Calendar Of Events

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

A Century Of Scouting

What organization in the Kansas City has members, who have spent more than 5 million hours combined exposing youth to nature, so far this year? 5 million hours works out to be around 590 years or more than 7000 months. That is a lot of time, and a lot of devotion to a single organization.

What organization is it; it could only be one, the Boy Scouts.

In 2007, just in the Heart of America Council (Kansas City Area), 14,851 Boys spent an average of 9 days at camp. In addition to the boys, 7,853 adults donated 9 days of their vacation time and another 1,291 gave additional vacation days in order to provide adult leadership to their boys.

This year is the 100 year centennial of Boy Scouting, and Scouts from all over the world returned to Britain, the birthplace of Boy Scouting. On August 1st the Scouting Jamboree’s 40,000 participants descended on the British town of Chelmsford, including many representatives from the Kansas City area.

Just as today, as the nineteenth century ended, adults on both sides of the Atlantic looked at the younger generation of boys and worried. In teeming cities, poor immigrant boys seemed destined for delinquency or poverty. Ernest Thompson Seton, a Canadian naturalist, wildlife painter, and children's author, observed at the time, "It is the exception when we see a boy respectful of his superiors and obedient to his parents . . . handy with tools and capable of taking care of himself, under all circumstances . . . whose life is absolutely governed by the safe old moral standards."

Enter British war hero, Lord Baden-Powell. A distinguished veteran of the Boer War in 1903, Lord Baden-Powell shared the concerns of his contemporary’s concerning the young men of his era. But he noticed that the boys loved reading the scouting manual he had written, and several local teachers urged him to revise the manual for boys. Lord Baden-Powell, inspired by Seton's Woodcraft Indians handbook, took up the challenge and in 1907 wrote Scouting for Boys. And thus Boy Scouting was born.

Scouting grew quickly, leading the famous author, H.G. Wells to write, just three years after publication of Scouting for Boys, "a new sort of little boy—a most agreeable development of the slouching, cunning, cigarette-smoking, town-bred youngster—a small boy in a khaki hat, with bare knees and athletic bearing, earnestly engaged in wholesome and invigorating games—the Boy Scout."

The first American edition, in 1911, the Scout Handbook for Boys, included contributions from famous American naturalists, stories about Abraham Lincoln, the Pilgrims and American Government. The 1913 edition included a reminder from Chief Scout Citizen Theodore Roosevelt that "manliness in its most rigorous form can be and ought to be accompanied by unselfish consideration for the rights and interests of others."

What is it about Boy Scouting that has engendered such loyalty, and popularity amongst its members? Why has Boy Scouting lasted for 100 years with no sign of losing its popularity? Why has its Kansas City members spent more than 5 million hours at camp this summer?

The answer is obvious; there is a definite need in our society for Scouting and Scouting meets that need superbly.

The Scout Oath and Law state a clearly defined code of ethical and moral conduct. If you think about it, you'll see that their ideals - trustworthy, loyal, helpful, friendly, courteous, kind, obedient, cheerful, thrifty, brave, clean, and reverent - can become very concrete goals for young people. Far from being "new and improved", these ideals have been around since the very beginning of Scouting.

My two sons and I have had the privilege of belonging to Boy Scouts, and I think that all three of us have gained a great deal from our involvement. My oldest son achieved the rank of Eagle and my youngest is well on his way to doing the same. And I am the proud parent of two boys that are both leaders amongst their peers.

I’ll never regret making the decision to get my boys involved in Scouting, and to those parents trying to decide which of the many opportunities their boys should get involved in this fall, may I make an observation. In the future will your son be able to put in his resume or college application that he achieved the rank of Eagle Scout or not, that rests on the decisions you make today.

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

News from the Thunderbird District



Thunderbird District Links
  • Thunderbird District Web Page
  • Centennial Quality Awards Program
  • Cub Scout Training
  • Boy Scout Training

Join our list
Join our mailing list!

Greetings!

*SEPTEMBER ROUNDTABLE - NEW LOCATION*
Make sure you tell your friends!

Roundtable for September 4, 2007 will be held at Aldersgate United Methodist Church
350 SW 150 Highway
Lee's Summit, MO 64082

We will be back in our regular location for October.



