Boy Scouts
Boy Scouts
Boy Scouts
Name _________________________________________ Webelos den number ___________________________ Pack number _________________________________ Webelos den leader _______________________________ Webelos den leaders phone number: ___________________________________________________ Bobcat badge earned on _________________________ Webelos badge earned on _______________________ Arrow of Light Award earned on____________________
This is my
YOU SHOULD USE THIS BOOK IF: You are a boy who has completed the third grade or you are 10 years old.
Webelos Handbook
Contents
Webelos Scout Parent Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Welcome to Your Webelos Scout Den! . . . . . . 23 Rank Advancement and Special Awards . . . . 39 Activity Badges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81 Physical Skills Activity Badge Group Aquanaut 83 Athlete 123 Fitness 245 Sportsman 455 Mental Skills Activity Badge Group Artist 101 Scholar 391 Showman 429 Traveler 461 Community Activity Badge Group Citizen 143 Communicator 165 Family Member 227 Readyman 365 Technology Activity Badge Group Craftsman 197 Engineer 211 Handyman 299 Scientist 401 Outdoor Activity Badge Group Forester 259 Geologist 279 Naturalist 317 Outdoorsman 343 Index and Credits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 475
Parents, Guardians, or Other Adult Family Members: This is your part of the Webelos Handbook. It tells what this part of Cub Scouting for older boys is all about, how it operates, and how you can help your son as he joins the exciting, challenging Webelos Scout den.
Note: In the front of this book there is a tear-out section for you on youth protection. Please do tear it out (that makes the book easier to handle), read it carefully, and keep it at hand for easy reference.
Character Connections
Cub Scoutings Character Connections program helps your son know, commit, and practice Cub Scoutings 12 core values while enjoying fun and adventure in his Webelos den. This symbol identifies Character Connections throughout this book and in other Cub Scouting materials.
Character Development
Since its origin, the Scouting progam has been an educational experience concerned with values. In 1910, the first activities for Scouts were designed to build character, physical fitness, practical skills, and service. These elements were part of the original Cub Scout program and continue to be part of Cub Scouting today. Character development should extend into every aspect of a boys life. Character development should also extend into every aspect of Cub Scouting. Cub Scout leaders should strive to use Cub Scoutings 12 core values throughout all elements of the programservice projects, ceremonies, games, skits, songs, crafts, and all the other activities enjoyed at den and pack meetings.
Cub Scoutings 12 Core Values 1 . Citizenship: Contributing service and showing responsibility to local, state, and national communities. 2 . Compassion: Being kind and considerate, and showing concern for the well-being of others. 3 . Cooperation: Being helpful and working together with others toward a common goal. 4 . Courage: Being brave and doing what is right regardless of our fears, the difficulties, or the consequences. 5 . Faith: Having inner strength and confidence based on our trust in God. 6 . Health and Fitness: Being personally committed to keeping our minds and bodies clean and fit. 7 . Honesty: Telling the truth and being worthy of trust. 8 . Perseverance: Sticking with something and not giving up, even if it is difficult. 9 . Positive Attitude: Being cheerful and setting our minds to look for and find the best in all situations. 10 . Resourcefulness: Using human and other resources to their fullest. 11 . Respect: Showing regard for the worth of something or someone. 12 . Responsibility: Fulfilling our duty to God, country, other people, and ourselves.
Pack Committee
Cubmaster
Assistant Cubmaster
Den Chiefs
Den Chiefs
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Webelos Scouts are encouraged to have several parent/son overnight camping trips during the year, as well as other activities that prepare them for becoming Boy Scouts. Webelos Scouts have some distinctive choices in their uniform. (Youll find Webelos Uniform and Insignia starting on page 20.) Webelos Scouts are still in Cub Scouting. They take part in Cub Scout pack meetings, events, and outings. But the Webelos den also makes its own plans and enjoys many activities that are not age-appropriate for younger boys.
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An engineer, for example, could be involved with the Engineer activity badge. The requirements are challenging for a boy but simple for an engineer. He or she could explain what an engineer does and guide the boys in building a catapult, if the den chooses that project. If youre skilled with tools and know about home repairs and car and bicycle care, you could help with Handyman activity badge projects. Take a look at the activity badge requirements in this bookSportsman, Scientist, Communicator, Showman, and the restand see where you might fit in. Sharing what you know with your son and his friends will be a great experience. (In addition to the activity badge areas, family members will have other opportunities to help at meetings and events.) The Webelos den leader (or another adult the leader designates) signs or initials each requirement your son completes. After completing the necessary requirements for one activity badge, hell receive his badge (a small metal emblem to attach to his cap or Webelos colors) during a pack meeting ceremony. Encourage and help your son earn as many of the 20 activity badges as possible, plus the Webelos badge and the Arrow of Light Award. Requirements for all badges and awards are in this Webelos Handbook.
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During the pack meeting recognition ceremony, your son will receive any badges he has earned. Be sure to attend so you can pin on his newest badge. Hell be proud of his accomplishment and proud to have you doing the honors. When he has completed the fifth grade and is at least 10 years old, or is age 11, or has earned the Arrow of Light Award and is at least 10 years old, hell be ready to continue along the Scouting trail that leads to a Boy Scout troop. This will be a highlight of his young life, and youll want to share the ceremony with him. His graduation will take place at a pack meetinghis last.
The opportunity to work with your son at this age is a precious one. Keep in mind the Cub Scout motto, Do Your Best. If you and your son strive for your best while he is a Webelos Scout, youll have a great, productive time together.
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and their families to be active in their own faith, in keeping with the BSA Declaration of Religious Principle. From the non-sectarian nature of BSA, it naturally follows that the leadership for your sons spiritual development, both within and outside Cub Scouting, must come primarily from you. Your son will look to you as his example of how to learn and perform his duty to God. The Webelos Scout program provides support through faith-related requirements for rank advancement and activity badges and by awarding religious emblems he earns with your support and that of your religious or faith-based organization. On a national level, BSA works closely with P.R.A.Y., a nationwide non-profit organization that coordinates many organized faiths religious emblem curricula and standards in youth organizations. (P.R.A.Y. stands for Program for Religious Activity with Youth.) A visit to their Web site at http://www.praypub. org can help if you have questions about what religious emblem your son can earn or if you need more information about it. Your local council of churches or your BSA local council service center should be able to help, as well. Many local councils and districts offer organized opportunities for Scouts of all ages to earn their religious emblems while meeting and sharing fellowship with other Scouts of their faith.
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Hiking
The boys will go on occasional nature hikes with the Webelos den leader and some other adults, parents, and guardians. Whether or not you go along, ensure a good experience for your son by helping him prepare. Hell need good socks, comfortable walking shoes, proper clothing, and food to take on the trail.
Obtaining a Uniform
The uniform and uniform accessories may be purchased at stores that are distributors for the Boy Scouts of America. Your Webelos den leader or Cubmaster will know the location of the nearest one. Suggest that your son earn his uniform by working for it. You might arrange to pay him for special chores around the house. Or he might work around the neighborhoodshoveling snow, running errands, taking care of pets while their owners are away, etc. Some Cub Scout packs maintain a uniform bank with experienced uniforms for new members.
20 Webelos Scout Parent Guide
Friends of Scouting
Cub Scouting in your area is administered by an organization called the local council. (Its listed in the telephone book under Boy Scouts of America.) The local council provides services to Cub Scout packs, Boy Scout troops, Varsity Scout teams, and Venturing crews. It operates camping facilities, conducts training for leaders, plans and runs councilwide events for all members, and works continually to introduce more young people to Scouting. Most councils receive some support from United Way; however, the majority of council funding comes from other sources, including indiWebelos Scout Parent Guide 21
vidual contributions through Friends of Scouting, camping and activities revenue, product sales, and other methods. Each year, usually in the spring, the local council conducts a special funding campaign called Friends of Scouting (FOS). Parents, guardians, Scouters (volunteers and professionals in Scouting), former members, and other friends of Scouting are invited to contribute. A member of your pack committee will be assigned to ask the packs families to give to FOS. By donating to FOS, youll help ensure good Scouting for your Webelos Scout.
Webelos badge requirement 1 asks your son to have you read this parent guide. Please sign your name beside that requirement on page 49, under Approved by.
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This book tells you all about the great new adventures you and your friends in the Webelos den can choose. If youve been a Tiger Cub or a Wolf or Bear Cub Scout, you probably know Webelos Scouts in your pack, and youve seen their plaid neckerchiefs and the colorful activity badges theyve earned. Now youre a Webelos Scoutone of the older boys in the packand ready for challenging activities and outdoor fun.
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the Webelos emblem, a plaid Webelos neckerchief, and a Webelos neckerchief slide. The navy blue Cub Scout belt may be worn with both uniforms; a Webelos belt buckle is available. The official Boy Scout olive web belt may be worn with the tan/olive uniform; however, Academics and Sports belt loops fit only on the blue belt. Youll be proud to wear your uniform at all Webelos den meetings, pack meetings, and special events. It shows youre one of the older boys in the pack, on the trail to Boy Scouting.
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Placement of Awards
Activity badges are small metal emblems. You earn one each time you complete the requirements for one of the 20 activity badges. They are pinned onto the plaid front panel of the Webelos cap. The shield inside the cap should be folded down when attaching awards and then folded up to cover the backs of the pins. Another way to wear the activity badges is to pin them to the Webelos colors, which are optional. The colors are three ribbonsone gold, one green, one redfastened together at the top by a pin with the word Webelos on it. The colors are pinned to the right shirt sleeve just below the U.S. flag. (The colors will cover the den emblem and Quality Unit insignia.) The two rank advancements for Webelos Scouts, the Webelos badge and the Arrow of Light Award, the highest award a boy can earn in Cub Scouting, are cloth patches. They are sewn onto the uniform shirt. There are two different Webelos rank badges. The one to be awarded depends on personal preference. 1. A tan oval-shaped cloth badge with an embroidered Webelos symbol. This badge is worn on the tan uniform shirt. When a boy wears the oval-shaped Webelos badge on his uniform, he does not include Arrow Points or Tiger Cub, Bobcat, Wolf, or Bear rank badges. 2. A diamond-shaped cloth badge with a gold and light blue embroidered Webelos symbol. Worn on the left pocket of the blue or tan uniform shirt with the other badges. Webelos Scouts who did not earn the Tiger Cub badge may wear the
32 Welcome to Your Webelos Scout Den!
diamond-shaped Webelos badge in the same place the Tiger Cub badge would otherwise be worn. The Arrow of Light Award, a gold arrow embroidered on a tan background with a blue border, is worn centered below the left pocket. This is the highest award in Cub Scouting and the only Cub Scout badge that may be worn on the Boy Scout uniform. The compass points emblem is a blue, red, and gold embroidered emblem awarded for earning activity badges beyond those required for the Webelos badge. It is attached to the button of the right pocket. Three metal compass points are attached to the emblem when they are earned. Boys who earned belt loops previously in the Cub Scout Academics and Sports program may continue to wear them. Webelos Scouts may also earn and wear the belt loops. These awards are square metal emblems that slide onto the navy blue belt.
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SHOULDER SEaM
2005
2005
LEFT SLEEVE
WEBELOS SCOUT LEFT POCKET (BLUE OR Tan SHIRT) WEBELOS SCOUT LEFT POCKET (Tan SHIRT)
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Activity Badges
While you are a Webelos Scout, you can work on any or all of the 20 Webelos Scout activity badges! You earn them by completing the requirements with your den or at home (with your Webelos den leaders approval). During den meetings one month, you might concentrate on swimming, and the next month you could be conducting scientific experiments. Activity badges are colorful metal emblems you pin on the front of your Webelos cap. Or you can pin them to the Webelos colors, which are the gold, green, and red ribbons you may decide to wear on your right sleeve.
Welcome to Your Webelos Scout Den! 35
Webelos Badge
As soon as you start earning activity badges, you can look forward to earning the Webelos badge. The Webelos rank is the fifth rank in Cub Scouting (coming after Tiger Cub, Bobcat, Wolf, and Bear). As you earn it, youll learn a lot about Boy Scouting. As part of your Webelos badge work, you need to earn activity badges, each one from a different activity badge group. Two of the badges must be Fitness, from the Physical Skills Group, and Citizen, from the Community Group. The other activity badge may be from the Mental Skills, Technology, or Outdoor Group. (Youll find all the activity badges listed in their groups on page 74.) There are two Webelos badge options: diamond-shaped and oval. Whichever you choose, you wear the Webelos badge on your left shirt pocket.
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k c
b.
c.
Commit: Discuss these questions with your family. Why is a promise important? Why is it important for people to trust you when you give your word? When might it be difficult to keep your word? List examples. Practice: Discuss with family members why it is important to be trustworthy and honest and how you can do your best to be honest when you are doing the activities in Cub Scouting.
2. Say the Law of the Pack. Tell what it means. 3. Tell what Webelos means. 4. Make the Cub Scout sign. Tell what it means. 5. Show the Cub Scout handshake. Tell what it means. 6. Say the Cub Scout motto. 7. Give the Cub Scout salute. Tell what it means. 8. With your parent or guardian, complete the Bobcat Requirements section of How to Protect Your Children from Child Abuse: A Parents Guide. (The guide is a pull-out section that came in the front of this book.)
42 Rank Advancement and Special Awards
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To Help Other People This means thinking about other people and their needs. Sometimes this isnt easy, but a Webelos Scout will help others when he can.
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The Cub Scout helps the pack go. When you become a Webelos Scout, youre a member of a Webelos den and a Cub Scout pack. Youll help the pack GO by doing whatever you can to help the pack run smoothly. By doing your part, youll help everyone in your den and pack get the most out of all their activities. Help the pack GO by attending all meetings and following the leaders. Your pack will be better in every way because youre in it. The pack helps the Cub Scout grow. Youll grow in skills and knowledge while youre a Webelos Scout. Thats what all the pack leaders want for you, so they plan den and pack activities to help all the Cub Scouts grow. In your den meetings, while youre having fun earning activity badges, youll learn new skills and new ways of doing things. Earning the Arrow of Light Award, the highest award in Cub Scouting, will help you prepare for Boy Scouting. Thats how the pack helps you grow. The Cub Scout gives goodwill. Goodwill means cheerfulness and kindness. You give goodwill by having a cheerful attitude, by being kind in what you say and do, and by looking for ways to help other people. Smile and helpthose are two Webelos Scout words to remember.
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Do Your Best.
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8. Faith After completing the rest of requirement 8, do these (a, b, and c): a. b.
c.
k c p
faith.
Commit: Tell how these faith experiences help you live your duty to God. Name one faith practice that you will continue to do in the future. Practice: After doing these requirements, tell what you have learned about your beliefs.
And do one of these (d OR e): d. Earn the religious emblem of your faith.* e. Do two of these: Attend the mosque, church, synagogue, temple, or other religious organization of your choice; talk with your religious leader about your beliefs. Tell your family and your Webelos den leader what you learned Discuss with your family and your Webelos den leader how your religious beliefs fit in with the Scout Oath and Scout Law and what character-building traits your religious beliefs have in common with the Scout Oath and Scout Law. With your religious leader, discuss and make a plan to do two things you think will help you draw nearer to God. Do these things for a month. (1) _____________________________ (2) _____________________________
50 Rank Advancement and Special Awards
For at least a month, pray or meditate reverently each day as taught by your family and by your church, temple, mosque, synagogue, or religious group. Under the direction of your religious leader, do an act of service for someone else. Talk about your service with your family and your Webelos den leader. Tell them how it made you feel. List at least two ways you believe you have lived according to your religious beliefs.
* If you earned your faiths religious emblem earlier in Cub Scouting and your faith does not have a Webelos religious emblem, you must complete requirement 8e. Completion of requirement 8e does not qualify a youth to receive the religious emblem of his faith. Webelos Scout religious emblems are listed on pages 6869.
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Your Uniform
Webelos Scouts may wear either the blue uniform they wore as Cub Scouts or the tan shirt and olive green trousers they will wear as Boy Scouts. You and your family decide which one you will wear. With either basic uniform, Webelos Scouts wear the Webelos cap, Webelos neckerchief, Webelos neckerchief slide, and the navy blue Cub Scout belt; a Webelos belt buckle is available.
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Scout Oath
On my honor I will do my best to do my duty to God and my country and to obey the Scout Law; to help other people at all times; to keep myself physically strong, mentally awake, and morally straight.
Staying mentally awake means learn all you can, be curious, and ask questions. Being morally straight means to live your life with honesty, to be clean in your speech and actions, and to be a person of strong character.
Scout Law
A Scout is trustworthy, loyal, helpful, friendly, courteous, kind, obedient, cheerful, thrifty, brave, clean, and reverent.
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A Scout is COURTEOUS . A Scout is polite to everyone regardless of age or position. He knows that using good manners makes it easier for people to get along. A Scout is KIND . A Scout knows there is strength in being gentle. He treats others as he wants to be treated. Without good reason, he does not harm or kill any living thing. A Scout is OBEDIENT . A Scout follows the rules of his family, school, and troop. He obeys the laws of his community and country. If he thinks these rules and laws are unfair, he tries to have them changed in an orderly manner rather than disobeying them. A Scout is CHEERFUL . A Scout looks for the bright side of life. He cheerfully does tasks that come his way. He tries to make others happy. A Scout is THRIFTY . A Scout works to pay his way and to help others. He saves for the future. He protects and conserves natural resources. He carefully uses time and property. A Scout is BRAVE . A Scout can face danger although he is afraid. He has the courage to stand for what he thinks is right even if others laugh at him or threaten him. A Scout is CLEAN . A Scout keeps his body and mind fit. He chooses the company of those who live by high standards. He helps keep his home and community clean. A Scout is REVERENT . A Scout is reverent toward God. He is faithful in his religious duties. He respects the beliefs of others.
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Scout Motto
Be Prepared
The Scout motto is Be Prepared. Someone once asked Robert Baden-Powell, the founder of Scouting, Be prepared for what? Baden-Powell replied, Why, for any old thing. Thats the idea. The Scout motto means you are always ready to do your duty and to face danger, if necessary, to help others.
Scout Slogan
Do a Good Turn daily. The Scout slogan is Do a Good Turn daily. This doesnt mean youre supposed to do one Good Turn during the day and then stop. It means you do at least one Good Turn a day. It means looking for chances to help and then helping quietly, without boasting about it. Always remember that a Good Turn is an extra act of kindnesssomething you go out of your way to do.
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Scout Salute
The Scout salute shows respect. Use it to salute the flag of the United States of America. You may also salute a Scout leader or another Scout. Give the Scout salute by forming the Scout sign with your right hand and then bringing that hand upward until your forefinger touches the brim of your hat or the arc of your right eyebrow. The palm of your hand should not show.
Scout Handshake
The Scout handshake is made with the hand nearest the heart and is offered as a token of friendship. Extend your left hand to another Scout and firmly grasp his left hand. The fingers do not interlock .
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Outdoor Code
As an American, I will do my best tobe clean in my outdoor manners, be careful with fire, be considerate in the outdoors, and be conservation-minded.
As a Webelos Scout, youll hike and camp out. As a Boy Scout, youll be outdoors a lot more often. The Outdoor Code is a guide all Scouts use. Read it with your Webelos den leader and discuss what it means. See page 346 for more about the Outdoor Code.
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Compass Points
Earn a compass point for each additional four activity badges you complete: E 1 2 3 4 W 1 2 3 4 S 1 2 3 4
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4. With your Webelos den, visit at least one Boy Scout troop meeting and one Boy Scoutoriented outdoor activity. (If you have already done this when you earned your Outdoorsman activity badge, you may not use the same outing to fulfill requirements for your Arrow of Light Award.) 5. Participate in a Webelos overnight campout or day hike. (If you have already done this when you earned your Outdoorsman activity badge, you may not use the same outing to fulfill your Arrow of Light Award requirements.) 6. After you have completed all five of the above requirements, and after a talk with your Webelos den leader, arrange to visit, with your parent or guardian, a meeting of a Boy Scout troop you think you might like to join. Have a conference with the Scoutmaster. 7. Complete the Honesty Character Connection. a.
k c
Promise to your family. Discuss these questions with them: What is a promise? What does it mean to keep your word? What does it mean to be trustworthy? What does honesty mean?
b.
c.
Commit: Discuss these questions with your family. Why is a promise important? Why is it important for people to trust you when you give your word? When might it be difficult to be truthful? List examples. Practice: Discuss with a family member why it is important to be trustworthy and honest. How can you do your best to be honest even when it is difficult?
Rank Advancement and Special Awards
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The knot attached to the bottom of the scroll reminds you that as a Boy Scout, you promise to do a Good Turn for someone every day.
Rank Advancement and Special Awards 65
Each troop has its own neckerchief design. Yours will be the one worn by your new troop. Some of the insignia on your Boy Scout shirt are like those on your Webelos uniform. But on your right sleeve, youll wear your patrol emblem. On your left shirt pocket, youll wear the highest Boy Scout rank youve earned. Your Arrow of Light Award goes at the bottom of the left pocket. Youll wear red shoulder loops that attach to the shirt at the shoulder. Wear your Boy Scout uniform with pride. It shows you are a good citizen and are ready and willing to help other people.
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Religious Organization
Armenian: Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern Diocese) ........Saint Gregory Association of Unity Churches..........................................................God in Me Bahai.....................................................................Unity of Mankind Baptist ...................................................................God and Family Buddhist ................................................................Metta Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) .......................................God and Family Churches of Christ ..............................................Joyful Servant Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS) .................................Faith in God Eastern Orthodox ................................................Chi Rho Eastern-Rite Catholic Churches ........................Parvuli Dei Episcopal ..............................................................God and Family First Church of Christ, Scientist (Christian Science) ........................God and Country Hindu .....................................................................Dharma Islamic ...................................................................Bismillah Jewish....................................................................Aleph Lutheran ................................................................God and Family Meher Baba ..........................................................Love for God Polish National Catholic .....................................Love of God (Milosc Boga) Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) ............................................................God and Family Protestant (available to any Christian denomination) ...............................God and Family Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) ..........................................That of God Community of Christ ...........................................Light of the World Roman Catholic ...................................................Parvuli Dei The Salvation Army .............................................Silver Crest, God and Family United Church of Christ .....................................God and Family United Methodist .................................................God and Family
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Qualified to receive the World Conservation Award: Name _______________________________________________________ Date ____________________________________________________________ Webelos den leaders signature ____________________________________
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If your work on an activity badge requires you to earn an Academics or Sports belt loop or pin, previous work done as a Tiger Cub or Cub Scout wont count. You must earn the belt loop or pin again while you are a Webelos Scout for it to count toward the activity badge. These activity badges give you the choice of earning (or require that you earn) a belt loop or pin: Aquanaut: Swimming; Athlete: Physical Fitness; Artist: Art; Engineer: Math; Family Member: Heritages; Geologist: Geology; Naturalist: Wildlife Conservation; Scholar: Language, Math, Chess; Scientist: Science, Weather, Astronomy; Sportsman: 2 individual sports, 2 team sports; Traveler: Geography, Map and Compass.
