him as a
    member of Troop __________-the best troop in town!

    That is the cue for the patrol leader to pin a patrol medallion on the new Boy Scout's right
    sleeve and to tell him that (name) ________________ Patrol (the best patrol in Troop _______ ) is glad to have him as a member. Then the patrol leader takes the new Boy Scout by the arm to where the other Scouts are standing in line. They shake hands and everything is informal.

    Nothing is memorized. A little equipment, a properly set stage, and a few Scouts and leaders speaking from the heart are all that's needed to make this an evening the new Boy Scout will remember for a long, long time.

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