Thunderbird District
Heart of America Council, BSA

Phone: 816-569-4971
Fax: 816-942-8086
Web: http://hoac-bsa.org

HOAC - Catholic Committee on Scouting Retreat

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Heart of America Council, BSA
Catholic Committee on Scouting
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Upcoming Event
Catholic Committee on Scouting Retreat
The upcoming retreat, sponsored by the Catholic Committee on Scouting and put on by Venturing Crew 875, would like to invite both Catholic and non-Catholic Scouts to attend. In fact, several non-Catholic units attend our retreats annually as their September Campout.
Main Retreat
The annual Catholic Scouting Retreat will be held September 7-9 at Rotary Youth Camp in Lee's Summit. The is the one chance per year that all area Catholic scouts have the opportunity to camp together and experience a fun faith-filled weekend.

Our theme is Disciplship = Life. We have split our program into five areas: Learn, Teach, Follow, Serve, and Grow. As attendees visit each program area, they will learn about discipleship, and participate in fun instructional exercises. There will be a penance service on Saturday evening where several priest will be on-hand to hear confessions. The retreat concludes on Sunday morning after mass. This retreat is for scouts 5th grade and older.

Day-Retreat
In addition, we are offering a corresponding day-retreat for Cub Scouts. Now in its third year, this program was designed to introduce the younger scouts to the retreat experience. This day-retreat is for scouts 4th-grade and under. It will be held on Saturday, September 8, along-side the main retreat, at Rotary Camp.

See the attachments for some general info on both retreats, including the tentative schedules. Both retreats will be held on the weekend after Labor Day at Rotary Camp.
Catholic Committee on Scouting Weekend Retreat information and Schedule
Contact Information
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Thomas Jewitt
Advisor, Crew 875
816-537-6104

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Troop 42: Aug/Sept Newsletter

CALENDAR AT-A-GLANCE

 

Aug 27

Mon

Reg Mtg & Cit. of the Nation Merit Badge 7pm

Aug 28

Tues

Parent Mtg 7pm

Sept 3

Mon

NO MEETING

Sept 4

Tues

Round Table at Hickman Mills HS

Sept 10

Mon

Reg Mtg & Cit. of the Nation Merit Badge 7pm

Sept 15

Sat

Fund-raiser, Distribute Lakewood directories.

Details TBA

Sept 17

Mon

Reg Mtg, Plan Campout, 7pm

Sept22

Sat

Campout at Longview & Trip to Liberty Memorial

Sept 24

Mon

PLC & QM mtg 7pm

Sept 25

Tues

Parent Mtg 7pm

 

RULES REGARDING CAMPOUTS: A MINIMUM of 4 registered adult leaders must sign up for any monthly campout activity by the Monday evening prior to any weekend campout, or the campout will be canceled immediately.

 

NEW TROOP ROSTER & CALENDAR:  The new roster & calendar is available. Pick one up at the next Monday night meeting. Calendar correction: Add the Pancake Breakfast to your personal calendar and Troop calendar – May 3, 2008.

 

UPCOMING EVENTS:

Oct 13 – Camporee at Blue/Gray Park; Nov 10 – Shotgun Shooting & campout at Smithville Lake; Dec 1 – Campout & Trip to the Cosmosphere in Hutchinson KS.

 

UPCOMING FUND-RAISERS:

Sept 15 – Lakewood Directories; Oct 13 – Fruit Cobblers at the Lee's Summit Chili Fest; Fall Popcorn Sales, details coming soon; Winter wreath sales details coming soon; May 3 – Pancake Breakfast. We need someone to take over

 

TROOP COMMITTEES: If you're interested in serving on a Troop committee contact Keith Martin or any current committee member. Parent involvement is vital if Troop 42 is to thrive. 

 

Bartle Summer Camp: Congratulations to Greg Foss on being awarded the title of Sachem in the Tribe of Mic O Say! This is a great honor.

In addition, Troop 42 now has 8 new braves, 9 new Warriors, and had 6 paint recipients!

Saturday, August 18, 2007

IMPORTANT - Troop 42 Monday night's meeting info

From: Don Dyer dwdyer314@comcast.net

This Monday will be the start of two important merit badge classes. Mr. Hobbs will begin teaching Citizenship in the Nation and Mr. Foss will begin teaching Personal Fitness. Both of these badges are Eagle required.