Qualified to receive Cub Scoutings Leave No Trace Awareness Award: Name _______________________________________________________ Date ____________________________________________________________ Webelos den leaders signature ____________________________________
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Physical Skills
Aquanaut Athlete Fitness* Sportsman
Mental Skills
Artist Scholar Showman Traveler
Community
Citizen* Communicator Family Member Readyman**
Technology
Craftsman Engineer Handyman Scientist
Outdoor
Forester Geologist Naturalist Outdoorsman**
* Fitness and CitizenRequired for the Webelos badge ** Outdoorsman and ReadymanRequired for the Arrow of Light Award
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Artist
Athlete
4 9
5 10
Citizen
4 12
6 13
7 14
8 15 16 17
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Communicator
Do any seven 1 2 3 4 5 6 9 10 11 12 13
7 14
8 15
16
Craftsman
Do all (four) 1 2 3
4
Engineer
Family Member
4 10
5 11
6 12
Fitness
13
Forester
Do any five 1 2 3
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10
Geologist
Do any five 1 2 3
Handyman
17
Naturalist
Outdoorsman
4 8 9 10 11 12
Readyman
4 12
6 13
7 14
8 15
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Scholar
4 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
Showman
Do six from any area (mark them below as well) Do one not already done 2 3 4 Puppetry Do one not already done 8 9 10 Music Do one not already done 16 17 18 Drama 5 11 19 6 12 20 7 13 21 14 22 15 23
Sportsman
Do all (four) 1 2 3
4
Traveler
Do any five 1 2 3 8 9 10
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Rank Advancement and Special Awards
a strong, confident adult. The knowledge and attitudes you develop as a Scout will be with you the rest of your life. And Scouting is fun. You can look around during Scouting activities and see everyone sharing and learning. Are you ready to get in on all the fun that Scouts have? Do you want to enjoy the adventures and friendship of a troop and patrol? Its all up to you!
Troops Visited
Troop Location Date Time Leader Phone
Scoutmasters conference to complete requirements needed to join Boy Scouts was held on (date) ________________________ I received my Arrow of Light Award on ____________________. My graduation ceremony was conducted on ________________.
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Activity Badges
A
AQUANAUT
Aquanaut Requirements
Requirement Do these:
1. Jump into water over your head. Come to the surface and swim 100 feet, at least half of this using a backstroke. 2. Stay in the water after the swim and float on your back and your front, and demonstrate survival floating. 3. Put on a personal flotation device (PFD) that is the right size for you. Make sure it is properly fastened. Wearing the PFD, jump into water over your head. Show how the PFD keeps your head above water by swimming 25 feet. Get out of the water, remove the PFD, and hang it where it will dry.
Approved by
Then swim 25 yards using an easy, resting backstroke. After completing the swim, rest by floating. The 100 yards must be completed in one swim without stops and must include at least one sharp turn. 8. While you are a Webelos Scout, earn the Cub Scout Sports belt loop for swimming.
quanauts are people who are at home in and around the water. When youre an aquanaut, you enjoy the water, but you also respect it. You master the water skills you need. Swimming, floating, snorkeling, water rescue, and boating are all skills of aquanauts. Aquanauts know water can be dangerous. They know how to be safe in and on the water, and they never take foolish chances or break safety rules. They know that rules protect everyone. They help others enjoy the water safely and help them improve their skills. So splash right in and become an aquanaut! The better you become at water skills, the more fun youll have.
Swimming Safety
Can you swim now? How far can you swim? And how deep is the water where you want to swim? The answers to these questions will help you swim where the water is safest for you. If you cant swim, stay in water that is not more than 312 feet deep. If you can swim 50 feet, you may go in water that is 6 feet deep but you may not go more than 25 feet from shore. If you can swim 100 yards or more, you may swim in water that is more than 6 feet deep but you may not go more than 50 yards from shore. Make plans to improve your swimming ability with adult supervision. Swim only when a lifeguard or an adult who is a skilled swimmer is along.
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Activity Badges
Rules on the waterfront protect you. Check a Do or Dont on each line to make the rules read correctly: DO DONT swim with adult supervision. DO DONT show off in the water. DO DONT dive into unfamiliar or shallow waters. DO DONT go swimming right after strenuous physical activity.
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Elementary Backstroke
Start by floating on your back, arms at your sides. Keep your eyes looking down toward your feet, over the surface of the water.
Bring your cupped hands up over your chest to your shoulders. At the same time, drop your heels downward. They should be beneath your knees. Turn your toes outward and swing your feet outward in a circular motion without stopping. At the same time, reach your arms straight out. Then sweep them down to your sides as your legs come together in a straight-out position, with toes pointed. The arm pull and leg kick happen at the same time. You should end up the same way you were at the start.
Aquanaut 89
Sidestroke
Lie on your side with one ear in the water. Stretch your bottom arm out ahead of you. Your top arm is at your side, along your leg. Start with your feet together, and then bend your knees, pulling your heels toward your hips. Cup your reaching hand a little. Sweep it down in front of your chest. Move your feet apart by moving your top leg forward and your bottom leg backward. Notice the hand and arm movement. As your lower hand pushes down, your upper hand moves toward your chest. They nearly meet. When your legs are as far apart as possible, snap them together quickly as if closing a pair of scissors. Your upper hand is pushing down. Your lower hand is reaching out ahead of you, returning to its starting position. Stop your feet as they come together. Repeat arm and leg movements.
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Activity Badges
Crawl Stroke
Float face down in the water with your arms and legs extended.
Move your legs up and down. Press down on the water with the top of your foot. (This is called the flutter kick.) Still kicking, pull downward with your right arm. Breathe out through your nose and mouth while your face is in the water. As your right-arm stroke ends, begin a stroke with your left arm. Raise your face by turning your head to the right so you can breathe in through your mouth. Reach ahead again with your right arm. At the end of the leftarm stroke, begin a new one with the right arm. Turn your face under water again to breathe out. Keep strokes and leg kicks even. The crawl stroke is a fast way to swim, but its tiring. Its great for racing and for swimming a short distance.
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Surface Dive
Float face down with your arms out ahead of you. Sweep your arms back toward your hips. At the same time, bend forward sharply at the hips. Aim the top part of your body toward the bottom.
Turn your hands palms down. Push them toward the bottom. Raise your legs above the surface as high as you can.
Your head will be pointing downward. The weight of your legs in the air above the water will drive you down. Swim underwater for four strokes before coming to the top again.
Swimming Underwater
Never overbreathe (hyperventilate) before swimming underwater. Take regular breaths. Whenever you feel you want to breathe while underwater, do so right away by coming to the surface and lifting your face out of the water. Then you wont be taking a chance on blacking out for lack of oxygen.
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The Mask
Your vision is blurred underwater by the water against your eyes. A face mask puts air in front of your eyes, which helps you see clearly. A good mask should cover only your eyes and nose. As a test, when youre out of the water, hold the mask to your face without using the head strap. Take a breath through your nose. When you do this, a mask that fits well will cling to your face. The window should be safety glass, with a metal band to hold the glass tightly in place. When you go underwater with a face mask, it may fog over. To minimize fogging, spit on the glass and rub the spit around. Then rinse the glass before you put on your mask. Try out your face mask in shallow water. When you need to breathe, raise your head from the water and breathe through your mouth. This is the only way to breathe when using a face mask by itself. Your view of the underwater scene will be interrupted each time you take a breath.
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The Snorkel
The snorkel is a J-shaped tube with a soft rubber end that fits in your mouth. You breathe through your mouth, through the tube that reaches upward above the surface of the water. When you use a snorkel, put it inside the headband of your mask. It should slope backward. Adding a snorkel should not break the seal between your face and the mask. Hold the mouthpiece in your mouth. Blow out before you breathe through your snorkel. Breathe only at the surface. Feel the back of your head to see whether the tube is out of the water. If it is, you can breathe through it.
Swim Fins
You can swim faster with swim fins. There are several kinds. Some have heel straps, and others have full foot pockets. The fins with heel straps fit any foot because you can adjust the size of the straps. The fins with pockets cost more and must be fitted to your feet. They cant be too tight or too loose. They protect your feet like shoes when you walk on sharp rocks. With fins, your feet have more surface area in the water, giving you the swimming advantage a fish has with its tail and fins. Use slow, easy flutter kicks, keeping your knees well bent. This will move you through the water at a good speed. Dont work too hard at first. Your legs will tire quickly. Train slowly and build your ability until you can use the fins for a longer time.
swimmer, dont dive under. When you become skilled at swimming and snorkeling on the surface, you may wish to learn the sport of skin diving, which is underwater exploration using a mask and fins but not the snorkel. Then you can see many more wonderful underwater sights.
Safe Snorkeling
While snorkeling, stay near your buddy at all times. Wise aquanauts obey the chief point of all aquatic safety:
1. REACH toward the person in the water with whatever is available or at hand. For instance, you can use your hand or foot, a tree branch, a canoe paddle, or a towel.
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2. THROW a line, a buoy, or a floating object (like a beach ball) to the person, to provide support.
3. ROW in a watercraft to the victim. A rowing rescue can only be made by a swimmer and one who can handle the boat. A PFD must be worn.
4. GO, with support. Those who go to the victim and make a swimming rescue must be trained in Swimming and Lifesaving. In these rare instances, when a swimming rescue must be tried, the swimmer takes with him something that can be used for flotation or can be extended to the victim to avoid direct contact. In any water rescue, the Webelos Scout should never put himself in danger or at risk. If reaching and throwing dont work, GET HELP!
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If your boat tips over or fills with water, hang on. You can kick the boat to shore or drift in, but dont leave it. Let help come to you. Watch the weather. Head for shore if it begins to look bad. If youre caught on the water in bad weather, seat your passengers on the floor of the boat. Have everyone in the craft sit as low as possible. Head your boat into the waves. If you use a motor when boating with your family, use one that is appropriate for the boat. Too much power can damage your boat or even swamp it. Look on the boat for the capacity plate. It shows how many people the boat should hold and the recommended horsepower for the motor. Sharp turns are dangerous, so take it easy. Keep a lookout for other boaters and for swimmers.
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A RT I S T
Artist Requirements
Requirement
1. Talk to an artist in your area or to your art teacher about the different occupations in the art field. Make a list of them. 2. Create a scrapbook (portfolio) of your Artist activity badge projects and show it to your den leader.
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aints, brushes, crayons, clay. Soft colors, bright and dark ones. Shapes you havent tried before. When you create a work of art, you stir up a fascinating mixture of materials and ideas. Making art is a constant experiment. You try many ways of working. Your art is like no one elses because you are unique. So are your ideas and your vision of the world around you. Art is about making your ideas visible and even changing them as you work. Its also about playing with materials until an idea takes hold. Youll go your own individual way on this badge. When you complete each requirement, ask your Webelos den leader or activity badge counselor to sign it on page 102.
Create a Scrapbook
As you work on projects for the Artist activity badge, you can make a record of your finished projects in a scrapbook. (Professional artists call this a portfolio.) Some projects, such as drawings or paintings, might go straight into the scrapbook. You could add sketches or photographs of other projects, such as sculptures or mobiles. Besides the fun youll have making your scrapbook, when you show it to your Webelos den leader, you will have completed requirement 2!
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Choosing a Medium
An artist chooses a medium to use in creating a work of art. Watercolor paint is a medium. Pencil is a medium. So is clay. A computer is a medium. The medium is whatever you use to make art. When you combine two or more materials, you are using mixed media. (Media means more than one medium.) An example of mixed media would be using crayon for the lines of a drawing and then brushing watercolor paint into some areas. As you work on the Artist activity badge, youll experiment with several media.
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Drawing
You could draw something from your imagination, like a dinosaur, or you could draw while you look at your subject: a person, a house, or a collection of items on a tabletopthats called a still life. A simple still life setup might include a mug, an apple, and a cereal box, to give you different shapes to draw. Or gather a few of your favorite things together. Whether your subject is a cup or a person, notice the form how the subject is shaped. Imagine the whole form, even the part around the back that you cant see. If you want to, you can use light pencil lines to sketch the general shapes first, as a guide. Look for shadowed areas and see if you can shade them in. Light, medium, and dark areas help show the form, so the subject wont look flat. If youre using color, you can apply the color more heavily in the shadows and make it thinner in the light places.
Media
Some ideas for drawing media: Pencil Ink (black and other colors) Crayon Marker (fine or broad-tipped) Oil pastels With pencil and ink, a fairly smooth paper gives you clean lines. With crayons and markers, use either smooth or rougher-textured paper for different effects.
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Drawing a Profile
A profile is a side view of a person. Try drawing one of a member of your family. Note the shape of the subjects head and sketch that in first. Then start adding features. If you have trouble drawing a profile, try this. Tape your drawing paper to a wall. Ask your subject to stand in front of the paper. Then shine a bright light on him or her. The shadow will outline the profile and you can trace it.
Painting
Media
Some choices for painting (these paints clean up with soap and water): Watercolor paint. Watercolor comes as a set in a box. Perhaps you use a set like this at school or have one at home. You can use this kind of paint for your painting. Watercolor in separate tubes or in kits is more expensive. Paint on drawing paper or watercolor paper. Watercolor paper is more expensive but also more absorbent.
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Tempera paint or poster color is liquid and dries quickly. It comes in small bottles or large squeeze bottles. Paint on manila paper or heavy white drawing paper. Acrylic paint. School acrylic comes in large squeeze bottles. Acrylic paint in tubes is thicker and more expensive. Paint on canvas board or heavy paper. Because of the cost of tempera and acrylic paints, its probably more thrifty to do this kind of painting as a den project. The cost of the paint squeeze bottles can be shared. Comparing paint: With tempera and acrylic, you can paint over areas you want to change. Watercolor wont hide a color youve already painted, but it lets the white of the paper shine through, adding light to the color. Compare paint prices. To start, you need only red, yellow, blue, black, and white. You can mix other colors from these. (See the color wheel on page 110.) If you buy a paint kit, it may include more than the basic colors.
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Brushes: Inexpensive brushes with synthetic bristles will work for tempera or acrylic. (For acrylic, you must have synthetic bristles because the paint will ruin natural hair bristles.) Watercolor brushes are softer, and camel hair is the least expensive. Its helpful to have at least two sizes of brushesone for larger areas and one for detail.
Maybe you have other art materials on hand. You decide what to use. Remember, you can combine drawing and painting materials in one picture.
Supplies
A mixing palette or tray. You can use a large plastic lid from a food container for tube acrylics. For tempera, school acrylics, and watercolor, which are more runny, use several jar lids or buy an inexpensive plastic paint tray with wells for colors.
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For tube acrylics: a palette knife (a flexible mixing tool). For the other paints, mix colors with your brush. A sturdy water container for rinsing paint from brushes before using another color. (Change water often.) A sponge for pressing excess water from brush before dipping in paint. Rags for spills. Cleanup: Make cleanup easy. If possible, work at a table with a washable surface. Before you start, cover it with layers of newspaper to protect it. When you stop, wash brushes promptly with soap and warm water. Store them with bristles up, in a jar, can, or mug. Wash and dry all tools.
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Red
Violet
Orange
Blue
Yellow
Green
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pale color. For brown, experiment with combinations of red, yellow, and blue. Try adding a little black. If youre not sure about a color youve mixed, try it first on a piece of scrap paper. The more you paint, the more youll remember about mixing colors. Art supply stores sell paints in many colors. After working with the primary colors, you may decide to buy a few other colors to see what theyre like.
Experiment!
You can use a brush in different ways. You know you can use it for lines, details, and larger areas of color. A wet brush makes a different pattern than a mostly dry brush. Discover other marks and textures you can make by holding the brush differently. Lay it flat, so it makes a mark the shape of its bristles. Touch the tip of it to the paper and see if it leaves a dot or a texture. You can use tools other than brushes. A sponge dipped in paint adds texture. A string dragged through paint and pressed down on the paper or canvas leaves a line. Crumpled paper dipped in paint makes interesting patterns.
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Making a Frame
You dont have to buy a frame for your drawing or painting. Make one instead. Here are three simple kinds of frames to make. Tape or glue your picture to a piece of cardboard that is about 1 inch bigger all around than the picture. (Use glue only on the edges so the paper wont buckle.) From a second piece of cardboard, cut out the frame. Glue that to the back cardboard. If you have a woodworking shop, you can make a wood frame. An old weathered board makes a good frame. You have to sand the board very smooth in the area where the picture will be glued.
Computer Designs
When artists create designs, they think about shape, line, color, placement, the feeling they want to convey, and more. If you do requirement 5, youll create original designs using a computer drawing program. Youll use straight lines or curved lines or a combination of both. You could try arrangements of thin lines or marks, or use lines to make shapes that you leave empty or fill with color. The result probably wont look like any object in the real world, although you might have been thinking about an ocean wave, a storm, a birthday party, or traveling through outer space. Sometimes a design expresses a feeling. We dont know what was on the artists
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mind, but the design might make us think of a happy time, or a peaceful night, or an adventure. Your designs can be as simple or as complicated as you want. Have fun and experiment with the drawing and painting tools and colors you can use. Learn how to move pieces of the design until the arrangement on the screen pleases you and feels right to you. Save and print your designs.
Sculpture
When you have a piece of clay in your hands, what happens? You squeeze it, twist it, pull it, roll it, and shape it. You are sculpting. Some sculptors say this is like thinking with your hands. What will you make? It could be the figure of a person, or just the head and neck. It could be an animal or a fantastic creature no one has ever seen before. You could even sculpt your own design of a futuristic car. You decide.
Media
Plasteline, a commercial modeling clay, is oily and plastic, meaning you can shape it. It never dries out. It works easily when kept at room temperature. If you stop working, put the sculpture away until you can return to it. Youll find it is still soft and ready to be worked. Plasteline costs more than natural clay in the beginning. But youll save money in the long run because you can use it again and again. Moist clay comes from the earth. It can be worked easily when damp. As it dries, it becomes stiffer and is good for detail work. Because natural clay does dry out, it must be kept covered when not being worked. Use wet cloths and a plastic bag. If it dries out, you can soak it and knead it until it becomes soft again. Self-hardening clay is a prepared clay. It costs more than the moist kind. It is as easily worked, as long as it is kept wet and soft. It is self-drying and becomes very hard. When it has dried, it cannot be softened for reuse.
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Tools
Your best tools for working clay are your fingers, but sometimes another tool comes in handy. Try these: Dull kitchen knife for cutting clay Tongue depressor or craft stick for detail work and smoothing Homemade modeling tool (See instructions below.)
Make a modeling tool with a wooden dowel for a handle. Shape a hairpin or paper clip and attach it to the dowel by wrapping with thread. Coat the thread with model cement.
Sculpting a Head
When you start sculpting, make the head small, about 3 or 4 inches wide. This size takes less clay, but its large enough for you to be able to work on detail. Work in a well-lighted room. Your workbench or table should be solid. The clay should be at eye level. Do this by sitting on a low chair or stool. Or put your clay on a box on top of your workbench. Work in a place that is easy to clean. Clay dropped on a good floor or rug leaves stains.
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How to Get Started 1. Make a support. Use a 1-inch dowel 12 inches long. Have an adult drill a 1-inch hole in the center of a 6-by-6-inch block of wood. 2. Start putting clay on and around the dowel stick. Build up an egg shape about 3 to 4 inches wide. 3. Push in the eye spaces with your thumbs. 4. Note the shape of a normal head. Most beginners forget the forehead and back of the head. 5. Add bits of clay to build up the chin, nose, neck, brows, hair, and ears. 6. Refine lips, eyes, and shape of the head. You can change clay while it is softtake a pinch off here, add a little more there. Turn your work around and look at it from the top, sides, back, and front.
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the balance pointthe right place to make the hole. Push a pin through the top of the design and hold onto the pin. The design should be loose on the pin so it can move. If your design takes a nosedive, this isnt the balance point. Move the pin until you find the balance point. Punch or drill a hole at the balance point. This is where the thread or string goes that will fasten your design to an arm of the mobile. Making the wire arms: Use coat hanger wire for the arms. With wire cutters, cut one length each of 12 inches, 19 inches, 24 inches, and 25 inches. Straighten each wire arm by hammering or pressing in a vise. Then bend it into a smooth arc. With pliers, bend up about 12 inch from each end, making a right angle. Putting the mobile together: Make a mobile from the bottom up. Hang a design on each end of one wire arm. Tie a thread or string to the center of the wire arm and slide it until the two designs balance. Make a loop in the top end of this thread. With the flexible spool wire, make a small ring through this loop. Slip the ring over the end of a second wire arm. Fasten another design to the other end of this second wire. Find the balance point of the second arm as you did for the first one by attaching a thread and sliding it. Again, make a thread loop at the top of the thread and add a ring made of spool wire. Add the other wire arms and designs to the mobile. You may decide to move items and rebalance arms. When its right, bend the ends of the wire arms to keep the designs in place. Hang the top of the mobile from fishing line, kite string, or other strong string.
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Constructions
Constructions are fun. You build a sculpture, using all sorts of objects. For the base, start with a handful of clay or a piece of wood. Collect odds and ends youd like to combine. These might be scrap items, things youve saved, things no one wants. Ideas: tongue depressors, ice cream sticks, toothpicks, bits of wood; buttons, cloth, yarn, spools, string; plastic spoons, forks, and knives; wire, chicken wire, screen wire, pipe cleaners, chenille stems, corks; straws, keys, bottle caps, egg cartons (you can cut shapes from them); seed pods, pinecones, nuts, sticks, seashells.
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Clay Base
Start with your base. Experiment. You might begin by pushing a stick or a wire into the clay. Then add items to the construction; change them around; figure out how to attach things and link them together.
Wood Base
Drill holes in the base the right size to hold any sticks or wires you want to use for main supports. Insert ends. For wire, a slight bend just above the base will help hold it in place. Add items; try connecting parts of the construction by crisscrossing with yarn, wire, or string. With flexible materials, try bending and twisting them. Experiment until the design pleases you.
Collages
Collage (co-LAZH) is a French word. A collage is a work of art made by gluing materials to a surface. How do you make a collage that expresses something about yourself? It could include a small photo of yourself and pictures out of magazines that show a sport you like, your favorite food, or a place you dream of visiting. Maybe youve saved the ticket stubs after going to a movie. Maybe you have something with your name on it, like the envelope from a letter addressed to you, a photo of your family, a photo of a pet, anything you decide on. Start with a blank poster board or a big piece of cardboard. Collect the items you want to use. Anything made of paper works well, although you can use other materials. Arrange things on the poster board and move them around. A collage is a very casual thingyou can do whatever looks good to you. You can tilt and overlap items. You can cut your paper items in shapes you want or use them as they are. For added color, cut or tear pieces of colored paper or scraps of gift wrap and slip them in. Try to cover all or most of the surface of the poster board.
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When youre ready to glue everything in place, use a glue stick that wont make ripples in the paper items when you glue them on. If you feel like your collage needs some finishing touches, consider cutting words from magazines or writing or drawing in a few places. If you want to frame your collage, look for a simple poster frame made of a backing, a sheet of clear acrylic, and clips that hold everything together. This will work if your collage is flat, but not if youve glued anything bulky to it.
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A
AT H L e T e
Athlete Requirements
Requirement Do these:
1. With your parent, guardian, or Webelos den leader, complete the Perseverance Character Connection. a.
Approved by
b.
k c p
Commit: When doing the harder requirement, did you ever feel frustrated or angry? What did perseverance have to do with that? Name another type of task for which you will need to persevere. Practice: Practice perseverance by following your plan to do that requirement for the Athlete activity badge.
c.
2. Explain what it means to be physically and mentally healthy. 3. Explain what you as a Webelos Scout can to do stay physically and mentally healthy. 4. Every time you work on requirement 5 below, start with at least 5 minutes of stretching warm-up activities. 5. Do as many as you can of the following and record your results. Show improvement in all of the activities after 30 days. a. Have another person hold your feet down while you do as many curl-ups as you can.
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b. Do as many pull-ups from a bar as you can. c. Do as many push-ups from the ground or floor as you can. d. Do a standing long jump as far as you can. e. Do a quarter-mile run or walk.
trength and good health are important to you now for sports and games. Theyll be important to you all your life. Athletes know that a good training program includes exercises that build strength and endurance. Endurance means the ability to keep going in a race or in playing a sport. See how much you can improve in each area over a 30-day period. The more you work on each skill, the more you will improve and the higher your rating should be. As you improve, this means youre growing stronger. Keep a record of all your scores. When you complete each requirement, ask your Webelos den leader or activity badge counselor to initial it on the previous page or this page.
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Curl-Ups
Starting Position: Lie on your back with your legs bent and feet flat on the floor. Cross your arms over your chest. Have a partner hold your ankles to keep your feet on the floor and count each curl-up. Action: Sit up and touch your elbows to your thighs. Return to the starting position. Count one curl-up each time you go back to the starting position. See how many you can do in one minute.
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Pull-Ups
Equipment: Use a bar high enough and easy to grip. Starting Position: Hold the bar with your thumbs facing one another. Hang with your arms and legs fully out and feet not touching the floor. Action: Pull your body up with your arms until your chin is over the bar. Then lower your body until your arms are straight. Rules: The pull must not be a snap movement. Dont raise your knees or kick your legs. Dont let your body swing. If this happens, your partner should stop the motion. Count one pull-up each time you place your chin over the bar.
Push-Ups
Starting Position: Lie face down on the ground or floor. Put your hands on the ground beside your shoulders. Action: Push up with your arms, keeping your back and legs as straight as possible. Then lower your body and touch your chest to the ground. Repeat as many times as you can. Rules: For each pushup, your body must be straight and your arms must be extended full length. Count one push-up each time your chest touches the ground.
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Vertical Jump
Equipment: Chalk and a ruler or tape measure Starting Position: Stand next to a wall with your feet flat on the floor. With the chalk in your hand, reach as high as you can and make a mark. Action: Now jump as high as you can and make a mark above the first one. Your score is the number of inches between the two marks.
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50-Yard Dash
Starting Position: Stand behind the starting line. The starter will be at the finish with a stopwatch. He will raise one hand before giving the starting signal. Action: The starter lowers his hand and hits the side of his leg. This is the signal to start. As you cross the finish line, your time is noted. Rules: The score is the time between the starters signal and the instant you cross the finish line.
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A regular football field can be used for both running tests. The 50-yard dash would cover half the field between the goal lines. The quarter-mile run or walk would be four lengths of the field, plus the distance from a goal line to the 40-yard line.
Quarter-Mile Swim
Before making your quartermile swim, review the Aquanaut activity badge on pages 83100.
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Curl-ups (number)
Pull-ups (number)
Push-ups (number)
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Paper Crunch: This will build strong hands and fingers. Squeezing sticks, rocks, or sponge balls; and rowing boats will also develop your hands.
Biceps Builder: Push up with the right hand and arm. Push down with the left hand at the same time. Hold as you count to 10. Repeat five times for each arm.
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Trunk Stretch: Strengthens the back and stretches the chest muscles. Lie face down with your hands at the back of the neck and elbows out. Raise your head and chest and hold.
Walking: Considered a perfect aerobic exercise. Aerobic means it helps your body use oxygen and it improves your heart and lungs. Aerobic exercise, such as walking, running, and swimming, increases your endurance and fitness. It helps prevent heart disease.
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Stretcher: Done best in slow motion. Curl up your body slowly from a flat-on-your-back position until your knees touch your chin. Count to five. Return to the starting position.
All the Way: Strengthens stomach muscles for tough jobs. Lie back on the floor, with your hands above your head. With your arms and legs straight, raise your body and touch your toes.
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Neck Builder: You need a bath towel. Pull it firmly across the back of your neck, using your neck muscles to push back. Hold 10 seconds and release. Repeat 10 times.
Butterfly: Strengthens the back. Lie on your stomach. Raise your arms, chest, and legs. Spread your arms and legs 10 times. Return to the starting position and repeat.
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Trunk Bend: Strengthens trunk muscles. Bend sideways and down. Touch your toesfirst left, then right. Spread your legs. Keep the elbows and knees straight.
Leg Stretch: Builds abdominal muscles. Raise your legs, then spread them slowly. Hold in this position 10 seconds. Bring legs together again and slowly lower to ground. Rest a few seconds. Repeat three times.
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Squat Thrust: Take a squatting position with your hands in front of you on the floor. Thrust your legs back until your body is straight from the shoulders to the feet. Return to a squat. Stand up. Then repeat.
Toe Exercise: Conditions the feet. Practice walking pigeon-toed with your toes curled. Try picking up and carrying small rocks, marbles, or pencils with your toes.
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Dual Contests
These two-boy contests will test your strength, balance, and ability to react quickly. Note: Do not do these contests with someone who is bigger or older than you. You and your partner should be about the same size.
Arm Wrestle: Try to force your opponents hand to the ground or raise his elbow. You must do this without moving your own elbow. Try changing hands.
Stick Wrestle: Grip the stick firmly left hand up, right hand down. Try to force the right end of the stick to the ground. Repeat several times.
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Stick Pull: Sit on the ground facing each other. Put the soles of your shoes together. Grasping a broomstick, try to pull your opponent forward to his feet.
Pull Apart: Sit foot to foot, with your hands locked and legs spread wide apart. Try to pull your opponent forward. The winner is on his back at the end of the contest.
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Duck Fight: Grasp your ankles in a low squat position. Push your opponent with your shoulders only. The winner forces his opponent to let go of his ankles or fall.
Chest Push: Start the contest between two lines, 10 feet apart. Push chest against chest, arms out, hands touching. The winner must force his opponent back over the line.
Leg Wrestle: Lie side by side on your backs, head to feet, and link inside elbows. Raise inside legs three times. On the third count, try to catch your opponents heel and flip him.
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Community Group
C
CITIzeN
Citizen Requirements
Requirement Do this:
1. With your parent, guardian, or Webelos den leader, complete the Citizenship Character Connection. a.
Approved by
b.
c.
k c p
Know: List some of your rights as a citizen of the United States of America. Tell ways you can show respect for the rights of others.
Commit: Name some ways a boy your age can be a good citizen. Tell how you plan to be a good citizen and how you plan to influence others to be good citizens. Practice: Choose one of the requirements for this activity badge that helps you be a good citizen. Complete the requirement and tell why completing it helped you be a good citizen.
Do all of these:
2. Know the names of the president and vice president of the United States, elected governor of your state, and the head of your local government. 3. Describe the flag of the United States and give a short history of it. With another Webelos Scout helping you, show how to hoist and lower the flag, how to hang it horizontally and
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vertically on a wall, and how to fold it. Tell how to retire a worn or tattered flag properly. 4. Explain why you should respect your countrys flag. Tell some of the special days we fly it. Tell when to salute the flag and show how to do it. 5. Repeat the Pledge of Allegiance from memory. Explain its meaning in your own words. 6. Tell how our national anthem was written. 7. Explain the rights and duties of a citizen of the United States. Explain what a citizen should do to save our natural resources. 8. As a Webelos Scout, earn the Cub Scout Academics belt loop for Citizenship (if not already earned), or earn the pin. At a Webelos den meeting, talk about the service project Good Turn that you did.
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14. Tell why we have laws. Tell why you think it is important to obey the law. Tell about three laws you obeyed this week. 15. Tell why we have government. Explain some ways your family helps pay for government. 16. List four ways in which your country helps or works with other nations. 17. Name three organizations, not churches or other religious organizations, in your area that help people. Tell something about what one of these organizations does.
n the Cub Scout Promise, you say you will do your duty to your country. This means being a good citizen. There are many ways to be a good citizen, not only of your country but in your community and your state, and even closer to home, in your neighborhood and school. And think about this: What does it mean to be a good citizen of the planet Earth?
As you earn the Citizen activity badge, youll find out what it takes to be a good citizen. When you complete each requirement, ask your Webelos den leader or activity badge counselor to initial it on the previous page or this page.
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Red Ensign Flag. An English flag that flew over the American colonies before the American Revolution.
Grand Union Flag. George Washington flew this flag over his army headquarters near Boston in 1776. The Revolutionary War had started the year before.
Old Glory. The first official flag of the United States. It was adopted by the Continental Congress on June 14, 1777. This is why June 14 is celebrated as Flag Day.
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Star-Spangled Banner. This flag flew over Fort McHenry near Baltimore, Maryland, during the War of 1812 against Great Britain. Francis Scott Key watched it waving as the British bombarded the fort. Then he wrote our national anthem, The Star-Spangled Banner.
Todays Flag. The 13 stripes represent the original 13 states. Each of the stars in the blue field represents one state. The 50th starfor Hawaiiwas added on July 4, 1960.
The flag can be attached to the halyard (the rope on the flagpole) with two half hitches or with two snap hooks, which fasten the flag more securely.
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It takes two people to hoist and lower the flag correctly. One person holds the flag. The other attaches it to the halyard and hoists the flag, keeping it close to the pole by holding the line taut (see hand positions in the illustration above). He finally fastens the halyard to the cleat on the pole.
Flag vertical
Flag vertical
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The U.S. flag is folded in a special way until only the blue field shows. First, fold the flag lengthwise, in half, then lengthwise again with the blue starred area on the outside. Then make triangular folds, starting from the striped end, until only the blue field is showing. Tuck in the loose end. Never let the flag touch the ground, the floor, or water.
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Flying the U.S. Flag The U.S. flag is flown on public buildings every day when weather permits. Some citizens fly it at home every day, too. It especially should be flown on the following days:
New Years Day, January 1 Inauguration Day, January 20 after a presidential election Martin Luther King Jr. Day, third Monday in January Lincolns Birthday, February 12 Washingtons Birthday or Presidents Day, third Monday in February Mothers Day, second Sunday in May Armed Forces Day, May 20 Memorial Day (half-staff until noon, full-staff to sunset), last Monday in May Flag Day, June 14 Fathers Day, third Sunday in June Independence Day, July 4 Labor Day, first Monday in September Constitution Day, September 17 Columbus Day, second Monday in October Veterans Day, November 11 Thanksgiving Day, fourth Thursday in November
It is also flown on other days proclaimed by the president of the United States, on the birthdays of states (dates of admission to the Union), and on state holidays. Saluting the U.S. Flag If you are in uniform, give the Cub Scout salute: When the U.S. flag is being hoisted or lowered. When the U.S. flag passes by or you pass the U.S. flag. In a parade, salute just before the U.S. flag passes and hold the salute until it has gone by. When you recite the Pledge of Allegiance. If you are not in uniform, greet the U.S. flag by placing your right hand over your heart. Take off your hat or cap, if you are wearing one.
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Examples of duties. As citizens, you and your family should Obey laws Respect the rights and property of others Help the police Keep informed on what is going on around you Help change things that are not good When you are an adult, you also should Vote Pay taxes Serve on a jury when asked to do so
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How can you tell whether a person is a good citizen? Here are some signs: Good citizens obey the law. If they think a law is wrong, they try to have it changed. They do this by telling what they think to the people who are elected to make laws. Good citizens respect the rights of others. They dont try to get special privileges for themselves. Good citizens try to be fair and honest with everyone. Good citizens try to make their community, state, or nation better. School-aged good citizens do their best to learn all they can about their country. Adult good citizens learn all they can about their government. Then they vote on election day.
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Laws You Obey You obey laws every day of your life. Perhaps you dont even know you are doing it. Here are some times when you obey laws: When youre riding your bike and stop for a red traffic light or a stop sign. When you go to school. Your state has a law saying you must attend school unless you are sick. When you follow the school crossing guards orders. When you cross streets only at corners when it is safe. When you take good care of your pet. There is a law stating that you must not mistreat or harm animals. When youre fishing and stop when youve caught the number of fish allowed. A law sets that limit. These are just a few examples. Talk with an adult family member or other adult about other laws you obey.
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C
Community Group
C O M M U N I C AT O R
Communicator Requirements
Requirement Do seven of these:
1. Play the Body Language Game with your den. 2. Prepare and give a three-minute talk to your den on a subject of your choice. 3. Invent a sign language or a picture writing language and use it to tell someone a story. 4. Identify and discuss with your den as many different methods of communication as you can (at least six different methods). 5. Invent your own den secret code and send one of your den members a secret message. 6. With your den or your family, visit a library and talk to a librarian. Learn how books are cataloged to make them easy to find. Sign up for a library card, if you dont already have one. 7. Visit the newsroom of a newspaper or a radio or television station and find out how they receive information. 8. Write an article about a den activity for your pack newsletter or Web site, your local newspaper, or your school newsletter, newspaper, or Web site. 9. Invite a person with a visual, speaking, or hearing impairment to visit your den. Ask about the special ways he or she communicates. Discover how well you can communicate with him or her.
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10. With your parent or guardian or your Webelos den leader, invite a person who speaks another language (such as Spanish, French, Arabic, Hebrew, etc.) as well as English to visit your den. Ask questions about the other language (its background, where it is spoken, etc.), discuss words in that language that den members are already familiar with, or ask about ways to learn another language. 11. Use a personal computer to write a letter to a friend or relative. Create your letter, check it for grammar and spelling, and save it to a disk. Print it. 12. Under the supervision of a parent or other trusted adult, search the Internet and connect to five Web sites that interest you. 13. Under the supervision of a parent or other trusted adult, exchange e-mail with a friend or relative. 14. While you are a Webelos Scout, earn the Academics belt loop for Computers. 15. While you are a Webelos Scout, earn the Academics belt loop for Communicating. 16. Find out about jobs in communications. Tell your den what you learn.
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communicator is a person who shares information. We all do that constantly. We tell or show what we know, how we feel, and what we think. When you speak or write, you communicate. And when you yawn, smile, or frown, youre showing other people that youre sleepy, happy, or unhappy. You can communicate by drawing pictures and by using sign language and codes. We communicate over long distances by mail, telephone and computer. Communications keep our personal, business, and government worlds going. As you earn this activity badge, youll learn about the many careers in communications. When you complete each requirement, ask your Webelos den leader or activity badge counselor to sign it on pages 166167.
Body Language
We often send messages without meaning to do it. People can see how we feel by our frown or smile or by a shrug of our shoulders. Such facial expressions and gestures are called body language. Animals use body language, too. When a dog wags its tail, you know the dog is happy. When a cat arches its back or bares its claws, you know the cat is prepared to fight.
Den members take turns showing these feelings. The others try to guess what the feelings are. The den leader or den chief can be referee and decide whether the body language really does show the feeling. If a den member guesses correctly, he gets one point. If nobody guesses correctly, the boy who performed the body language gets one point. The final winner is the boy with the most points. Here are examples of feelings that you can show with body language. Probably you can think of other body language that shows feelings.
Indifferenceshrugging shoulders
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Sleepinessyawning
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Giving a Talk
Most of our communication is done through speaking and listening. Its important to learn to speak well so that everyone understands what youre saying, and you need to listen carefully when others are speaking. Its also important to ask questions when you dont understand or want more information. For requirement 2, youll give a three-minute talk in front of your den. This could be a story about something you have done. You can answer questions after the talk. Suppose you plan to tell the den about an exciting soccer game you played recently. Would the story sound like this? Did we have a great game Saturday! In the last seconds, I passed off to Jason, and he kicked the winning goal. It was great! Your listeners will know it was a soccer game and your team won by one goal, but theyre going to have questions if that is all you say. What teams were playing? What was the final score? Who is Jason? How far was he from the goal when he scored? Where were the defenders and goalkeeper? This story could have had a few more details in it.
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Think through your story before you tell it. You might even make a list of the important points to fix them in your mind. You dont have to tell everything that happened, but include the basic information, the highlights, and why the game was exciting. Try to avoid using words and phrases that dont move your story along. Expressions like you know? just slow it down. What will your story be? Will it be about an exciting game, or a holiday with your family, or an outdoor adventure? After you decide, practice your talk and time it.
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Am Hungry
Give
Me
Thank
You
Communicator
Tastes Good
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Methods of Communication
Each day, you share your thoughts and ideas with other people. You ask questions and answer them. You receive information from all sorts of sources. Its all communication. How many methods of communication touch your life? Spoken words: Talking directly or by telephone, cellular telephone, CB radio, ham radio, announcements on the school public address system; translating spoken words from one language to another. Signed words: Communicating with sign language to someone who is deaf. Written words: Notes, letters, newspapers, magazines, school books, fiction books, nonfiction books, computer e-mail, posters, notices on bulletin boards, braille books; translating written words from one language to another. Recorded words: Compact disks, tape recordings of books or instructions. Audiovisual: Motion pictures, videos, television. What important messages do signs on the street give you? Do they all use words? Do you get information from radio programs? Can art and music communicate? Can a look from a person communicate? What else do you know that is a form of communication?
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Secret Codes
Secret codes are fun. Perhaps you learned how to make and figure out secret codes for elective 1 in the Wolf Handbook. You can invent a secret code that only your den members know. Send them a short message and see if they can decode it. Heres a simple code that is tough to break, unless you know the secret. The secret: Pick out every third letter. ATWRQESNBZTELULCAOPVSCLSBTCRVONMUZOT GXSRUHMFAHIVWNEYFFDRUTMN WEBELOSSCOUTSHAVEFUN Webelos Scouts have fun. For a tougher code to crack, try this grid code device. On a square piece of paper, draw lines to make a grid. Put a second piece of paper under the first. Now use a paper punch to make a hole through both sheets in each of the squares. Make curved marks above and below some of the holes on both sheets as shown. Give one sheet of the code device to another den member. Place the other code sheet over a blank piece of paper. Now you are ready to scramble a message. Lets say you want to code the message, BILL IS AN ENEMY SPY. over it, fill in the first Starting at the top left box with the . Fill in the five letters of the message in the holes marked next five letters in the holes marked . Then fill in the six remaining letters in the unmarked holes. If an enemy agent found the coded message, this is what he would see: All your den members have to do is put their code device over the sheet. Presto! They are in on the secret.
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Using a Library
Youve probably visited a library. Do you know how to use the librarys computer catalog or card catalog to find a book you want? If you dont, learn now. Its a skill youll need all through school. Libraries have separate sections for fiction, biographies, and nonfiction. Usually, fiction books are arranged alphabetically by the last name of the author, and biographies are shelved alphabetically by the last name of the subject. Nonfiction books are grouped by subject. Many libraries use the Dewey decimal system to group nonfiction books. All sports books, for example, have numbers beginning with 796 on the spines of the books. After you find a books number in the catalog, you can go to the right shelf. Another way of numbering and shelving books is with the Library of Congress classification system. When you visit the library with your den, find out which system it uses. Then see if you can find books with the computer or card catalog. Find out whether the computer catalog can be accessed from a home computer. Libraries lend magazines, videos, CDs, and books on tape, too.
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The library is a great place to go for almost any kind of information. In most city libraries, you can use telephone books from other cities, encyclopedias, and newspapers from many places. Some libraries have computers you can use for writing or to get on the Internet. You need a library card to check out books and other materials. If your family doesnt have a card, ask your parent or guardian about getting one.
Visiting a Newsroom
Where does the news come from? Ask your Webelos den leader to help you find out by arranging a den visit to the newsroom of a newspaper, television station, or radio station. All newspapers and broadcast stations have reporters who cover the news in their areas. For news from farther away, they rely on Internet and satellite communication. The largest news gathering organization is the Associated Press (AP). You may see the words Associated Press at the top of newspaper stories.
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Computers in the newsroom receive thousands of stories and pictures every day. Editors decide which stories and pictures to use in the paper, to broadcast, or to post on a Web site. Talk to an editor to find out how these decisions are made.
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First, write the lead. The lead is the first sentence or paragraph of the article. It tells the five Ws: Who? What? Where? When? and Why? Heres a sample lead: Webelos Den 1 visited Boy Scout Troop 10 at Green Tree Park Saturday to find out about Boy Scouting. Look for the five Ws in this lead. Who? Webelos Den 1. What? Visited Boy Scout Troop 10. Where? At Green Tree Park. When? Saturday. Why? To find out about Boy Scouting. Next, write about the most important parts of the activity. The Boy Scouts showed the Webelos Scouts how to set up a tent and build a cooking fire. Everyone helped cook. Lunch included meat and vegetables wrapped in foil and cherry cobbler baked in a Dutch oven. After lunch, the troop and den went on a nature hike together. They saw two red-tailed hawks and raccoon tracks by a creek. Newspapers use short paragraphs, so instead of putting everything in one big paragraph, write your story in short ones. Many times, a newspaper paragraph is only one sentence long. Double-space your article. This is easy if youre using a computer. If youre writing with pencil or pen on lined paper, leave every other line blank. This gives you space to make corrections. Be sure to turn your article in on time. If you miss the deadline, your article may not be published. Include your name, address, and phone number. The person who receives it may have questions only you can answer. Maybe youll get a bylineyour name at the top of the article when its published!
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Promise
To
Do
My
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Best
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To
Do
My
Duty
To
God
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And
My
Country
To
Help
Other
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And
To
Obey
The
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Of
The
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Other Languages
Learning other languages can be fun, and it will help you throughout your life. More and more, people all over the world visit and live in countries other than the one where they were born, and often its a country with a different language. Many U.S. companies do business in countries where the main language is not English. Knowing another language can help you when you travel, when you meet people from other countries, and even in the job you do as an adult. Find out about learning other languages from someone who speaks two or more languages.