The Citizenship badge will culminate with a tour of the Liberty Memorial Saturday, September 22nd followed by a campout at Longview Lake.

According to our records the following Scouts are in need of these badges. If you need both badges, you should take Citizenship in the Nation. If you already have both badges, you should come to the meeting anyway as there will be something else for you to do (NOT grunt work, I promise).

Please take advantage of this opportunity to work on these badges.

Citizenship in the Nation:

Fields, Levi

Glorioso, Nicholas

Grayson, Christopher

Kuklenski, Austin

Marr, Andrew

Smith, Alex

Smith, Keegan

Tarpley, Matthew

Wait, Garret

Personal Fitness:

Andreasen, David

Ashley, Jacob

Bolden, Brendon

Brandon, Kevin

Cowing, Jeff

Cudmore, Garrett

Daniel, Kevin

Davis, Arthur

Duboc, Samuel

Dyer, Kelly

Dyer, Kyle

Fields, Levi

Fiorello, Dominick

Glorioso, Nicholas

Grayson, Christopher

Kuklenski, Austin

Marr, Andrew

Marr, Samuel

Miller, Sean

Muller, Matthew

Philyaw, Daniel

Rogers, William

Skinner, Zach

Smith, Alex

Smith, Keegan

Swetnam, Andrew

Tarpley, Andrew

Tarpley, Matthew

Wait, Garret

I know there are 'Meet Your Teacher' nights at the elementary schools. Please come even if you are a few minutes late.

If you have any questions, please give me a call.

Don Dyer
Hodges & Associates
816-478-8844
816-478-9044 fax
816-678-3514 cell


Thursday, August 16, 2007

HOAC Camping/Program August Updates

Heart of America Council, BSA - Camping/Program Updates
August 2007 Updates
2007 Camp Attendance Totals for HOAC Residence Camping Opportunites
Scouts - 14,851
Leaders - 7,853
Part-time Leaders - 1,291

Wood Badge Training has Openings
Wood Badge training is an experience like no other!!! You will take part in several days of classroom training followed by several days of training and fun in the outdoors with your patrol. This training is a once in a lifetime experience with other Scouts from the area.
The fee for the course is $200 (including a non-refundable and non-transferable deposit of $50.00) and includes all meals and training material. Please complete a Wood Badge participant application and together with the registration deposit, mail or bring to the Council Service Center. Please click the Wood Badge graphic to be directed to the Council website for your Wood Badge Forms.
University of Scouting - Saturday, November 3, 2007
Start watching your mail in September. University of Scouting Program materials are being mailed to all registered adult leaders in the Heart of America Council.
University of Scouting is a Council wide Cub, Boy Scout & Venturing Leader learning extravaganza where you pick your own classes. It's an annual get-together, a conference, a convention, a big fun-filled experience where ALL Scout Leaders increase their knowledge, improve their skills and gain enthusiastic attitudes about Scouting. It's an opportunity to add the fun and pizzazz to your program.
Fall Fellowship Weekend - September 14-16, 2007
Arrowmen, don't miss the 2007 OA Fall Fellowshiop Weekend. Reservation are now being accepted with a dealine of September 7, 2007. Please visit the Council website by clicking the picture to the right and print off you registration form today.
Truman Library Merit Badge Program - September 22, 2007 8:00 am to 1:30 pm
Scout can earn all the requirements for American Heritage or Citizenship in the Nation during this merit badge clinic. The cost is $10.00 with a small snack provided.
On-line Registration will begin at 12:00 am on Monday, August 20, 2007. This event is a participant registration (there is no unit registration), so be prepared to enter each participant individually (first name, last name, district, unit #, participants address, emergency contact name, phone number and the merit badge that the Scout wishes to attend). Registration is limited to 100 Scouts on a first come first serve basis.
General Camping Updates for 2008 Information
With the 2007 Camp Season concluding, units are trying to plan their 2008 Camping Season. Please be aware that 2008 Camp Draw information will go in the mail to the Registered Committee Chair around the first part of October.
For those wishing to apply for Camp Staff, the 2008 Camp Staff Application will be sent to all previous Camp Staff members around the middle of October. The application will also be placed on the Council website at www.hoac-bsa.org under resources and forms around the same time period.
Heart of America Council, BSA


Monday, August 13, 2007