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Computer Communication
You probably use a computer at school or home or both. School computers have programs (called software) that can help you learn math, English, and other subjects. A home computer could have programs that help you learn, as well as programs for the familys budget, recipes, games, and much more. You can use word-processing software to write a school report or a letter. You can even check the spelling and grammar before printing it. Its still a good idea to read your work carefully, though, because the spelling checker will accept the word here even though you meant hear.
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Computer Talk
Computers use their own languages to talk to each other, just as people do. Of course, people write the languages and instruct the computers in using them. A job in computer communication might be what someone in your family does, or what you choose to do someday.
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Networks
Computers are connected to other computers by telephone lines and cable speed communications in our personal, business, and government worlds every day. Computer talk goes on between computers in one office, across the country, and around the worldalmost instantly! The computers at your school, at a family members workplace, or in your home might be on a network. A network links only member computers together. Computers on the network may be connected by phone lines or cables. The network might even be wireless, using radio waves for communication between the computers. This is a local area network (LAN). Larger wide area networks (WANs) link member computers in different locations, across the street or anywhere in the world. A group of businesses or organizations may communicate through an extranet. Members of one organization or company may communication through an intranet. Extranets and intranets work like the Internet, but each is private and only links members. A worldwide network links bank computers, allowing customers to use automatic teller machines (ATMs) to withdraw cash from their accounts, even when theyre far from home. Some people telecommute. Instead of traveling to a job, they work at home and use a computer to communicate with their employer. They can get company information, exchange messages with the staff, and send their work ineither from their homes or while they travel for the employer.
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Computer Health
Just as you need to take care of your own health, you need to take care of your computers health if you want it to last a long time and work well. Instructions that came with your computer should include the routine tasks you need to do, like removing old files you no longer use. If you keep up with these tasks, your computer will continue to perform well.
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Virus Protection
People protect themselves from viruses by doing things like eating healthy foods, taking vitamins, and washing their hands. Computers have their own kinds of viruses, and you need to help your computer stay virus-free, too. A virus might enter your computer from an e-mail message, from a Web site you visit, or from a disk you put into the computer. Some computer viruses are mostly harmless, but some can wreck your computer. A good virus protection program will recognize a virus and destroy it before it can damage your computer. You have several choices for virus-protection software; some are free and some charge a fee. The best virus protection programs keep up with new and changed viruses and offer a new download at least monthly, so your computer is better protected.
Making Choices
You can learn about choices for hardware, software, and service providers by visiting local computer stores and reading current computer magazines and computer company catalogs.
What do you need for surfing the Net? Computer technology changes so fast, new ways to get on the Net can become available at any time. When your Webelos Handbook was published, this is what was needed to get on the Internet using a computer: A computer. The best situation is to have a fast computer with a lot of memory, so you can surf efficiently. But you can still surf the Net without having the latest and greatest computer. Your Internet service provider (see below) can tell you how much speed and memory your computer needs. A modem or router. Having one of the faster modems or a router is an advantage. It will save you time in receiving information on your screen and getting information and new programs from other computers to yours (called downloading). A connection. This means signing up with a provider of your choice and paying a monthly or annual fee. An Internet service provider (or ISP) gives you a connection to the Internet and may provide e-mail and a few other services. A Web browser. This software guides your exploration of the Internets World Wide Web. There are only a few main Web browsers, but you do have choices. There is no charge for a Web browser. You can download the one you want to use with a computer that already has a connection and browser, then save the program to a CD or disk so you can load it onto your computer. If you buy a new computer, it should come with a browser already loaded and ready to use.
Never give out your name, address, telephone number, or school location or send your picture without your parents OK. Never plan to meet in person anyone you meet online, unless your parent approves and goes with you and the meeting is in a public place. Always tell an adult family member if anything you find or anyone you chat with makes you uncomfortable. Its important that both you and your adult family members think about safety on the Internet. Have your parent or guardian read the section Your Childs Safety on the Net and then discuss it with you.
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Electronic mail (e-mail) is a way of exchanging messages with other people. All Internet e-mail participants have a unique e-mail address with their Internet service provider. If you know a persons address, you can send e-mail no matter which service he or she uses. The messages can contain Web links, files, pictures, sounds, and other features. You write it and send it, and then it waits in the other persons mailbox until he or she checks the mail.
Hey Jim, Check out the Cub Scouting website, it is really cool! www.joincubscouting.org You should come to our den meeting next week at my house and see if you like it. You will have so much fun. See you at school tomorrow. Kevin
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Careers in Communication
Next time youre at the library, choose a book about a career field in communications. Read the book you choose and tell your den what you learned about the field. You could also visit a person who works in communicationsa newspaper reporter, an editor, a writer, a webmaster, a print buyerand share with your den what you learn from talking to him or her.
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Technology Group
C
Craftsman
Craftsman requirements
Requirement Do these:
1. Explain how to safely handle the tools that you will use for this activity badge. 2. With adult supervision and using hand tools, construct two different wooden objects you and your Webelos den leader agree on, such as the items listed below. Use a coping saw or jigsaw for these projects. Put them together with glue, nails, or screws. Paint or stain them. Book rack Shelf Bulletin board Weather vane Tie rack Letter holder Notepad holder Toolbox Towel rack Recipe holder Lamp stand Kitchen knife rack Kitchen utensil rack Napkin holder Animal cutouts Garden tool rack Lid holder Mailbox Birdhouse Desk nameplate Letter, bill, and pencil holder Bread box Key rack Measuring cup rack Measuring spoon rack
Approved by
3. Make a display stand or box to be used to display a model or an award. Or make a frame for a photo or painting. Use suitable material.
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4. Make four useful items using materials other than wood that you and your Webelos den leader agree on, such as clay, plastic, leather, metal, paper, rubber, or rope. These should be challenging items and must involve several operations.
any people use tools every day in their work. Think about the tools used by carpenters, automotive technicians, machinists who make precision metal parts, furniture makers, potters who create vases and bowls. Other people become experts at using tools so they can enjoy hobbies. For example, a person whose hobby is woodworking might design and build a table for his or her home.
In working on the Craftsman activity badge, youll become good at handling a variety of tools. Youll use wood to make some of your projects. For others, youll decide to work with leather, metal, or other materials. When you complete each requirement, ask your Webelos den leader or activity badge counselor to sign it on the previous page or this page.
Keep your hands away from saw teeth and knife blades so that if the tool slips, you wont get hurt. Be careful when youre hammering. If you miss the nail head, you sure dont want to hit your thumb! Practice using your materials and tools until you know how to handle them well. Protect your tools. When youre through working, put them back in place. Keep your workshop in order. A clean bench makes a safer place to work. Practicing good safety skills with hand tools as a Webelos Scout will help prepare you for the greater challenge of using power tools when you are a Boy Scout.
Choosing Projects
Plans for some projects are shown on these pages. You can find many more in books in your public library. Look under Crafts in the library card catalog or computer catalog. Or try making your own plans. Think about what you want to make. Draw a simple picture of it. Decide how big it should be. Write the dimensions on the drawing. Keep your costs down by using scrap material if you can. Then, with adult supervision, go to work!
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Woodworking Projects
These are some of the tools you need for woodworking projects: Hammer Set of knives Saws (ripsaw, crosscut saw, Pocket knife coping saw) Whetstone Pliers Sandpaper and sanding Screwdrivers block Chisels File and/or rasp Awl Nails Wood clamp Drill and drill bits
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Weather Vane
Cut the birds body and legs from thin wood with a coping saw. Bolt the legs on. Fasten the bird to a 1-by-6-by-12-inch board. Fasten the board to the top of a post with washers and a bolt so the board can turn.
Worm of rubber
Bolt
Post
Letter Holder
Draw the duck on a 6-by-8-inch piece of 12-inch plywood. Make sure you draw its feet and outspread wings. Cut them out with a coping saw. Fasten them to a piece of 1-by-2-by-6-inch wood with glue, nails, or screws.
Necktie Rack
To enlarge the pattern for this Scout badge tie rack, use the grid method. With a ruler, make a 12-by-13-inch grid of 1-inch squares on a large sheet of paper. Draw the badge by copying the badge outline from the small grid to the large one, square by square. Cut out your paper pattern and trace around it on 14inch-thick plywood. Cut the badge shape out with a coping saw. Sand it smooth. Drill holes for 14-inch dowels 212 inches long and glue them in. Paint or decorate the rack as you like and fasten a hanger to the back.
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4"
Front
4"
Rear
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Wall Shelf
Draw a half circle with a protractor on a piece of 1-by4-by-8-inch pine. Cut out with a coping saw.
1"4"8"
Coping saw
Protractor
Make the brace by sawing diagonally through another piece, 1-by-4-by-6-inches. Sand both pieces smooth.
Brads
Screw 1-inch angle irons to the bottom of the shelf at the back edge. With adult help, use wall fasteners to attach your shelf to the wall.
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4 12" Sq uare
plywood to post.
Use any material you like to make a picture frame or a 2"2" Piece display stand or box. Maybe youll decide to about 5" make a wooden frame for long a painting you made for the Artist activity badge. Or you 1 2" Plywood might make a display stand for your favorite pinewood For engraved derby car. One type of stand plate, glue is shown here. piece of 2"3"
Place car on nail.
Leatherworking
There are special tool kits for working with leather. You can buy them at hobby stores, or you can buy the Leathercraft Workshop from your Scouting distributor. Your leatherworking tools might include some of the following: Eyelet setter Lacing fid Rivet setter French skiver Shears Wing divider Punch set Arkansas stone Tooling board Skiving knife Mallet Thonging chisel Adjustable creaser Circle edge slicker
For your first projects, use calfskin leather. Its easy to cut and tool. Look for it at arts and crafts supply stores. Try designing and making simple projects like a key case, eyeglass case, coin purse, or drawstring purse.
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Beginning a Project
First make a pattern of the article you plan to make. Draw it on a piece of paper in its exact size. Use a ruler or steel square for straight lines. Cut out your paper pattern and draw dotted lines where folds will be. Fold the pattern to make sure it looks right. Make a template by tracing around the paper pattern on a piece of fairly heavy cardboard. Cut the cardboard, following the tracing lines. Then place the template on the piece of leather.
Cutting Leather
Place the leather on a softwood cutting block, with the rough side down. Put your template on the leather and hold it firmly. Draw its outline on the leather with a tracer or awl. Now use a very sharp knife to cut through the leather. Use a steel square or ruler to cut along straight lines.
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Tooling Leather
Tooling is the most common way of making designs on leather. A modeling tool is used to press the design into the leather. The leather must be moist. Dampen a sponge with water and hold it on the top side of the leather for about three seconds. Make your design on the leather with the modeling tool. If you dont have one, use an orangewood manicure stick or an awl.
Lacing
To make holes for lacing leather pieces together, use a tool called a drive punch or a large nail. Use a mallet or light hammer to drive the punch or nail. For lacing, you can use a leather thong or plastic laces. The drawings show two common lacing stitches.
Running Stitch
Whipstitch
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Clay Projects
Unless you know someone who has a potters kiln, use ovenfiring clay for your clay projects. Regular clay must be fired (baked) in a kiln, which gets much hotter than your kitchen oven. But you can fire oven-firing clay in your kitchen. Go to a hobby store for oven-firing clay and glazes in powder or liquid form. The glaze, which comes in different colors, will give your projects a shiny finish. Experiment with two basic methods of working in clay. Use the coil method to make bowls, cups, mugs, and other items with circular tops. Try the slab method to make boxes and other things with corners.
Coil Method
Suppose you want to make a small bowl. First flatten a big chunk of clay until it is about 12 inch thick. You can do this with a rolling pin. Cut out a circle about 3 inches across. This is the bottom of the bowl.
Coil Method
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For the first coil, make a long smooth rope of clay with your hands. It should be just slightly longer than the bottom of the bowl is aroundabout 10 inches. Coil the rope around the bottom. Cement it to the bottom with slipa thin mixture of clay and water. Smooth the seam with your fingers. Make more coils and cement them on with slip. Each one should be a little longer than the last so the bowl will slope outward and get wider as you build toward the top. Use your fingers and a kitchen knife to smooth the sides. Make sure there are no holes in the bowl. Let it dry for an hour or two before decorating, glazing, and firing.
Slab Method
In this method, you make slabs of clay and join them together with slip. Lets say you are going to make a small box. The sides and bottom will be 38 inch thick. Find two flat wooden sticks of that thickness and lay them on your worktable with the clay between them. Use a rolling pin, with its edges on the two sticks, to roll out the slab.
Slab Method
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Cut out pieces for the bottom, sides, and top. Join the sides and bottom with slip, using your fingers and a kitchen knife to smooth the seams. Let the box dry an hour or two before decorating, glazing, and firing.
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Technology Group
E
EnginEEr
Engineer requirements
Requirement Do both of these:
1. Talk to an engineer, surveyor, or architect in your area about the different occupations in engineering. Create a list that tells what they do. 2. Draw a floor plan of your home. Include doors, windows, and stairways.
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ngineers designed your school bus, the cars on the road, the road itself, and the bridges you cross. Engineers designed all the different kinds of computers you see at school, in offices, and at home. Almost anything you use that was manufactured was probably designed by an engineer. Not only that, but engineers designed the machines that workers used to make the product and the factory building where it was made. Airplanes, space shuttles, space stationsall designed by engineers. Engineers work in many exciting and challenging fields.
While you earn this activity badge, you can work on engineering projects like bridge models, a catapult, and an electrical circuit. When you complete each requirement, ask your Webelos den leader or activity badge counselor to sign it on page 212.
What Engineers Do
Engineering is a specialized profession, which means there are almost as many types of engineers as there are engineering jobs to be done. Here are some of the types of engineers and a few examples of the work they do: Civil engineers design construction projects like bridges, dams, stadiums, highways, and wastewater treatment plants. Mechanical engineers design automobiles, engines, refrigeration and heating systems, and machines. Electrical engineers design computers, motors, television sets, telephones, and communications systems. There are engineers in aerospace work, industry, agriculture, chemistry, and many other areas. Engineers write the specifications for their designs. Specifications are the rules that the project has to follow. They describe how the project is going to perform, what materials go into it, and exactly how the materials are to be put together.
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Engineers also may investigate problems like traffic flow, water and air pollution, and river flooding. Then they work on plans to solve the problems.
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Step-up Transformer
Transmission Lines
Distribution Lines
Step-down Transformer
Electric Power
An electric current is created when a magnet is spun rapidly inside a coil of wire. The huge generators in a power plant work on that principle. The turbines that spin the magnet are powered by water, steam, or wind power. Electricity moves along wires like water running through a pipe. The electricity generated by a power plant moves over wires to a nearby step-up transformer. There, the voltage is raised so that the electricity can go efficiently over long distances. A high-voltage line carries electricity to your town. But the voltage must be reduced by a step-down transformer before you can use the electricity in your home.
Electrical Circuits
An electrical circuit is the route by which electricity moves from an electrical source to the point where it is used and back again. In the house or building where you live, electrical circuits
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Metal Contacts This switch is in the off position. There is a gap in the path for electricity. When the switch is turned on, the metal contacts come together so the electricity can flow.
Electric Switch
supply electricity to different parts of the building. In lamps and appliances, when a switch is turned to the on position, it closes (completes) the circuit and allows electricity to flow to, for instance, the light bulb or the toaster. You can make a simple electric circuit. You will need A D size flashlight battery A holder for a small light bulb A light bulb that fits the holder An on/off switch Wire to connect it all together When the switch is off, the circuit is open, which means there is a gap in the circuit. Electricity cannot flow to the light bulb. When the switch is on, it closes the circuit. The circuit is complete, and electricity reaches the bulb.
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Bridges
The best way to learn about bridges is to study the way they are made. Then you can build model bridges, the way civil engineers do. You can use bricks, wooden blocks, and heavy paper. Start with a plank bridge. Set up two bricks. Lay a heavy piece of paper on them to go over the river beneath. What happens when you put a toy car on the bridge?
Plank Bridge
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What would you do to hold the middle? Putting a wooden block under it helps. This is called a pier bridge.
Pier Bridge
Beam Bridge
Take another piece of paper and fold the sides up 1 inch. Set this on the bricks. How much weight does this hold? More than the flat piece of paper? This is called a beam bridge. You may have seen beam bridges on railroads. They hold up a heavy weight over a short distance.
Curve a piece of heavy paper to form an arch. Slip it between two bricks. Set a piece of heavy paper on top of it and the bricks. This is called an arch bridge. Does it hold more weight than the others?
Arch Bridge
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Engineers know about shapes and how much weight each one will hold. Make a square out of four drinking straws, fastening the corners with straight pins. Stand it up. Is it rigid? Does it want to fold up? The square will move. Now make a triangle out of three straws. Does it move out of shape? In building very long bridges, engineers use a whole row of triangles. These are called truss bridges. Railroad bridges over rivers Truss Bridge are truss bridges. Suspension cable bridges are the largest. The Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, California, is a suspension bridge.
Runner
Luff
Gun Tackle
Twofold W = Weight
Single Whip
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A cardboard tube from a roll of paper towels or something similar will make a good scale. Suspend rubber band and wire as shown.
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This runner block and tackle is lifting several pieces of wood. The boys at either side support the rod to which one end of the block and tackles rope is attached. The rope goes around the pulley. The other end of the rope is attached to the spring scale, and the boy in the center is holding the scale and lifting, providing the force. The scale measures the force required to lift the object. By attaching the same object directly to the scale, the boys can then measure the force required without a block and tackle.
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Catapult
Catapults were once war machines used to throw huge rocks over castle walls. Today, a type of catapult is used to launch planes from aircraft carriers. A slingshot is also a kind of catapult. Heres a simple catapult you can make. When using it, be sure everyone is out of the way, behind you.
Marshmallow Catapult
To make this marshmallow-throwing catapult, you will need a clean, empty half-gallon milk carton, a 1-inch and a 3-inch rubber band, two pencils, a toothpick, a plastic spoon, tape, and some small marshmallows, or you can use cotton balls or small pieces of dry sponge. 1. Lay a paper milk carton on its side. Cut off one side and the top of the milk carton so it looks like the diagram. Cut holes the size of a pencil in both sides and in the bottom.
2. Fold down and tape the end of the carton. Push a rubber band through the bottom hole. Put the toothpick through it on the bottom, and tape it to hold the rubber band in place. Push a pencil through the side holes.
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3. Tape the plastic spoon onto one end of the second pencil. Put the small rubber band on the spoon pencil, lay it across the top of the first pencil, and use the small rubber band to securely attach (lash) the two pencils together. Attach the bottom rubber band to the other end of the spoon pencil.
4. Test your catapult to be sure it works properly: Place a marshmallow in the spoon, pull back the pencil, and release it. Adjust and modify your catapult as needed to make it work better.
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Computers in Engineering
Engineers use computers in many ways: To make calculations. Many advanced technological problems require a huge number of calculations to be solved. Hundreds of people working on the problem by hand might not be able to do them fast enough. To design and draw plans using a computer-aided design (CAD) program. CAD is especially useful to architectural and civil engineers in designing and building complicated bridges and other structures. During the design stage, computers can produce models of the structure that even look three-dimensional on a computer screen. These models can be changed and tested before building ever begins. The computer can analyze things such as the strength and weight of each part of the structure, as well as its cost and availability. For a building, the computer can determine whether there will be enough vertical braces, such as walls and columns, to keep a roof up. To calculate and store cost estimates and plan budgets for projects. To schedule work. To write business letters.
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9. Learn how to clean your home properly. With adult supervision, help do it for one month. 10. Show that you know how to take care of your clothes. With adult supervision, help at least twice with the family laundry. 11. With adult supervision, help plan the meals for your family for one week. Help buy the food and help prepare three meals for your family. 12. While you are a Webelos Scout, earn the Academics belt loop for Heritages. 13. Explain why garbage and trash must be disposed of properly.
family is a group of people who care for one another and share their lives and their love. There are many different kinds of families. Some families have a father, a mother, and children. In other families, children live with one parent. A grandparent or a guardian with a childthats a family too. And children belong to families in foster homes or boarding schools.
As you earn the Family Member activity badge, youll discover new ways to take part in family life and show your family you care about them. When you complete each requirement, ask an adult member of your family to sign it on the previous page or this page.
family Jobs
What are some of the jobs a family does? Someone cooks the meals, or maybe several people pitch in to help. Family members may take turns setting the table and taking the trash and garbage out. Does one person clean the house, or does each person clean part of it? Then theres lawn mowing and other outdoor chores. All these jobs are important, and they may be shared by family members who are old enough to do them. For requirement 2, list all your familys jobs around the house. Who does each job? Write in those names beside the jobs. Now you can discuss with your family some other ways you can help out.
It isnt hard to keep your room neat. Pick up after yourself. Put your books, games, and sports equipment where they belong. Learn to make your bedand do it every morning. Doing these things shows you care about others in your family.
Be safe at Home
A lot of people are hurt or even killed in accidents in their own homes each year. Most of these accidents could be prevented. Make your home safe by checking it for dangers. Then do something about the dangers. Other safety tips: If there are young children in the house, add special safety latches to kitchen and bathroom cabinets. Theyre easy for you and adults to open. When cooking, use the back burners when you can. Turn pot handles toward the back of the stove so young children cant reach them. Make sure all purses and briefcases, including those belonging to visitors, are placed out of childrens reach.
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Danger
Toys on Floor Furniture blocking easy passage Electric cords under rugs; worn cords can cause shock, fire Curtain cords dangling
Kitchen
Matches in reach of children Knives in reach of young children Cleaning fluids and other poisons exposed Spilled grease or water
Bathroom
Medicines in reach of young children Radio, hair dryer, or other electrical device near water source Toilet lid open Water too hot
Stairways
Boxes, toys, and other items left on stairs Handrail loose Stair covering loose Light bulb out
Tools left out Waste paper, rubbish near furnace Trash, garbage Sandbox, wading pool
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Try planning a budget for the first week. Heres a sample you can fill in, or make a chart of your own:
Where my money will come from: Allowance ........................................................... Jobs.................................................................... Savings............................................................... Total money ............................................... Where my money will go: School lunches (1 week) ....................................... Den dues ............................................................ Other expenses ______________________ ...................................... ______________________ ...................................... Total expenses ...........................................
Add up the total money available to you, and then add up the total expenses. If youre not going to have enough money for the first week, decide where you can cut down on expenses. If you expect to have more than enough money, you can increase your savings for another category. Plan the second, third, and fourth weeks. Be sure to include any special expenses you expect and make plans to save for them ahead of time if you can. Requirement 4 also asks you to keep a record of the money you spend for one week. Each time you spend money, write down what you spent it for and the amount. When you add up your actual expenses for a week, youll know whether your budget is working out. You may have to adjust your budget if you didnt include all your expenses, or you may have to cut down your spending so you dont run out of money.
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Saving Energy
Saving energy helps your family save money. It also helps conserve our natural resources. Requirement 7 asks you to prepare an energy-saving plan for your family. Check the list below to see what ideas need to go in your plan. Maybe you know other ways to save energy around your home. Close heating or air-conditioning vents in unused rooms. In winter, close the fireplace damper when the fireplace is not in use, because warm air in the house can be drawn up the chimney. Set the thermostat at the lowest comfortable level in winter and highest comfortable level in summer. In winter, lower the heat at night. Keep windows and outside doors closed when heating or air conditioning is on. Dont keep the refrigerator open more than needed. Cook several foods at one time. For example, if you cook two things in the oven at one time, the oven doesnt have to be on as long. Dont let water run when it isnt needed. Use lower wattage bulbs where less light is needed.
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family fun
A family can have fun together in many ways. Some ways may cost no money, others cost a lot. Try to think of some inexpensive activities your family can do for fun. Here are some ideas: Play a new game together Make crafts with your family Go on a picnic Visit a museum, zoo, or park Do some community activities together Go swimming Go on a fishing trip
What are some other things you can do with your family?
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Cleaning may not be anyones favorite activity, but when youre done, its satisfying to have a clean home to live in and enjoy. You are old enough to help, so pitch in willingly. This is another way of showing you care about your family and your home.
Do you take care of your own clothes? When theyre dirty, do you put them in the laundry hamper? Once theyre clean, do you fold them and put them in drawers or hang them on hangers in the closet? There is no trick to doing these things. You can learn to fold clothes in about two minutes. Why not help with the laundry? Youll learn how to operate the familys washing machine or the large machines at the selfservice laundry. It will be one more step in showing that you can share in your familys jobs.
Planning Meals
Do you think it would be great to have a hamburger, French fries, and soda for every meal? Youd soon get bored with it, and a diet like that wouldnt do your body any good. To stay healthy, you need a balanced diet and a variety of foods. When you help an adult in your family plan meals for requirement 11, look at the Food Guide Pyramid on page 249 and the section on meal planning, pages 248256 (Fitness activity badge). That will tell you about a balanced diet and give you ideas for a variety of foods to choose for your plan.
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Preparing Meals
Have an adult member of your family with you when you prepare meals. He or she can help if you dont understand the cookbook recipe or the directions on a box. For requirement 11, youll help with at least three meals. Will they be three different breakfasts? Or a breakfast, a lunch, and a dinner? Getting a meal ready to eat shouldnt be difficult. Maybe you already prepare your own breakfast cereal. But this requirement asks you to help prepare three meals for the whole family. So you might be cooking hot cereal and adding chopped apple to it, or mixing up pancakes to serve with blueberries. Dont forget the other items on your menu plan, like milk and fruit juice. Lunch can be easy, especially when you know exactly what to get ready. Washing fruit and putting it in a bowl on the table can take just a few minutes. If you get out all the ingredients for the familys favorite sandwiches before you start, you can put them together quickly. Dinner may take more planning. Since some foods take longer to cook than others, ask an adult to help you decide when to start cooking each dish so everything is ready at about the
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same time. Or maybe youll plan a dish you can make earlier in the day, and you can prepare the remaining items just before dinner. If you use a recipe, read it carefully. Then read it again. Follow it exactly. If the recipe calls for 1 teaspoon of salt and you put in a tablespoon, your dinner will be a disaster! After dinner, when everyone compliments your good food, youll feel great. But theres still one thing to do. Clean up! Wouldnt this be a good time for everyone to help?
family meetings
Requirement 5 asks you to take part in at least four family meetings. Most families dont have formal meetings, but when your family is at the dinner table, you probably talk about school and events coming up. You make plans for a weekend or a trip. Thats one type of meeting that is more like a conversation. Sometimes families need to sit down and talk at a special time about plans and ideas they need to work out together. These are family meetings, too. The meeting might involve plans for fun, or it might be about serious topics that a parent wants children to know about. Here are some of the subjects that might come up at a meeting like this:
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A schedule to get everyone to music lessons, religious instruction, sports practices, Webelos den meetings, and home again Plans for a weekend camping trip or a vacation during the summer Family volunteering, like a bike ride for charity or a litter cleanup in your community Deciding what to make or buy as a gift for a relative or family friend Current events, what is in the news Family rules Ideas for helping each other What everyone needs to know about child abuse, alcoholism, drug abuse, and crime prevention In the meeting, its important to listen as well as to talk about your ideas and opinions. If other family members disagree with you, dont get angry about it. Remember, they have their own interests and ideas, just as you do. Afterward, do your best to do your part in whatever is decided. Family meetings are important. Talking about things brings all family members closer together.
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fitnEss
fitness requirements
Requirement Do this:
1. With your parent, guardian, or Webelos den leader, complete the Health and Fitness Character Connection. a. b.
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Know: Tell why is it important to be healthy, clean, and fit. Commit: Tell when it is difficult for
you to stick with good health habits. Tell where you can go to be with others who encourage you to be healthy, clean, and fit.
c.
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5. Tell an adult member of your family about the bad effects smoking or chewing tobacco would have on your body. 6. Tell an adult member of your family four reasons why you should not use alcohol and how it could affect you. 7. Tell an adult member of your family what drugs could do to your body and how they would affect your ability to think clearly. 8. Read the booklet Take a Stand Against Drugs! Discuss it with an adult and show that you understand the material.
hat does fitness mean? It means being healthy and in good physical and mental shape. One of your jobs in life is taking care of your wonderful and complex body. You need to become an expert at keeping it working at its best. That means you must have a healthy diet and plenty of exercise and rest. You must avoid harmful substances.
You can earn the Fitness activity badge at home, on your own and with a family member. Youll learn about taking care of yourself, so youll be your best when you work, play, and learn. When you have completed each requirement, ask an adult member of your family to sign it on the previous page or this page.
can check the booklet How to Protect Your Children from Child Abuse that comes as a pull-out section with this book.
You can use the advice Inside MyPyramid to help you make smart choices from every food group, find your best balance between food and physical activity, and get the most nutrition out of your calories. Every member of your family has different nutritional needs, and each of them can go to mypyramid.gov to find out what those are. (Or you can do it for them.) That information is what you need to be ready to plan family meals. By using MyPyramid, youll plan a balanced diet that includes protein, vitamins, minerals, carbohydrates, and fiber. You need all of these to grow and stay healthy and strong. See the pyramid on the next page. You need the most each day from the widest areas of the pyramid, and the least amounts from the narrowest areas. GrainsMake half your grains whole. Eat at least 3 ounces of whole-grain cereals, breads, crackers, rice, or pasta every day. One ounce is about 1 slice of bread, about 1 cup of breakfast cereal, or cup of cooked rice, cereal, or pasta. VegetablesVary your veggies. Eat more dark-green veggies like broccoli, spinach, and other dark leafy greens. Eat more orange vegetables like carrots and sweet potatoes. Eat more dry beans and peas like pinto beans, kidney beans, and lentils. FruitsFocus on fruits. Eat a variety of fruit. Choose fresh, frozen, canned, or dried fruit. Go easy on fruit juices (they are high in sugar and low in fiber). MilkGet your calcium-rich foods. Go low-fat or fat-free when you choose milk, yogurt, and other milk products. If you dont or cant consume milk, choose lactose-free products or other calcium sources such as fortified foods and beverages. Meat and beansGo lean with protein. Choose low-fat or lean meats and poultry. Bake it, broil it, or grill it (dont fry it). Vary your protein routinechoose more fish, beans, peas, nuts, and seeds. Fats, sugars, and salt (sodium)Choose these with caution. Get most of your fat from fish, nuts, and vegetable oils. Limit solid fats like butter, stick margarine, shortening, and lard. Check nutrition labels to keep your intake low on saturated fats, trans fats, and sodium. Choose foods and beverages that are low in added sugar.
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WaterNot on the pyramid. but essential. Be sure you drink plenty of water, too, especially if youve been playing hard, hiking, or exercising. Source: www.mypyramid.gov
1 slice of bread (a sandwich has two servings) 1 tortilla 12 cup cooked rice, pasta, or cereal 1 ounce ready-to-eat cereal 12 hamburger bun, bagel, or English muffin (one whole bun has two servings) 3 to 4 plain crackers (small) 1 pancake (a stack of three pancakes has three servings) 12 doughnut or Danish (medium) 116 cake (average) 2 cookies (medium) 112 pie (two-crust)
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1 apple, banana, orange, pear, nectarine, peach, or melon wedge 34 cup fruit juice 12 cup chopped, cooked, or canned fruit 14 cup dried fruit
Meat and Beans These are equal to 1 ounce of meat, poultry, or fish:
12 cup cooked beans 1 egg 2 tablespoons peanut butter 13 cup nuts
Fats, Sugars, and Salt Use sparingly. Examples of fats and oils in your diet are:
One pat (1 tablespoon) butter or mar arine g Oils used in cooking Shortening used in pastry Salad dressings (read the label) Fat-free dressings are available.
Sweets include most desserts, cookies, candy, cakes, pies, puddings, and syrups. Some reduced-fat and reduced-sugar products are available.
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Vegetables
1 carrot 34 cup mixed vegetable juice 1 stalk celery (1 cup chopped)
Grains
1 graham cracker, wheat cracker, 12 English muffin, or rice cake 12 bagel 1 low-fat granola bar 1 cup popcorn, light (not much fat added) 1 ounce pretzels
Milk
1 ounce skim mozzarella cheese 1 cup of 1 percent chocolate milk 1 cup powdered breakfast drink made with skim milk 1 cup skim milk 8 ounces yogurt with fruit
Mixtures
1 cup low-sodium (low-salt) chicken noodle or vegetable soup 1 cup low-sodium (low-salt) chicken broth
Sugars
1 slice angel food cake (bread group) 3 gingersnaps or vanilla wafers (bread group) 12 cup ice milk (milk group) 1 juice bar (fruit group)
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a sample menu
Make different daily plans with a variety of foods. Check to see if you have enough servings from each food group.
Sample Menu for a 2,000-Calorie/Day Diet
Group Grains Breakfast Orange Milk Cereal with raisins Whole-grain toast Lunch Ham sandwich on whole-grain bread Carrot sticks Apple Milk Afternoon Snack Celery Dinner Chicken Peas Brown rice Tossed salad Low-fat salad dressing Ice milk Evening Snack Popcorn Daily Total
1 1 1 1 1
Vegetables
Fruits
Milk
2 medium 1 cup
2 cup
( 4 cup in cereal)
1
1 slice
2 slices bread
Lettuce leaf
1
6 ounces
The amounts you need may be different than these. See www.mypyramid.gov to find out your daily amounts of each food group.
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Fat-free pretzels
Nutrition Facts
Serving Size 1 oz. (28g/About 12 pretzels) Servings Per Container 15
Amount Per Serving
Nutrition Facts
Serving Size 1 oz. (28g/About 12 pieces) Servings Per Container 10
Amount Per Serving
Calories 110
Calories 150
Total Fat 0g Saturated Fat 0g Cholesterol 0mg Sodium 520mg Total Carbohydrate 23g Dietary Fiber 1g Sugars less than 1g Protein 2g
Vitamin A 0% Calcium 0%
0% 0% 0% 22% 8% 5%
Total Fat 10g Saturated Fat 2.5g Cholesterol less than 5mg Sodium 350mg Total Carbohydrate 15g Dietary Fiber less than 1g Sugars 1g Protein 2g
Vitamin A 0% Calcium 2%
Vitamin C 0% Iron 2%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily values may be higher or lower depending on your calories needs. Calories: Total Fat Sat Fat Cholesterol Sodium Total Carbohydrate Dietary Fiber Less Less Less Less 2,000 2,500
*Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily values may be higher or lower depending on your calories needs. Calories: Total Fat Sat Fat Cholesterol Sodium Total Carbohydrate Dietary Fiber Less Less Less Less 2,000 2,500
than 65g 80g than 20g 25g than 300mg 300mg than 2,400mg 2,400mg 300g 375g 25g 30g Protein 4
than 65g 80g than 20g 25g than 300mg 300mg than 2,400mg 2,400mg 300g 375g 25g 30g Protein 4
If you read labels, you begin to get an idea of the nutritional content of different types of foods. Some have higher sodium (salt) content than others. Some products have protein, potassium, vitamins A and C, calcium, and iron, and some have little or none. Some have fiber, and some dont. Some have extra sugars that add calories but few nutrients. Read the ingredient list and make sure that added sugars (with names like sucrose, glucose, and high fructose corn syrup) arent one of the first few ingredients. Eating right is a kind of balancing act. What you dont get from one food you may get from another. The more you learn about what your body needs, the better prepared youll be to make wise choices about food.
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The effects of inhalants: Sniffing glue and inhaling the fumes of paint thinner or gasoline can be dangerous and even fatal. These substances contain toxins that can affect the liver, kidneys, and muscular system. Inhaling these poisonous substances can also cause psychological problems. Stay away from inhalants and drugs and people who sell them. Marijuana, cocaine and crack, heroin, speed, pep pills, LSD, and other illegal drugs bring nothing but trouble. Some drugs make people drowsy. Some make it hard to know what is real and what is a dream. Others make people feel so awake and active that they cannot relax and rest. Overdoses are often fatal. All illegal drugs are bad news.
Note: Take a Stand Against Drugs materials may be obtained through your local council service center.
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Outdoor Group
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forester requirements
Requirement Do five of these:
1. Make a map of the United States. Show the types of forests growing in different parts of the country. Name some kinds of trees that grow in these forests. 2. Draw a picture to show the plant and tree layers of a forest in your area. Label the different layers. (If you dont live in an area that has forests, choose an area that does and draw a picture of that forest.) 3. Identify six forest trees common to the area where you live. Tell how both wildlife and humans use them. (If you dont live in a region that has forests, read about one type of forest and name six of its trees and their uses.) 4. Identify six forest plants (other than trees) that are useful to wildlife. Tell which animals use them and for what purposes. 5. Draw a picture showing how water and minerals in the soil help a tree grow how the tree uses sunlight to help it grow 6. Make a poster showing a trees growth rings or examine the growth rings of a tree stump. Explain how the rings tell its life history.
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7. Collect pieces of three kinds of wood used for building houses. Tell what kinds of wood they are and one place each of them might be used. 8. Plant 20 forest tree seedlings. Tell how you planted them and what you did to take care of them after planting. 9. Describe both the benefits and the harm wildfires can cause in a forest ecosystem. Tell how you can help prevent wildfire. 10. Draw your own urban forestry plan for adding trees to a street, yard, or park near your home. Show what types of trees you would like to see planted.
rees and other forest plants are important parts of the interconnected life on Earth. A foresters worktaking care of trees and managing forest landis important to the well-being of the planet. Youll learn why when you earn the Forester activity badge. Wherever you live, on a farm, in a small town, in a large cityor even in the middle of a forestyou can learn about identifying trees and planting new trees. You might visit a forest with your Webelos den. Take your time and notice everythingall kinds of trees and other plants, animals, birds, and insects. The forest is a fascinating place.
Learning about forests will help you understand more about how all the living things on our planet work together to keep each other healthy. Forests provide much more than building material and shade. They help keep a livable climate for us and other animals. We learn to make medicines from studying forest
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plants. Learning about forests is important because we need to manage our forests wisely to keep them healthy. When you complete each requirement, ask your Webelos den leader or activity badge counselor to sign it on pages 260261.
West coast forest Western forest Northern forest Central hardwood forest Southern forest Subtropical forest
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Northern forest: Low temperatures, short growing season. Common trees are eastern white pine, northern white cedar, white and black spruces, paper birch, sugar maple, northern red oak. Central hardwood forest: Climate varies from north to south. Rich soils. Good rainfall, usually. Some of the trees are red, white, and black oak; black walnut; sycamore; sweetgum; silver maple; poplar; hickory. Hardwood trees lose their leaves in the fall. Some conifers (trees that have cones) also grow in this region. Southern forest: Drier soils, but usually enough rainfall. Typical trees are shortleaf and longleaf pines, magnolia, red and white oak, pecan, poplar, overcup oak, holly. In swamps, bald cypress and gums. Subtropical forest: Warm climate and humid (damp). Common trees are West Indies mahogany, mangroves, palms.
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forest structure
Did you know a forest has layers? Here are the five basic forest layers, from top to bottom. The canopy: The canopy of a forest is made up of the tops of the tallest trees. Its like the roof of the forest. This layer gets the most sunlight, so it often produces the most food for wildlife. Birds, squirrels, reptiles, and insects live here. The understory: Shorter trees grow in the understory of the forest. They get less sunlight, but they also produce food and habitat for animals, birds, and insects. The shrub layer: Shrubs are woody plants, smaller than trees, that have more than one stem. Mammals, birds, and insects live and feed in the shrub layer. The herb layer: These plants are small and have softer stems that are not woody. Depending on the type of forest and the amount of sunlight at this level, youd find ferns, grasses, and wildflowers here. Insects, mice, other small animals, and snakes live here. Large animals like deer and bears depend on the food in the understory, shrub layer, and herb layer. The forest floor: This bottom layer collects dead leaves and plants, fallen trees, animal droppings, dead animalsand returns them to the soil in a process called decomposition. Earthworms, fungi, and insects, along with bacteria and other microscopic organisms, gradually break down the materials. The plants of the forest absorb the nutrients released by decomposition. Look for plants in the different forest layers in your area (or in a forest area in your state). What kinds of trees are the tallest? Which trees are in the understory? In an eastern hardwood forest, the tallest trees might be oak and hickory. The understory could contain flowering dogwood, redbud, sassafras, and sumac. The shrub layer might have blackberry and wild grape. In a western conifer forest, the tallest trees might be Douglas fir,
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western hemlock, and western red cedar. The understory might have Pacific yew, dogwood, and ocean spray. The shrub layer might have salal and sword fern. The forest you study could have entirely different trees and plants.
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forest trees
Foresters learn everything about the many kinds of trees, smaller plants, and animals that grow and live in the forests they manage. A few of the forest trees that grow in the United States are shown on these pages.
Douglas Fir Pacific Northwest coast and Rocky Mountains Height: 100250 feet Used for lumber, plywood, paper.
Sweetgum Southeastern states and north to Connecticut, New York, Ohio, Illinois, Missouri, Oklahoma Height: 80120 feet Used for veneer, furniture, cabinets, and woodwork. (Veneer is a thin layer of wood used to make furniture surfaces.)
Eastern White Pine Northeastern states Height: 50100 feet Used for cabinets, interior lumber, woodenware.
Ponderosa Pine All western states, into southern Canada and northern Mexico Height: 60200 feet Used for lumber, fences, railroad ties; very important for millwork.
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Shagbark Hickory Eastern half of the United States Height: 6080 feet Used for furniture, wall paneling, tool handles, cooking fuel; provides nuts for wildlife.
Walnut Eastern half of the United States Height: 80100 feet Used for furniture, gunstocks, doors, and cabinets; wildlife and humans eat the nuts.
White Oak Eastern half of the United States Height: 60120 feet Used for lumber, furniture, boats, fuel wood; the acorns are important food for wildlife.
Hemlock Northeast (eastern hemlock) Far west (western and mountain hemlocks) Height: 60100 feet (mountain hemlock); 125 200 feet (western hemlock) Used for lumber, pulpwood for paper, and railroad ties. Longleaf Pine Southeastern coastal states Height: 100120 feet Once used for turpentines and resins; now used for lumber and framing.
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Wildlife uses:
Bluebirds, catbirds, and mockingbirds eat the red berries of the holly tree. Deer eat tree bark, leaving marks. Deer also eat tree leaves, stems, and other green plants. Bears mark their territory by clawing and biting tree trunks. Mountain lions sharpen their claws on trees. Moose, elk, and deer use tree trunks or flexible saplings to rub the velvet off their antlers. Beavers eat the bark and cut down trees to build dams and homes for themselves.
Human uses:
Hickory and white ash are used to make baseball bats and tool handles. Western red cedar is used to make porches, decks, and shingles for roofs.
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Mesquite and hickory chips on cooking fires flavor food. Candles are made from the waxy covering of the southern bayberry fruit. Maple syrup is made from the sap of sugar maples harvested in the early spring.
but jack pine needles are only about 1 inch long. The size and type of cone will also provide clues to the identity of the tree. The tree supports much life. Look for woodpecker holes, insects hiding under the bark, mistletoe rooted in the branches, fungi growing on the bark, and the nests of birds and squirrels. Move slowly and quietly so you can have a chance to see birds, squirrels, and other animals.
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The crown of the tree grows each year by adding a new growth of leaves and twigs. This growth comes from young cells in buds on the twigs.
Tree Bud
Photosynthesis
Chlorophyll Trees, like all captures the plants with green suns energy. leaves, use sunlight Carbon dioxide to make food from air and water, in a from the air. chemical process Oxygen and called photosynthemoisture are sis. The food (carreleased into bohydrate) is made the air. Water and in the leaves. Carbon dioxide minerals from from the air comes the roots. through pores in the leaves. Water and minerals come up through the roots in tubelike pathways in the tree to the veins in the leaves. (You can see these tubes on the branch and in the stem when you detach a leaf.) Chlorophyll is what makes a leaf green. It also captures the suns energy and uses it to process carbon dioxide and water, making liquid sugar. This flows to every living part of the tree, nourishing it and helping it grow. Some of the oxygen taken from the water is left over. The tree doesnt need all the leftover oxygen, so the leaves release excess oxygen and also water, keeping the air around the trees damp and cool.
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Fire Scar: A tree can be damaged by fire even if it is not burned down. Disease and insects can enter through fire scars.
Thinning: At this point, nearby trees were cut down, giving the tree more light. There were 20 years of growth before thinning, and 10 years of growth after. Sapwood: Carries sap from roots to leaves. Heartwood: Originally sapwood, inactive; gives strength to a tree.
Cambium: This thin layer of cells between bark and wood is where the trunk grows. Each year it forms a ring of new wood toward the inside of the trunk and new inner bark toward the outside of the trunk.
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tree Planting
Planting new trees is the key to sustainable forestry. Sustainable forestry means that people in the future will have the same abundant forests that we enjoy today. Carry seedlings in a bucket or box. Keep the roots damp. Plant them at least 6 feet apart. Dig holes just deep enough to hold the roots. Loosen the sides and bottom of the hole so that tiny roots can push into the soil. The roots should not be stuffed into the hole, or the trees chances of surviving are low. A seedling should be planted so that its old ground line is about 14 inch below the new ground level. (The ground line is the dark mark on the trunk.) A seedling should be planted with its trunk straight up and the hole filled with soil even with the ground. The soil should not be sunk in or mounded up above the ground.
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Press the soil down firmly around the roots to prevent air pockets. If you dont, the roots will dry out and the tree will probably die. A newly planted seedling needs lots of water, so soak the soil around the seedling with water, and then soak it again. Cover the ground around the base of the seedling with several inches of mulchcomposted leaves, wood chips, grass cuttings, straw, or sawdust. This holds in moisture and helps make the soil richer for the new tree.
Fall Color
Why do some hardwood tree leaves change color and fall off the tree? Chlorophyll production stops in the fall, revealing the yellow and orange pigments that were hidden by the green of the chlorophyll. Reds and purplish colors also develop in leaves rich in sugar, in trees like hard maples, dogwoods, and sweetgums. As winter approaches, days grow shorter. The place where the leaf stem is connected to the branch weakens. Wind and frost can cause the connections to break, and the leaves fall. wildlife. Sometimes it destroys the animals themselves. And, as more people build their homes near or in forests, more and more homes are at risk of being destroyed by wildfire. Wildfire can burn the plant cover that protects the soil and sometimes might cause erosion. When soil and ashes wash into streams and lakes, good fishing may be spoiled. Campsites and other recreation areas may be destroyed by fire. You can help prevent wildfire in these ways: Be extremely careful with any fire you build in the outdoors. Always build your fire in a safe place and watch it at all times. Dont leave a fire until it is out and cold. If you can still feel heat through the ashes, the fire is not completely out. (Be careful not to burn your hands!) If you see a fire, report it immediately to the nearest fire warden or fire department. Because some kinds of fires can help the forest, foresters sometimes intentionally set controlled fires (called prescribed fires) or allow a natural fire caused by lightning to burn in order to reduce the buildup of deadwood or leaves on the forest
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floor. When this material gets too deep, a wildfire will burn hotter, increasing the destruction. Foresters also use prescribed fires to maintain savannas, which are grasslands with scattered trees and shrubs. Fires help control the invasion of too many trees into the grassland. The lodgepole pine, which grows in the west from Alaska to Baja, California, actually needs fire to release its seeds. Its cones stay closed and attached to the tree for years. When a ground fire comes through the forest, the heat causes the cones to open and release the seeds.
Urban forestry
Foresters work in cities, too. Thats called urban forestry. These foresters know what kinds of trees grow well in a city environment.
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Planting trees in cities helps in these ways: New trees beautify streets and show that people care about the way their city looks. People enjoy walking along treelined, shady sidewalks. Trees in front of businesses make the property more attractive to customers. Flowering trees put on a show in the spring. Fall leaf colors brighten the city in autumn. Adding trees in parks creates shady places to play and picnic. Shade trees can be located to shade pavement and buildings, cooling them in summer and cutting down on air-conditioning costs. A grove of trees can shelter an area from winter winds. Trees provide habitat and food for birds and other wildlife in the city. Trees purify air by taking in carbon dioxide and releasing oxygen. Urban foresters plan tree-planting projects, decide what kinds of trees to plant, and supervise crews of workers who plant and care for new trees. The foresters also may advise volunteer groups working on community tree-planting projects.
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Outdoor Group
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GeoloGist
Geologist Requirements
Requirement Do five of these:
1. Collect five geologic specimens that have important uses. 2. Rocks and minerals are used in metals, glass, jewelry, road-building products, and fertilizer. Give examples of minerals used in these products. 3. Make a scale of mineral hardness for objects found at home. Show how to use the scale by finding the relative hardness of three samples. 4. List some of the geologic materials used in building your home. 5. Make a drawing that shows the cause of a volcano, a geyser, or an earthquake. 6. Explain one way in which mountains are formed. 7. Describe what a fossil is. How is it used to tell how old a formation is? Find two examples of fossils in your area. 8. Take a field trip to a geological site, geological laboratory, or rock show. Discuss what you learned at your next Webelos den meeting. 9. While you are a Webelos Scout, earn the Cub Scout Academics belt loop for Geology.
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geologist is a person who studies the history of the earth and its life. In this case, the history books are rocks. Geologists are interested in learning how the earth is made. Geologists study rock formations at the tops of mountains and deep in the earths crust. They investigate earthquakes, volcanoes, and geysers. They know about the uses of rocks and minerals. Some geologists search for mineral deposits like gold, diamonds, coal, and oil. In earning this activity badge, youll find out how the earth is formed and what is in it. Youll find out what fossils are. Youll learn what they can tell us about the earth millions of years ago. When you complete each requirement, ask your Webelos den leader or activity badge counselor to sign it on page 280.
Granite
Geologist
Igneous Rock
Igneous rock is any rock made by the cooling of magma or lava. Magma is molten material that flows under the earths crust. Sometimes it finds a weak spot and breaks through to
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form great areas of rock called flood basalts, or it may erupt as a volcano. Besides basalt, examples of igneous rock are granite and obsidian.
The Tooth of Time at Philmont Scout Ranch is an example of igneous rock formed by volcanic action 22 to 40 million years ago.
Sedimentary Rock
Sediment is gravel, sand, clay, or soil that settles out of water in riverbeds, ponds, lakes, and oceans. Sediment may contain shells and skeletons. Sedimentary rock is formed in layers, like a giant cake, after sediment has been under great pressure for millions of years. If the sediment was originally sand, it becomes sandstone. Clay turns into shale. Shells and skeletons make limestone. Small pebbles and sand form conglomerate.
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Metamorphic Rock
Metamorphic rock has been through a process much like baking. (Meta means changed, and morphic means form.) The change is caused by intense heat and great pressure deep in the earth. Under these conditions, sedimentary limestone becomes marble. Sedimentary sandstone turns into quartzite. Igneous granite changes into gneiss (pronounced nice).
Useful Minerals
The earth contains useful minerals. Some, like silica (sand), are easy to see and collect. Others, like iron and zinc, are found in rocks. They must be removed from the rock by a process called smelting or refining.
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There are three classes of useful mineralsmetals, nonmetallic minerals, and fuels. Here are some examples.
Metals Nonmetallic Minerals Used in building materials and supplies Iron Tin Platinum Zinc Mercury Aluminum Lead Gold Uranium Copper Silver Magnesium Gypsum Potash Limestone Sand Borax Talc Quartz Precious and semiprecious stones Turquoise Topaz Garnet Tourmaline Diamond Zircon Sapphire Ruby Coal Natural gas Petroleum Uranium (used for nuclear fuel) Fuels
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Collecting specimens
One way to begin a collection of geologic specimens is to visit a business that sells building stone or one that makes gravestones. These businesses might have small scraps of marble, granite, sandstone, limestone, pumice, shale, or slate that they will give you. Or, go on a field trip. If possible, go with a collector who knows a lot about rocks (called a rock hound). A rock hound will know which rocks contain useful materials. Look for minerals in gravel or sand pits, road cuts, diggings, mountains, hills, and stream banks. But stay away from dangerous areas like quarries, mine dump heaps, and old mines. Always have an adult with you. Be careful when climbing on rocks or cliffs. Watch out for snakes. They may crawl under rocks, so learn to poke around a rock with a stick before reaching under it. Keep your rock samples small. Small ones are easier to carry and easier to care for. Collecting rocks is not allowed in national parks and in many state parks. Ask permission before you collect anywhere.
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Geologists Equipment
Safety glasses to protect your eyes. A pocket magnifier for seeing things up close. Geologists hammer for pulling rocks out of hillsides and breaking them open. Cold chisel, 12-inch to 1-inch wide, for chipping stone with a hammer and for digging things loose. Small notebook and pencil for recording where and when you found a sample. Number each sample in the notebook. Clear plastic food storage bags. Write the number of the rock sample on paper and slip it into the bag with the rock sample. Heavy gloves for rough work. A small day pack for carrying equipment and rocks.
Your Collection
You can display your rock collection by putting specimens in egg cartons, or you can make dividers Specimen Boxes for boxes. On each specimen, paint a spot of quick-drying white enamel. When it is dry, write a number Egg Carton on the spot with a dark felt-tip pen. For each specimen, keep a card with that number. The card should tell what the specCigar Box With imen is and where and when you found it. Dividers
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Metal Iron
Use Beams, girders, posts, nails, machines, screws Electric wiring, gutters, roofing, pipes
Copper
Galvanizing pipe, sheet metal Siding, windows, doors, roofs Glass Glass Cement, building stone
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Volcanoes
Volcanoes are simply vents in the ground formed by the pressure of magma building up. They come in many sizes and shapes. The streams of melted rock that pour out of the earth during some volcanic eruptions are called lava. Lava changes the earths shape as it flows and cools. In time, it may build up into a mountain peak with a vent up the center. From this chimney comes smoke, steam, and gas mixed with melted minerals. As lava pours out, it spreads over the country- Mount St. Helens in Washington side and keeps building up. state erupted in 1980. Geologists say that in some places this mineral rock may be thousands of feet deep. Cool lava becomes igneous rock. The foaming surface of lava forms lightweight pumice stone, which is used as an abrasive cleanser or polish.
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Capulin Volcano
Capulin Volcano, an extinct volcano in northeastern New Mexico, is more than 1,000 feet high from its base to the crater rim. Long ago, wagon trains traveling west used it as a landmark. From its rim you can see parts of five states: New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas, Kansas, and Colorado. Capulin Volcano National Monument is not far from Philmont Scout Ranch. If you visit Philmont, maybe youll have a chance to see Capulin Volcano, too. Capulin Volcano is one of the United States largest recent cinder cones. But thats recent in geologic terms: Geologists estimate that it was active about 7,000 years ago. The cone is also one of the most perfectly shaped. The rim is 1 mile around, and the center is 415 feet below the rim.
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Geysers
Geysers form when underground water meets hot gases and molten rock deep in the earth. This water is partly changed into steam by the red-hot magma. The steam gathers in the geysers tube. When enough pressure builds, a column of steam and boiling water erupts into the air. Old Faithful geyser is in Yellowstone National Park. It shoots 100 to 150 feet into the air. Until 1959, this occurred about every 70 minutes. Since then, its timing has been affected by several earthquakes, making it less predictable. In some geysers, the steam pours out in a steady cloud. Underground hot water and steam are also present in areas around geysers called geothermal fields. In some places, steam from the geothermal field is piped to power plants and used to make electricity, but this often kills the nearby geysers. In some geysers there is so much water it isnt turned into steam. This heated water flows out as a hot spring. Because the water is hot, it dissolves minerals from the rocks it passes over. Some of these mineral springs have become health resorts.
Old Faithful geyser in Yellowstone National Park
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Fault A fault is a fracture in the earths crust. Earthquakes may occur along a fault.
earthquakes
The earths rock crust is not in one piece like an unbroken shell around the planet. Its made up of parts called plates. The plates that are mostly land are called continental plates, and the plates under oceans are called oceanic plates. The plates are huge, and they are moving all the time. They move slowly, perhaps 1 inch a year, but they have great force. Most earthquakes occur along plate boundaries, when the edges of two plates slide into each other or past each other. Far below the surface, the rocks are strained to the limit by this pressure and finally break up, sending out vibrations called seismic waves. The seismic waves reach the surface, causing anything from a short, light shaking to violent tremors that can wreck a city. In California, many earthquakes have happened along the San Andreas fault. The San Andreas fault lies over the place where the North American plate meets the Pacific plate. An earthquake may happen near the surface of the earth, or it may be as much as 400 miles down. Scientists use a machine called a seismograph to measure the force of vibrations in the earths crust.
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Mountains have been formed over millions of years. There are three basic ways this has been done. First, mountains are formed when the plates in the earths crust collide. Over a very long time, the crust will fold or arch up, resulting in mountains caused by crustal uplift. The Rocky Mountains were formed this way. In the Great Basin area of the western United States, which includes most of Nevada and parts of its neighboring states, the
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crust was pushed upward and then pulled apart. Huge sections of the crust, called fault blocks, dropped downward, making broad valleys between mountain ranges. Volcanic action also makes mountains, as you read on page 290. This action happens along the moving edges of the plates. Mount Rainier in Washington state is an example of a mountain made out of cooled lava and volcanic debris. Finally, erosion makes mountains, usually lower ones. Softer rocks erode, or get worn away by wind and water, more quickly than harder rocks. This results in certain kinds of mountains, such as the flat-topped mesas or buttes in parts of the western and southwestern United States. Also, parts of the Ozark Mountains in Arkansas and Missouri and some mountains in the eastern United States were created by the forces of erosion.
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Would you believe that fossils from the sea can be found in a desert? Its true. And fossils have been discovered on top of mountains! This means that the spot where they were found was once an ocean floor. Certain plants and animals live in hot climates, but their fossils have been found in cold countries. This means that these areas were not always cold. Geologists study the rock layer in which the fossils were found. Then they can tell when the country was warm and for how long. Fossils show us what plants and trees lived millions of years ago and where. They show the changes that have happened through the years. An unusual type of fossil is petrified wood or bone. A chemical known as silica replaced each cell of the original matter. Slowly the material turned to stone. Today it looks just as it did millions of years ago. You probably can find fossils in your own neighborhood. Look in diggings, road cuts, or stream banks. Look wherever cuts have been made through layers of sedimentary rock. If you dont know a good place to hunt for fossils, ask your teacher or write to a college geology department in your state.
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Here are a few places to look for some types of rocks in the city: Granite. This strong igneous rock is used often in city buildings. Look for it on the outside of buildings. It can be gray, pink, or a deeper rose color. It has a speckled pattern. The darkest flecks are mica crystals, and the glasslike areas are quartz. The feldspar in it is smooth. You can find both rough and polished granite in buildings. Sandstone. In eastern cities, many older homes, called brownstones, were built of brick and then covered with brown sandstone blocks. Slate. This metamorphic rock, changed by heat and pressure, was once clay. It can be split into slabs. You might find an old sidewalk made of gray slate. Chalkboards in schools used to be made of smooth black slate. Some roofs are made of slate. Marble. Look for marble in the lobbies of office buildings and banks. A streaky, swirling pattern of mixed color and a smooth, shiny surface will be the main clues. Marble comes in many different colors. The main color might be black, gray, green, pink, or white. You can find marble in museums and parks, too. Pure white marble is often used for sculptures, statues, and monuments.
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Technology Group
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HAnDyMAn
Handyman Requirements
Requirement Do these:
1. With your parent, guardian, or Webelos den leader, complete the Responsibility Character Connection. a.
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Practice: Choose one of the requirements and show how you are responsible by doing that task well for two weeks.
7. Properly lubricate the chain on a bicycle. 8. Properly inflate the tires on a bicycle. 9. Change the wheels on a skateboard or pair of inline skates. 10. Replace a light bulb in a fixture or a lamp. 11. With adult supervision, arrange a storage area for household cleaners and other dangerous materials where small children cannot reach them. 12. Build a sawhorse or stool to be used around your home. 13. Help take care of the lawn. 14. Arrange a storage area for hand tools or lawn and garden tools. 15. Clean and properly store hand tools or lawn and garden tools in their storage areas. 16. Label hand tools or lawn and garden tools. 17. Put together a toolbox for common repairs around the house. Be sure the toolbox and tools are stored safely.
handyman can do many different jobs. He knows how to take care of a car and a bike. He uses tools to make repairs around the house, and he takes care of the lawn. When you work on this activity badge, you can learn a lot about keeping a car, bike, and home in good shape. You can find out how to change a flat tire. You might even build a sawhorse or a step stool. Keep adding to this knowledge after you earn this activity badge. Your handyman skills will always be useful to you and your family. When you complete each requirement, ask an adult member of your family, your Webelos den leader, or your activity badge counselor to sign it on the previous page or this page.
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Washing a Car
Use an automatic shut-off nozzle on the hose so you dont waste water while you are washing the car. Use products specifically designed for washing your car. Use a sponge or clean cloth for a scrubber. Check the car owners manual for any instructions on caring for the finish. Close the car windows so wash water wont drip inside. Rinse the car with plain water. Start washing the top of the car and work down so the suds and dirty water wont streak areas you have already washed. Do a small areaabout 3 feet squareat a time. Then rinse by spraying. You can let the car drip dry, but wiping it dry with a dry, clean cloth prevents water spots.
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Changing a Tire
Dont try to change a car tire unless an adult is with you. First, set the parking brake as tight as you can. If the car has an automatic transmission, put it in park. If it has a manual transmission, put it in first gear. Put wedges in front and back of the wheel diagonally opposite the tire you are going to change. These steps will keep the car from moving forward or backward when you jack it up. Before using the jack, use the sharp end of the lug wrench (found with the jack) to pry off the wheel cover (if your car has wheel covers). Youll see the nuts that hold the wheel on the axle. With the other end of the wrench, loosen the nuts one turn. If they are tight, you may need the adults help. Youll find instructions for using the cars jack in the instruction manual. Follow the instructions exactly. If the jack is not placed properly under the car, you could damage the car when you jack it up, or the car could fall off the jack and injure you. Use the jack to lift the car so that the flat tire just clears the ground. Remove the nuts and pull the wheel off. Slip the spare tire wheel on over the bolts. Screw the nuts on until all of them are fairly tight. Carefully lower the jack until it is free of the car.
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Then, with the lug wrench, tighten one nut as tight as you can make it. Next, tighten the nut opposite the first. Then tighten all the others. Finally, go around the circle again, tightening each nut as hard as you can. Ask the adult to check. Fit the wheel cover back into its brackets and push it into place. Put the jack, lug wrench, and flat tire back in the trunk of the car. The job is done, but remind the cars owner to have the flat tire fixed!
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Fixing a Flat
To fix a flat tire, you need a tire repair kit. Some kits have a scraper or sandpaper, patches, and cement. Other kits have patches that dont need cement.
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Take the wheel off the bicycle, and then take off the tire and tube. Taking off the tire can be tricky. You might have to use tools called tire levers. Ask an adult to help you the first time if you have trouble. If you cant see where the hole in the tube is, pump air into the tube. Dunk it into a tub of water. Bubbles will show where the air is escaping. Dry off the area around the hole. Use the scraper or sandpaper to rough up the tube around the hole. If your repair kit has cement, put a light coating of cement around the hole and quickly wipe it off. Then put on another coat of cement and let it get tacky. If you have glueless patches, you dont need to use any cement. Remove the coating from a patch and smooth the patch over the hole. Press the patch hard to spread the cement evenly and make a tight seal. Put the tube back in the tire and position the tire carefully on the wheel before you inflate it.
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Lubricating a Bicycle
Oil prevents rust and helps to keep a bicycle running smoothly. To lubricate the chain, turn the bicycle upside down. Use the pedals to make the crank turn, and then drip lightweight oil on the chain. The oil will spread over the chain as you turn the crank. When all the links of the chain have a light coating of oil, the job is done. Wipe any extra oil from the chain and sprocket with a clean rag.
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Woodworking Jobs
If you like working with wood, try making a sawhorse or stool. Either one will be useful around your house. The carpenters best friend is the sawhorseor better, two sawhorses. Using sawhorses, a carpenter has his or her work at a comfortable height for sawing, planing, and nailing boards. Easy-to-Make Sawhorse The easiest sawhorse uses two steel brackets. You can buy them at a hardware store. Use two-by-four lumber for the legs and crosspiece. Cut four legs, each 2 feet long. Cut a crosspiece about 30 inches long. Fit the legs and crosspiece into the steel brackets, and you have a strong sawhorse.
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5. Ready to use.
All-Wood Sawhorse The main crosspiece is a two-by-four, cut 30 inches long. Set it on 30" edge and nail a 30-inch one-by-four to its top. This will be the top surface of the sawhorse. Turn it over and nail another 30-inch one-by- 21" 2"4" four to the bottom. 1"4" Cut the four legs from one-by-fours. Each should be 21 inches long. Nail the legs to the two-by-four crosspiece, just under the top, and again to the edge of the bottom one-by-four board, as shown. Cut the braces to fit. Nail on the braces, and the job is done.
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Making a Stool To make a stool (or bench), you need about 36 inches of 1" 12" wood (pine or 34" plywood). See the drawing below. You will cut five pieces from this one board. Measure carefully so you dont waste any of the wood. Cut the top of the stool: 1" 12" 18". Cut two 8" 8" pieces for the legs. Clamp the two leg pieces together, mark where you will cut the notch, and saw them out. This will make the legs exactly the same so the stool wont wobble. Cut two 34" 2" 14" pieces for the side braces. Nail the stool together with finishing nails. Note that the legs are set 2 inches in from the ends of the top. Measure carefully before you drive the top nails into the legs to be sure they go into the legs. Countersink the top nails. (That is, use another nail to tap them just below the surface.) Fill the nail holes with wood putty. Nail the side braces to the legs. Fit them just under the top of the stool. The side braces will keep your stool stable. Sand the stool all over. Be sure to clean any grit from the stool before applying the finish. You can stain the stool to match other furniture, or you can paint it any color you like.
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Outdoor Jobs
If your home has a lawn, you can help take care of it by raking the leaves and grass clippings. If the grass isnt too long, dont rake up the clippings. They will rot and enrich the soil. If the clippings are very long, you may have to rake them up because they could damage the grass by cutting off sunlight. Put them on a compost pile. If you dont have a compost pile, dispose of the clippings by whatever method allowed by law in your community.
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" 18
Cut two pieces 17 2 inches long for the sides and one 16 inches long for the bottom.
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naturalist Requirements
Requirement Do this:
1. With your parent, guardian, or Webelos den leader, complete the Respect Character Connection. a.
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b.
Commit: Tell things some people have done that show a lack of respect for wildlife. Name ways you will show respect for and protect wildlife. Practice: Explain how completing the requirements for this activity badge gives you the opportunity to show respect.
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4. Visit a museum of natural history, a nature center, or a zoo with your family, Webelos den, or pack. Tell what you saw. 5. Watch for birds in your yard, neighborhood, or town for one week. Identify the birds you see and write down where and when you saw them. 6. Learn about the bird flyways closest to your home. Find out which birds use these flyways. 7. Learn to identify poisonous plants and venomous reptiles found in your area. 8. Watch six wild animals (snakes, turtles, fish, birds, or mammals) in the wild. Describe the kind of place (forest, field, marsh, yard, or park) where you saw them. Tell what they were doing. 9. Give examples of A producer, a consumer, and a decomposer in the food chain of an ecosystem One way humans have changed the balance of nature How you can help protect the balance of nature 10. Identify a plant, bird, or wild animal that is found only in your area of the country. Tell why it survives only in your area. 11. Learn about aquatic ecosystems and wetlands in your area. Discuss with your Webelos den leader or activity badge counselor the important role aquatic ecosystems and wetlands play in supporting lifecycles of wildlife and humans.
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12. Look around your neighborhood and identify how litter might be dangerous to the birds and other animals. Clean up the litter. Identify what else you might do to make your neighborhood safer for animals. 13. While you are a Webelos Scout, earn the Cub Scout Academics belt loop for Wildlife Conservation.
f you like watching wildlife, youre already a naturalist. A naturalist studies living creatures and plants in the wild. When you visit a nature center to learn about birds, reptiles, mammals, trees, and wildflowers, your guide is a naturalist. For this activity badge, you might keep an insect zoo, watch tadpoles change into frogs, or make a terrarium for wild plants. Perhaps your den will visit a real zoo or take a nature walk in the woods. Naturalists have a great love for nature. They notice details that other people miss. They know that the well-being of all living things is interconnected. When you complete each requirement, ask your Webelos den leader or activity badge counselor to sign it on the previous page or this page.
Crickets
Sink a small plastic jar or can into the ground so its rim is level with the surface. Put a sweet, gooey mixture in the jar. It might be a mixture of two parts molasses and one part water or a mashed pulp of overripe fruit. The sweet smell will attract crickets and beetles, and they will tumble in. Or you can look for crickets under rocks and logs. You have to be quick to catch a cricket. Crickets dont bite, but they do jump. Cricket home You can use a large, wide-mouthed plastic jar as a cricket home. Have an adult help you punch air holes in the jar lid, or if the lid is too hard, make a lid out of fiberglass screenwire and put a rubber band around it. Put 1 inch of moist soil in the bottom. (Soil from the place you found the cricket should be good.) Put in a bottle cap for drinking water and a rock or small piece of wood. Crickets like to crawl underneath rocks or other objects. Dont place the jar where it will get direct sunlight, as it will heat up inside and the cricket may die. Food: Try lettuce, a small wedge of raw potato, or a bit of dry dog or cat foodfresh food each day. Keep the house clean by removing leftover food and droppings. Expect some chirping! Your cricket guest may keep you awake or sing you to sleep.
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Ants
To capture ants you need a 2-foot-square piece of white cloth or paper, two large-mouth bottles with lids, a piece of cardboard, and a trowel. Now find an anthill or ant nest under rocks. Caution: Dont try to collect fire ants or other biting ants. Stay away from them. Stir the anthill gently with your trowel. When the ants come out to investigate, use the cardboard to guide them into one jar. Put some dirt from the anthill in with them. Some ants may be carrying white objects, which are the larvae and pupae, two stages of ant development. Collect some of these too.
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Now find the colonys queenif you can. Some ant queens live very deep in the ground, and when the nest is disturbed, the other ants carry her off to safety. That is because the queen produces all of the colonys young. She will be larger than the other ants. As you look for the queen, spread the dirt on the white cloth, and she should show up against the white background. Put the queen into the second bottle and add some dirt. Ant house You can use a wide-mouthed jar with screenwire (if the holes are small enough to keep ants from climbing out) or cheesecloth on top to let in air. Put your ant colony in it, including the queen, along with the dirt from the anthill. Add ordinary soil until the jar is about twothirds full. Keep the soil moist, but not wet, by putting in a few drops of water when it looks dry. Fill a bottle cap with water for the ants to drink. Keep the house covered when you arent watching the ants at work. Ants like to work in the dark. You can cover it with black paper or cloth held on by rubber bands. Handle the house with care, and dont jar or jiggle it. Food: Small bits of sugar, peanuts, apples, and bananas every few days. Remove uneaten food each time you put in new food.
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Bent wire
Broomstick Notch
Tape
Mosquito net
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Cage for a praying mantis Youll need metal screening and a large round tin can with a plastic lid. The screening will be the top of the cage. Cut the screening so it is 12 inches high and long enough to go around the can and overlap 1 inch. Make a tube from the screening, to fit inside the can. Lace it together with wire. Set the wire tube in the can. Fill the bottom of the can with plaster of paris. Push a branch into the plaster of paris before it hardens. The cans plastic lid goes on top of the screen tube. Food: Flies, small insects, tiny bits of raw liver, chopped meat. The mantis prefers live food. Water: Put in a bottle cap. Note: In some states it is against the law to confine a praying mantis. Make sure that, with the help of your parent, guardian, or Webelos den leader, you check your states laws.
Grasshoppers and walkingsticks Cover the bottom of a plastic jar with 1 inch of soil. Cover this with grass sod. (Water the grass occasionally.) Punch air holes in the cover. Food: Grass for grasshoppers. Walkingsticks eat the leaves of oak, locust, cherry, and walnut trees. Supply water, too.
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1. Egg. Egg masses are on the undersides of leaves or grass blades. 2. Larva. A larva (caterpillar) emerges from the egg. 3. Pupa. During this stage, the larva develops into an insect with wings. There is a difference between moths and butterflies in the pupal stage: A typical moth caterpillar spins a soft silky covering around itself and becomes dormant (goes to sleep). The covering is called a cocoon. (See page 327.) Some cocoons have twigs or leaves attached to the outside. A butterfly larva doesnt spin a cocoon (except for a few kinds of butterflies, like the skippers). The butterflys body changes, forming a firm outer case called the chrysalis. It is also dormant.
Monarch Butterfly
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4. Moth or butterfly. In the spring or summer, an adult moth or butterfly emerges. Butterflies come out more quickly than moths. Collecting moth and butterfly larvae Many larvae blend in with their surroundings, so look closely to find a green larva on a leaf. Other larvae may have bold patterns, like the monarch butterfly larva with its black, yellow, and white stripes. Some larvae have hairs or spines sticking out. Be careful, because in some species the hairs can irritate your skin or the spines can sting. Use a wide-mouthed jar with a screw top. Punch air holes in the top. Put in a branch or twig and some leaves of the tree or shrub on which you found the larva. Keep a fresh supply of the same leaves in the jar until the larva stops eating. Then it will enter the pupal stage (cocoon or chrysalis). Later it will emerge as a butterfly or moth. Be prepared to release it at that time. Starting with a cocoon or chrysalis Look for the cocoons of moths and the chrysalises of butterflies in early spring before trees and shrubs have leaves. Youll find them hanging from branches or twigs. Cut away part of the twig. Keep the cocoon in a clean, covered jar. Punch air holes in the cover. Soon youll see a miraclea moth or butterfly emerging. Release the butterfly or moth very soon so that it can find the food it needs.
Moth Cocoon
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Aquariums
Perhaps you already have an aquarium for tropical fish at home. Even if you do, its fun to make one for fish or water animals you have collected from a stream or pond.
Jointed Handle, 412' to 512' Long
Use a fish bowl or a square-sided aquarium. Make a dip net to catch small fish along the edge of a pond and put them in your aquarium with water from the pond.
Tadpoles
In the spring, you can catch tadpoles in ponds and watch them grow into frogs or toads in your aquarium. Prepare your aquarium by putting a layer of sand and rocks on the bottom. Plant a few aquatic plants in the sand. You can buy them at tropical fish stores. Fill the aquarium with water from a pond. Put in some rockstheyll be needed later. Catch two or three tadpoles and put them in. As the tadpoles grow, youll see the first hint of legs. Feed the tadpoles soft insects, earthworms, grasshoppers, flies, and crickets.
Tadpoles Growth Hind legs developed
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Watch for the legs to appear, because when your tadpoles start looking like frogs or toads, they can no longer breathe in the water. Lower the water level so they can climb out on the rocks. Feed the maturing frogs or toads mealworms, which you can buy at pet shops.
Make a support for your terrarium. Use lathing strips and nail them to a wood block.
terrariums
One kind of terrarium is a small garden of plants in a big bottle or jar with the lid on it. You can also turn an aquarium into a terrarium. The terrarium shown here is simple. You seal it up, and it will support plant life for two or three months. Use a wide-mouthed gallon jar and build a base to fit it. Put in 1 2 inch of sand or fine gravel. Sprinkle 12 inch of charcoal chips over that. On top of the charcoal, put 2 cups of rich soil. If the soil in your area is poor, use potting soil from a garden center. Plant small tropical plants that thrive in low light and high humidity, like aluminum plant, flame violet, and artillery plant. Ask about small tropical plants at a garden center. Mist the plants lightly with water before screwing on the lid. You shouldnt need to water them again because the moisture will circulate in the closed jar. Keep the terrarium where it will get indirect sunlight each day. Dont put it in direct sunlight because the container will heat up too much.
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If you want a cactus terrarium, it should have a wide open top so moisture gets out instead of staying inside. (Cactus plants cant take high humidity.) Or you can plant cacti in a dish garden. Any container two or three inches deep will work. Use soil recommended for the cactus plants you choose. Handle the plants carefully so the spines dont stick your hands. Cacti need water, but not too often. Give them bright indirect light, and turn the container so all the plants get light. Dont fertilize any terrarium plants, or they may outgrow their containers.
The museum may also have skeletons and likenesses of creatures that lived thousands of years ago. A nature center has indoor exhibits and an outdoor area where you can hike and see trees and plants that grow wild in the area. At a zoo you can get a fairly close view of many animals and birds from all over the world, some that are rarely seen by humans. A day at a nature center or zoo is a lot of fun.
Bird Watching
An easy way to watch birds is to bring them to your yard by setting out a bird feeder. You may also build a bird nesting box and put it near your window for a close-up view of birds.
Bird Feeders Pinecone stuffed with suet
Plastic container
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Some simple bird feeders are shown on the previous page. The log, pinecone, and basket are for feeding suet (hard fat from beef or mutton) or peanut butter. Fill other types of feeders with seed that is sold as food for birds. Some birds may like small pieces of fruit or bread crumbs. See what kind of birds come to your feeder. Borrow a field guide to birds from a library so you can identify the birds you see. Keep a record of the birds for at least one week. Here are some things to notice about birds: Marks. The chickadees black cap and bib, the downy woodpeckers red spot on the back of the head. Marks help you remember the bird. Wings. Pointed, rounded? Tail. Long or short? Rounded, square, or forked? Bill. Short bills are good for cracking seeds. Long pointed bills are good for digging in bark for insects. Toes. Most birds have four toesthree pointing forward and one back; but tree-climbing woodpeckers have two forward, two back. Flight and behavior. The starling flies straight as an arrow, but the goldfinch dips up and down. The nuthatch hops down trees headfirst. Song. In spring, the black-capped chickadees song sounds like Fee-bee. The song sparrow gives three sharp whistles, and then a chirp. If you can imitate the sound, it may draw a bird closer; so can kissing the back of your hand to make a chirp.
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Pacific
Bird Flyways
Some birds, like starlings, blue jays, sparrows, and nighthawks, stay in one area all their lives. Other kinds of birds migrate, flying south each fall to warmer places to spend the winter. They return to nest and live in their northern homes each spring. Many birds that migrate use regular main routes. These routes are called flyways. The map shows the four main flyways in North America. You dont have to live on a flyway to see birds moving in the spring and fall. Some will pass over your town. But most flocks of birds, like geese and ducks, use the flyways. These are their highways between winter and summer homes.
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Poisonous Plants
As a naturalist and camper, you should know the poisonous plants in your area. Avoid them! Three common poisonous plants are shown here. If you touch them, your skin may get red and itchy. If you think you have touched a poisonous plant, wash the spot with soap and water. Notice that poison oak and poison ivy have three leaflets on the end of stems. They both have white or whitish fruit. Thats why Scouts say, Leaflets three, let it be; berries white, poisonous sight.
Poison Sumac The foliage of poison sumac stays green from spring through summer (left), then turns red in the fall (right).
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Venomous Reptiles
Snakes and other reptiles will usually do their best to stay out of your way. But if you stumble over one, it may bite. Most snakes and reptiles dont have poison in their bite. The few that do are listed here. Gila monster: This lizard grows to about 2 feet long. The lighter part of the pattern is white or yellow. It is found in parts of Nevada and Utah and down into Mexico. Eastern diamondback rattlesnake: Sometimes grows to 7 feet in length. It is found along the Atlantic coast from North Carolina to Florida and west to Louisiana. It is never more than 100 miles from the coast. Western diamondback rattlesnake: Often grows to 7 feet in length. It lives in the southwestern United States, from Missouri and eastern Texas to southeastern California.
Timber rattlesnake: Is less than 6 feet in length. It ranges from Maine to Texas, but its numbers are now greatly reduced.
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Coral snake: Grows to about 2 feet long. It is ringed with red, yellow, and black bands. (The red and yellow bands touchremember the saying red on yellow kill a fellow.) Most coral snake species are found in Central and South America, but two are found in the United States. The harlequin or bead coral snake is found in some southeastern states, and the Arizona coral snake is found in southern New Mexico and Arizona. Prairie rattlesnake: About 3 feet in length. Sometimes it grows to 5 feet. It lives in the western half of the United States.
Sidewinder or horned rattlesnake: Found in the deserts of the Southwest. Water moccasin (cottonmouth): Found in or near water from southeastern Virginia to Florida. It can be seen westward to east Texas and north as far as southwestern Illinois. It sometimes grows as long as 6 feet. Copperhead: Not often longer than 4 feet, it lives in most southeastern states. It can be found as far north as Massachusetts and Pennsylvania and westward to Illinois and Texas.
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Fish: It is very hard to spot fish unless they are in shallow water. That is because the light bounces off the water, making it hard to see far down. To see better under water, make the waterscope shown here. Use it by lying on your stomach on a low dock. Put the end of the waterscope into the water and look through the top.
Waterscope Water-proof tape Tin cans wired and taped together Plastic or glasss dish or jar
ecosystems
An ecosystem is a community of plants and animals living in an environment that supplies what they need for life. There are many types of ecosystems. For example, a forest, a desert, and a wetland each contain different combinations of plants, animals, soils, and water sources. In an ecosystem, plants and animals depend on their environment and on each other. Energy and food flow through the community in a food chain. The sun: Without the sun, there would be no life on earth. The suns energy flows through a cycle in the ecosystem. Plants are the first to use this energy. Producers: All green plantstrees, shrubs, grasses, flowers, etc.use the suns energy to grow. Plants also take up nutrients and minerals from the soil. The plants produce leaves, bark, fruits, nuts, and seeds that many animals eat. Consumers: Animals that use the stored energy, nutrients, and minerals in their food to grow and to maintain their health. Primary consumers: Plant-eating animals are called herbivores. Theyre the primary consumers in the ecosystem because theyre the first to benefit by eating the producers. Examples: Rabbits, squirrels, deer, seed-eating birds, grasshoppers. On farms, cattle are primary consumers.
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Secondary consumers: Animals that eat other animals are meat-eaters or carnivores. In an ecosystem, theyre secondary consumers, because they benefit from the energy and nutrients stored in their prey (the plant-eaters). Examples: Hawks and owls eat mice and rabbits. A mountain lion hunts deer and smaller animals. Some consumers eat both plants and animals. Theyre called omnivores. The gray fox hunts rabbits, mice, voles, birds, and insects, but it also eats blackberries, grapes, persimmons, and grass. Humans who eat meat and plants, such as fruits, vegetables, and grain products, are omnivores too. Decomposers: These are the fungi, lichens, bacteria, and insects that break down dead plants and animals. This returns organic matter and minerals to the soil, making them available to trees and other plantsthe producers. Nature is a good recycler.
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You can help in larger ways by joining local efforts to solve water and air pollution problems. Or your den can plant trees or clean up a stream. Can you think of other ways to protect the balance of nature?
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Outdoor Group
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outdoorsman Requirements
Requirement Do two of these:
1. Present yourself to your Webelos den leader, properly dressed, as you would be for an overnight campout. Show the camping gear you will use. Show the right way to pack and carry it. 2. With your family or Webelos den, help plan and take part in an evening outdoor activity that includes a campfire. 3. With your parent or guardian, take part in a Webelos den overnight campout or a family campout. Sleep in a tent that you have helped pitch. 4. With your parent or guardian, camp overnight with a Boy Scout troop. Sleep in a tent you have helped pitch
Approved by
8. With your accompanying adult on a campout or outdoor activity, assist in preparing, cooking, and cleanup for one of your dens meals. Tell why it is important for each den member to share in meal preparation and cleanup, and explain the importance of eating together. 9. Discuss with your Webelos den leader the things that you need to take on a hike. Go on one 3-mile hike with your Webelos den or a Boy Scout troop. 10. Demonstrate how to whip and fuse the ends of a rope. 11. Demonstrate setting up a tent or dining fly using two half hitches and a taut-line hitch. Show how to tie a square knot and explain how it is used. 12. Visit a nearby Boy Scout camp with your Webelos den.
o go camping, you need skills that will help you feel at home in the outdoors. When you earn the Outdoorsman activity badge, youll learn about building campfires, cooking, setting up tents, making outdoor beds, tying knots, and many other skills. Youll have a chance to use your new camping skills with a friend, your family, or your Webelos den. You may visit a Boy Scout troop activity to learn how Boy Scouts use their outdoor skills.
The outdoors is calling you. Have fun! When you complete each requirement, ask your Webelos den leader or activity badge counselor to sign it on the previous page or this page.
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outdoor Code
The Scouting way is to leave no trace of your presence in the outdoors. Always take good care of nature.
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Camping out
Camping is living outdoors. You can learn how to camp as most good campers do, by practicing skills close to home first. With a parents permission, practice setting up a camp in your own backyard if you have one, or in a friends backyard, or even in a room of your home. With adult supervision, you might even spend the night in your backyard camp! Youll make your own simple tent and a comfortable bed on the ground. With adult supervision, and only if the laws where you live allow it, you can build a safe fire, cook your meals, and clean up afterward. (See the Outdoor Code on page 346.)
Homemade Tent
If your family doesnt own a tent, you can make one that wont cost much money. It will do for mild weather. Youll need a sheet of heavy-duty builders plasticabout 8 by 9 feet. Tie a rope between two trees or posts, using two half hitches. Drape the plastic over the rope and spread it like a tent. Hammer four stakes in the ground near each edge. Hold a stone under each corner of the sheet and tie a knot around it and the sheet. Then tie the rope to the stakes, and your sheet wont fly away. Be sure to leave both ends of your homemade tent open for ventilation, and make the tent wide enough for two people. This tent will be fine for an overnight campout.
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3. Fold the remaining half of the second blanket over the first. This gives you two thicknesses over you and under you. 4. Fold the bottom of the blankets under the bed.
Using Rope
Whipping a Rope Ropes are made of twisted fibers. When a rope is cut, the fibers separate. You can whip the ends in place with string so the rope wont unravel. Cut off the part that has already unraveled. Take a piece of strong string, dental floss, or thin twine at least 8 to 10 inches long. Make a loop and place it at one end of the rope. Wrap the string tightly around the rope. When the whipping is as wide as the rope is thick, slip the end through the loop. (See illustration 2.) Then pull out the string ends hard and trim them off.
1 2
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Fusing a Rope Rope and cord made of plastic or nylon will melt when exposed to high heat. Cut away the frayed part of the rope, then, working in a well-ventilated area, hold each end a few inches above a lighted match or candle to melt and fuse the strands together. Melted rope can be hot and stickydont touch the end until it has cooled. Do not try to fuse ropes made of manila, sisal, hemp, cotton, or other natural fibers, because they will burn rather than melt. Knots for Camping Youll use rope for many purposes when you go camping. Practice these knots. Theyll come in handy in different situations.
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2 3 1 Square Knot: For tying two ropes together and for tying bandages in first aid. 3 4 2
Taut-line Hitch: For tightening and loosening a rope easily and for use on tent guy lines. Tighten or loosen it by pushing the hitch up or down.
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4 5
Two Half Hitches: For tying a rope to a post or ring. It is strong but is easy to loosen. 1 2 1
Bowline: Used when you want a loop that will not slip or close up. It is often used in rescue work.
Outdoorsman
Sheet Bend: For tying two ropes together, especially when one is thicker than the other.
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Bow saw for fuel wood Matches in waterproof container Charcoal or camp stove if not using wood fire Food for all camp meals A cooler to keep perishable foods cold Trash bag Sunscreen Insect repellent One or two flashlights with fresh batteries Toothbrushes and toothpaste Toilet paper Sweaters or jackets Ponchos or raincoats Bar soap Towels Extra pants and shirts, if rain is likely Extra pair of shoes Whistle Webelos Handbook Bible, testament, prayer book, or other book for your faith If you use a backpack, arrange soft items in it so they will cushion your back. Keep your raingear, first-aid kit, and water bottle near the top of the pack. You may have to bring a tent, too, unless a Boy Scout troop is letting the den use its tents. Wear your Webelos Scout uniform in camp.
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Tents
Most tents have the shape of an A-frame or a dome, and are roomy enough for two to four campers. Many are made of breathable nylon that allows moisture to escape. A waterproof nylon fly pitched over the body of the tent shields it from rain, snow, and wind. When you are ready to pitch your tent, first you must choose a level site. Remove stones and large sticks, but dont disturb pine needles or grasses. Spread out a ground cloth to protect the tent floor from dirt, sharp objects, and moisture. Unfold the tent on top of the ground cloth. Pull out the corners of the floor and stake them to the ground, then assemble the poles and put them in place. Use taut-line hitches to tie the free ends of guylines around stakes youve pushed into the ground, and pull the lines tight. Finish by putting the rain fly over the tent and staking it down. Whenever possible, let your tent dry in the sun before you take it down. When thats not possible and you have to pack a wet
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tent, set it up again as soon as you get home, or hang it indoors and be sure it dries completely before putting it away. That will prevent mildew from ruining the fabric. No Flames in Tents Keep all flames away from tents. Never use candles, matches, stoves, heaters, or lanterns in or near tents. No tent is fireproof. All of them can burn or melt when exposed to heat. Flashlights only!
Activities in Camp
At a den or troop overnight campout, the leaders will suggest activities, such as working on outdoor activity badges, learning Scout skills, and playing outdoor games. In the evening you may have a campfire program, with songs, skits, and other fun. Join in with your friends.
Insects: A good bug spray keeps most of them away. Spray on exposed skin and also around your ankles and on your socks. Dont spray inside the tent because this may destroy the waterproofing. Poisonous plants: Learn to recognize poison ivy, poison oak, and poison sumac (see page 334) and stay away from them. Never eat anything from the woods unless you know exactly what it is. Animals: Animals can be drawn to your camp by the food you throw away or leave out. Bears are the most dangerous camp raiders and roadside beggars. You must remember that they are not tame. Never let anyone get near them. Mice, chipmunks, raccoons, opossums, porcu- Black Bear pines, and skunks add to the adventure of camping. Watch them and enjoy them, but dont try to catch or pet them. Swimming: Always swim with an adult and use the buddy system (see page 385). Watch for drop-offs or holes and swift currents. Dont swim in polluted water! Dont get too much sun or get too tired. Use a sunscreen lotion to protect your skin. Weather: See pages 362 and 364 for tips on staying safe and comfortable whether it rains or the sun shines during your campout. Getting lost: Anyone can get lost, even adults. But some things can help you to not get lost or to keep you safer if you do: Always stay with a buddy. Let people know when you leave and where you are going.
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Carry a plastic trash bag poncho in case of rain. Carry a whistle to signal for help. If you think you are lost, sit down in an open area. Relax. Blow your whistle every so often. Stay put.
Cooking in Camp
You and your adult partner may be expected to bring your own food to a Webelos den overnight campout, unless the whole den cooks together. Choose foods that are easy to fixand that you love to eat. For most meals youll need a fire. You may build it with wood or charcoal or your adult partner may use a camp stove. If you have a choice, use wood, because fire making is a skill you need to learn. Building a Wood Fire If your campsite already has a fireplace or safe fire site, use it. If it doesnt, you must make a safe fire site. Clear a circle 10 feet across, taking out anything that could burntwigs, leaves, dry grass, pine needles. Save the groundcover so you can put it back when you are done with your fire. Your fire will be in the center of the circle. (See the illustration on the next page.) Have a pot of water nearby for emergencies and to extinguish the fire.
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You will need three kinds of materials to make your fire: Tinder: Stuff that flares up quickly when you touch a lighted match to it. It must be dry. Look for dead twigs on standing trees and tiny dry twigs on the ground. Dry weed tops are good, too. Kindling: Small branches about as thick as your thumb and 6 to 10 inches long. Snap dead branches off standing trees and pick up dry branches on the ground. They will catch the flame from the tinder. Fuel wood: Larger dead branches you find on the ground. You may need a saw to cut them into pieces about a foot long. They provide the heat for cooking. You dont need a big fire for cooking on a campout. Five to 10 pieces of fuel wood should be plenty.
Making Your Fire Lay Put your tinder in the center of the fire circle. Then arrange kindling in one of the ways shown here, so that the flames from the tinder will catch the kindling quickly. When the kindling is burning, add a couple of pieces of fuel wood. As the fuel wood burns down to coals, add more fuel.
Tepee
Lean-to
Fire-stick
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You can use logs or big flat rocks to hold your pots and pans. Dont use sandstone or wet rocks. They may explode if they get hot. What to Cook Keep meals simple on your first few campouts. Consider Rock Fireplace cooking hamburgers, hot dogs, bacon and eggs, or canned food like spaghetti, beans, and vegetables. You might prepare a supper dish in aluminum foil at home before you go to camp. Heres how to do it: You need an 18-by-24-inch sheet of heavy-duty aluminum foil, or two sheets of regular foil. Use a piece of meat about the size of your hand. It could be ground beef, steak, chicken, or fish. Flatten ground beef. Lay the meat near the center of the foil. Slice a small onion and cut a small potato in thin slices and arrange them over the meat. Add peas, beans, or thinly sliced carrots. Now fold the foil into a package. Join the edges and fold them over tightly so steam cant escape. Take the foil dinners to camp in a cooler so the food wont spoil. About a half-hour before supper, lay the packages directly on the coals of the fire. Turn them over after 15 minutes and cook them another 10 minutes. Dinner should be ready. Eat it from the foil. Note: To protect against food poisoning, always wash your hands before you handle food. Wash all vegetables and fruits. Make sure that food packets stay cool in the cooler and that food is thoroughly cooked before you eat it.
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Cleanup Every Scout camper learns to wash dishes and clean up after eating. Do your part in the cleanup job. Make sure your cooking fire is DEAD OUT. Replace the groundcover you saved earlier. Pick up garbage and trash and put it in a garbage bag to take out of the campsite. Put all leftover food, milk, and other drinks back in the camp cooler or food box. Keep all food and smellables (toothpaste, gum, candyeven toiletries and cleaning products) in closed containers, in a vehicle or building, with all windows and doors closed. They can attract all kinds of animals. You dont want to come back to your camp and find everything torn apart, or have a midnight visitor in your camp!
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When you sit down for a rest, look around. Find grasses that arent the same. Count the different bugs you find. Youll enjoy your hike more if you notice everything. Some people hike as if they were walking through a tunnel. They never see a thing. Watch for signs and landmarks so you can find your way back.
What to Wear
The Webelos Scout uniform is ideal for hiking. Take along a raincoat or poncho in case it rains. Shoes: You depend on your shoes to get you to your destination and back. Choose them carefully. Take good care of them. A hightop shoe or boot is best because it keeps out gravel and sand. Its very important that your hiking shoes fit well. If they dont, youll be sure to get blisters. The shoes should be fairly tight around your heel. There should be room to wiggle your toes.
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Never go hiking in new shoes. Break them in first by wearing them part of every day for a week or more. To keep leather shoes soft and partly waterproof, rub them with saddle soap. Do this before and after every hike. When leather shoes get wet, wipe them with paper or old socks. Dry them slowly, away from direct heat. Socks: Socks are almost as important as shoes. They soak up moisture. They also cushion your feet. Socks made of wool, polypropylene, or a wool/nylon blend work well. Take an extra pair on a hike. Then you can put on clean socks before you start back. This dry pair will feel great. Dont use socks with holes or holes that have been darned. They start blisters.
outdoor essentials
1. First aid kit 2. Filled water bottle 3. Flashlight 4. Trail food 5. Sunscreen 6. Whistle 7. Map and compass 8. Rain gear 9. Pocketknife 10. Matches or fire starters
Sun Smarts
Block the sun year round. Its possible to burn all year (that includes cloudy and snowy days). So whether youre walking to school or outside playing dont forget to block the sun, to have fun year round! Use a sunblock with an SPF of at least 15. If you have fair skin, light-colored eyes and hair, freckles, or spend a lot of time outside, use an SPF 30 or higher. Apply sunblock 15 minutes before you go out. Reapply after prolonged swimming, vigorous activity, sweating, or toweling off. Watch the clock. Try to limit the amount of time youre in direct sun during 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. Waterproof your skin. If youre spending a day at the beach or at the pool, cover up with waterproof sunblock. After swimming, toweling off, sweating, and/or vigorous activity, be sure to reapply sunblock. Remember your ears, nose, neck and hands. They may seem small but they can burn big time. Always cover these areas with sunblock. Make a statement with shades, hat, and a wild Tshirt. A cool pair of UVA/UVB blocking sunglasses protect your eyes like nothing else. As for your hat, if you get really hot, dunk it in water, then pull it on (but make sure its a wide brimmed hat). Of course, a long-sleeve T-shirt is a must for summer fun. The American Academy of Dermatology supports the use of sunscreen products with an SPF 15 rating or higher but does not endorse, guarantee, or approve any specific sun-safety products. American Academy of Dermatology, 1999. Used with permission.
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Readyman Requirements
Requirement Do all of these:
1. With your parent, guardian, or Webelos den leader, complete the Courage Character Connection. a.
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Commit: Explain why it is hard to follow the courage steps in an emergency. Tell when you can use the courage steps in other situations (such as standing up to a bully, avoiding fights, being fair, not stealing or cheating when tempted, etc.) Practice: Act out one of the requirements using these courage steps: Be strong; Be calm; Be clear; Be careful.
2. Explain what first aid is. Tell what you should do after an accident. 3. Explain how you can get help quickly if there is an emergency in your home. Make a help list of people or agencies that can help you if you need it. Post it near a phone or in another place with easy access. 4. Demonstrate the Heimlich maneuver and tell when it is used.
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5. Show what to do for these hurry cases: Serious bleeding Stopped breathing Internal poisoning Heart attack 6. Show how to treat shock. 7. Show first aid for the following: Cuts and scratches Burns and scalds Choking Blisters on the hand and foot Tick bites Bites and stings of insects other than ticks Poisonous snakebite Nosebleed Frostbite Sunburn 8. Tell what steps must be taken for a safe swim with your Webelos den, pack, family, or other group. Explain the reasons for the buddy system.
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14. Explain six safety rules you should remember when riding in a car. 15. Attend a first aid demonstration at a Boy Scout troop meeting, a Red Cross center, or other community event or place.
n emergencies, someone has to be ready to help. After you earn the Readyman activity badge, youll know how to react quickly when someone is ill or injured. Youll be ready to call for emergency help. When you learn first aid, you can care for a sick or injured person until help arrives. Youll also find out how to prevent accidents and how to be safe when swimming and biking. Youll help your family be safe at home and when traveling by car.
Learning the skills that prevent accidents and help in emergencies will make you a Readyman. When you complete each requirement, ask your Webelos den leader or activity badge counselor to sign it on pages 366368.
Be Courageous
Courage is what you need when you face an emergency. Courage is not something youre just born with; it is something you can train yourself to have when you need it. Learn to say these steps to help you feel courageous and behave courageously:
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When you call for help, remember the three Ws: Who? What? and Where? Who? What? Where? Give your name. Explain the situation: fire, accident, injury, etc. Give the exact location. Give the names of both streets or roads at the nearest corner. Stay on the phone until your message is understood and you have answered all questions. Sometimes you need to know how to get help, but it may not be an emergency. For problems with your sewer line or other housing problems, call a department of your city or county government. Your church or other religious group, a counseling agency, or friends and relatives might be able to help with a family problem. Find out who to contact in your community.
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Stopped Breathing
In drowning cases and some other accidents, the victims breathing may stop. It must be started again quickly, or the person will die. Look at the chest. Is it moving up and down? Put your ear to the victims mouth. Do you feel the victims breath? If the answer is no, start rescue breathing. This is a way of blowing air from your own lungs into the victims lungs.
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Rescue Breathing
Dont give up. Continue rescue breathing until medical help arrives and takes over.
Step 1
Note: If available, a mouth-barrier device should be used when rendering rescue breathing or CPR. Place the victim faceup. Lift the chin with your right hand, and push the forehead down with your left hand.
This shows why it is important to tilt the head back. If the head is not tilted back, the tongue blocks the airway.
Step 2
Pinch the victims nostrils together. Seal your mouth over the victims mouth. (If the victim is a small child, dont pinch the nostrils. Blow into both the mouth and nose at the same time.) Blow into the victims mouth to fill the lungs with air. Look to make sure the chest rises.
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Step 3
Remove your mouth. Take a deep breath and count slowly to fiveabout five seconds. (Count to three if the victim is a child.) Watch to make sure the victims chest falls as air escapes from the lungs. Then give another breath.
If the victims chest does not rise when you blow in, the airway must be blocked. Turn the head to one side. With your fingers, feel whether something is in the mouth. If there is, pull it out.
If the airway still seems to be blocked, turn the victims head faceup. Place the heel of your hand midway between the victims rib cage and belly button. Push upward quickly several times.
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Avoid direct contact with the blood. Use latex gloves. Grab the wound with your gloved hand and press hard! Raise a cut arm or leg above the level of the victims heart. That will help slow the bleeding. With your free hand, grab your neckerchief, handkerchief, or other cloth. Fold it into a pad and quickly press it on the wound. Then press hard again. If you can, tie the pad in place with a bandage. Dont remove the pad even if it gets soaked with blood. Put another pad and bandage over the first. Send for medical help.
Direct pressure on the wound usually stops bleeding. If it doesnt, press hard on one of the pressure points shown to stop bleeding in an arm or leg. The arteries that carry blood from the heart are squeezed against the bone. Its like stepping on a garden hose to stop the water.
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Poisoning by Mouth
Young children will try anything! They will even drink poisons because they dont know any better. Keep all household cleaners, medicines, weed killers, and insect poisons out of their reach. Locked cabinets are best because children are curious and learn to climb. If a child does swallow some poison, call a hospital or poison control center immediately. Tell them what the poison is. Follow their directions. Dont give anything to drink unless they tell you to. Save the poison container so the poison can be identified.
Heart Attack
Heart attack is the number one cause of death in the United States. Most heart attacks happen to adults, especially older people. Here are the signs of a heart attack: A feeling of pain or pressure in the center of the chest lasting more than a few minutes. It may come and go. Sharp, stabbing twinges of pain are rarely signals of a heart attack. If in doubt, seek medical help. Sweating when the room is not hot Feeling like throwing up Shortness of breath A feeling of weakness If you think a person is having a heart attack, call for medical help at once.
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Dont wait for these signals to appear. Give any badly injured person first aid for shock. Have him lie down. Raise his feet slightly, unless you think he has injuries to his head, neck, back, hips, or legs. If you dont know, have him lie flat. If he is not awake, turn him on his side, not on his back. If the weather is cool, cover him. If its hot, dont. Call for emergency help immediately. He needs expert medical care as soon as possible.
First aid for larger cuts: Treat large cuts by using direct pressure to stop bleeding, then keep the wound as clean as you can to limit infection. Cover an open wound with a sterile gauze pad or clean cloth folded into a pad. Hold the pad in position with tape, a cravat bandage, or other binder. Anyone suffering a serious wound should be treated for shock and seen by a physician.
Third-degree burn: The skin may be burned away. Flesh may be charred. The victim may feel no pain. Dont try to remove clothing from around the burn. Wrap the victim in a clean sheet. Cover him with blankets if the weather is cool. Call for an ambulance to rush him to a hospital. Treat for shock, too: People with second- or third-degree burns will be suffering from shock. So give first aid for shock as well as for the burn. Sunburn: Most sunburns are first-degree burns. A severe sunburn is a second-degree burn and should receive prompt medical attention. Prevent sunburn by liberally applying sunscreen lotion with a high sun protection factor (SPF) about 20 minutes before youre in the sun. Reapply if you sweat heavily or swim. Its also important to wear protective clothing and a broad-brimmed hat and sunglasses as well as limit your exposure to the sun. The suns rays are most harmful between 10:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. Sunburns should be treated with cool compresses or baths.
Choking
If a bit of food sticks in a persons throat, he will start choking. He may not be able to cough it up by himself. Unless the person is a baby, use the Heimlich maneuver to help him.
Heimlich Maneuver
Stand behind the victim and put your arms around him. Make a fist with one hand just above his belly button. Cover the fist with your other hand. Now make four quick thrusts inward and upward to force air
Close-up of hand position for Heimlich maneuver
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from his lungs. This should dislodge the food. If it doesnt, repeat until the food is dislodged. If the person is too big for you to do the Heimlich maneuver standing up, have him lie down faceup. Put one open hand just above his belly button and put the other hand over the first. Make four quick, upward thrusts. Note: Because of the possibility of injury, do not practice the thrust part of the Heimlich maneuver on a person. Thrusts should be used only for actual choking cases.
Tick Bites
Ticks are small, hard-shelled arachnids that bury their heads in the skin of warm-blooded vertebrates. Protect yourself whenever you are in tick-infested woodlands and fields by wearing long pants and a long-sleeved shirt. Button your collar and tuck the cuffs of your pants into your boots or socks. Inspect
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yourself daily, especially the hairy parts of your body, and immediately remove any ticks you find. If a tick has attached itself, grasp it with tweezers close to the skin and gently pull until it comes loose. Dont squeeze, twist, or jerk the tick, as that could leave its mouth parts in the skin. Wash the wound with soap and water and apply antiseptic. After dealing with a tick, thoroughly wash your hands.
Spider Bites
The bite of a female black widow spider can cause redness and sharp pain at the wound site. The victim might suffer sweating, nausea and vomiting, stomach pain and cramps, severe muscle pain and spasms, and shock. Breathing might become difficult. The bite of a brown recluse spider doesnt always hurt right away, but within two to eight hours there can be pain, redness, and swelling at the wound. An open sore is likely to develop. The victim might suffer fever, chills, nausea, vomiting, joint pain, and a faint rash. Victims of spider bites should be treated for shock, then seen by a physician as soon as possible.
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Snakebite
Snakes are common in many parts of the country, but bites from them are rare. Snakes try to avoid humans, and normally strike only when they sense danger. Snakebites seldom result in death. The bite of a nonpoisonous snake causes only minor puncture wounds. The bit of a poisonous snake can cause sharp, burning pain. The area around the bite might swell and become discolored; however, a poisonous snake does not inject venom every time it bites. Use a hiking stick to poke among stones and brush ahead of you when you walk through areas where snakes are common. Watch where you put your hands as you collect firewood or climb over rocks and logs. 1. Get the victim under medical care as soon as possible so that physicians can neutralize the venom. 2. Remove rings and other jewelry that might cause problems if the area around the bite swells. 3. If the victim must wait for medical attention to arrive, have him lie down and position the bitten part lower than the rest of his body. Encourage him to stay calm. He might be very frightened, so keep assuring him that he is being cared for. 4. Treat for shock. 5. If available within 3 minutes of the bite, apply a venom extractor such as a Sawyer Extractor directly over the fang marks and leave in place for no more than 10 minutes. Properly used, the extractor can remove up to 30 percent of the venom. Do not make any cuts on the bitethats an old-fashioned remedy that can harm the victim much more than help him. 6. Do not apply ice to a snakebite. Ice will not help the injury, but it can damage the skin and tissue.
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Nosebleed
A nosebleed can look bad, but it will usually stop in just a few minutes. Have the victim sit up and lean forward to prevent blood from draining into his or her throat. Pinch the nostrils together to maintain pressure on the flow. Apply a cool, wet cloth to the victims nose and face. If bleeding is severe or if there are other injuries to the face and head, position the victim to keep blood out of his airway. Treat for shock and call for help.
Frostbite
A victim of frostbite might complain that his ears, nose, fingers, or feet feel painful and then numb. Another frostbite victim wont notice anything. You might see grayish-white patches on his skina sure sign of frostbite. Get into a tent or building, then warm the injury and keep it warm. If an ear or cheek is frozen, remove a glove and warm the injury with the palm of your hand. Slip a frostbitten hand under your clothing and tuck it beneath an armit. Treat frozen toes by putting the victims bare feet against the warm skin of your belly. Avoid rubbing frostbitten flesh, as that can damage tissue and skin. You can also warm a frozen part by holding it in warmnot hotrunning water. Or wrap it in a dry blanket. Have the patient exercise injured fingers or toes, and dont let the injured area freeze again. Get the victim to a doctor.
Sunburn
Sunburn is a common injury among people who enjoy being outdoors. Repeated burns can cause long-term skin damage and the potential for skin cancer. People with lighter skin are most at risk, though others are not immune. Prevent sunburn by using plenty of sunscreen with a sun protection factor (SPF) rating of at least 15. Reapply sunscreen after swimming or if you are perspiring. A broad-brimmed hat, long-sleeved shirt, and long pants provide even more protection.
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safe swimming
Swimming is a lot of fun, but the water can be a dangerous place if you arent prepared. Scouting has a checklist called the Safe Swim Defense plan to make sure you are prepared. The plan has eight points.
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4. Lifeguards. Trained lifeguards are on shore, watching everybody who is in the water. 5. Lookout. A lookout is also on shore to direct the lifeguards if a person needs help. 6. Ability groups. The leaders divide the swimmers into three groups: (1) nonswimmers; (2) beginners, who can swim at least 50 feet; and (3) swimmers, who can swim 100 yards and float. Each group stays in its own area. 7. Buddy system. Each person is paired with another person who has the same swimming ability. They go into the water together, stay together, and come out together. 8. Discipline. Everyone agrees to follow water safety rules. Everyone obeys the lifeguards or other supervisors.
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Left Turn
Right Turn
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Bicycle safety
Did you notice that requirement 9 talks about driving a bicycle? When you are on a bike, you are a driver, just like an adult driving a car. So you should act like a driver and obey traffic safety rules. Here are the safe bicycle driving rules. 1. Always wear a safety helmet. 2. Obey all traffic laws. Stop at all Stop signs. Give signals for turns. Avoid busy streets, if you can. 3. Observe local laws. Your community may have rules for registration of bicycles and driving on sidewalks. Learn them and obey them. 4. Drive with traffic, not against it. Stay close to the curb. 5. Watch out for hazards like potholes and drain grates. 6. Watch out for car doors opening or cars pulling into traffic. 7. Dont carry passengers. You will have less control of your bike if you have a passenger.
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8. Never hitch a ride by holding onto a truck, car, or other vehicle. 9. Be extra careful at intersections. If traffic is heavy, get off your bike and walk it across the intersection. 10. Use hand signals for turning and stopping. 11. Drive a safe bike. Keep it in good repair. Dont ride after dark, but have reflectors and lights on your bike in case you have to ride for an emergency reason. In that case, also wear reflective clothing. 12. Drive defensively. That means: Watch out for the other guy. Keep a safe distance from traffic ahead of you. Stay alert. Be ready to stop suddenly.
safety equipment
For all sports, it is important to wear equipment that will help prevent injury. For example, during all street or pavement skating activities, participants should wear properly fitted helmets that meet American National Standards Institute (ANSI) standards, padded gloves, wrist supports, and elbow and knee pads. Your parent, guardian, or Webelos den leader can help you learn what safety equipment is needed for each sport you want to learn.
Make sure your family has a place to meet once they are outside. Then everyone will know when all family members are out and safe.
BATH PARENTS BILL HALL TO GARAGE ROOF MARY
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Safety pins Two 1-inch roller bandages Two 2-inch roller bandages Three triangular bandages Three cravat bandages (a cravat bandage is made by folding a triangular bandage or Scout neckerchief) Two 17-inch splints of thin board Two 30-inch splints Calamine lotion Latex gloves Mouth-barrier device For a first aid kit in a car, also include a small flashlight and spare batteries, hand cleaner in packets, a white handkerchief (to attach to the car so you can attract attention if the car is disabled), a blanket, and a large red and white sign that can be placed in the front or rear window that reads Send Help!
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safety in a Car
You may say, What can I do about safety in a car? Im not old enough to drive. Thats true. But you can do something about car safety. Here are ideas: Always use your seat belt. You are much less likely to get hurt in an accident if you are wearing a seat belt. In some states, wearing a seat belt is the law. What is the law in your state? Dont talk to the driver in heavy traffic. He or she must concentrate on driving. Do talk to the driver when he or she is tired. It will help keep the driver alert. But also remind the driver to stop for a rest and perhaps something re-freshing to drink. When a driver dozes off even for a second, an accident can happen. Suggest to the driver that you stop every two hours on a long trip. The driver needs to stretch and relax. Maybe you can take a ball along and play catch at a rest area to help the driver relax. Keep younger children from quarreling or jumping around in the car. Be sure they keep their seat belts fastened or are in their car seats with the harness fastened. Lock the doors. Then younger children wont be able to open them accidentally. Keep hands, head, and feet inside the careven when it is parked. Dont ride or carry passengers in the bed of a pickup truck.
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Scholar
Scholar requirements
Requirement Do this:
1. With your parent, guardian, or Webe los den leader, complete the Positive Attitude Character Connection. a.
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commit: Plan with your parent or guardian, or your Webelos den leader, how you will apply the BEST steps for a positive attitude in doing your school work and in other areas of your life.
Practice: Do your BEST to have a cheerful and positive attitude while doing the requirements for this activity badge.
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5. List in writing some important things you can do now because of what youve learned in school. 6. While you are a Webelos Scout, earn the Cub Scout Academics belt loop for Language. 7. While you are a Webelos Scout, and if you have not earned it for another activity badge, earn the Cub Scout Academics belt loop for Mathematics. 8. While you are a Webelos Scout, earn the Cub Scout Academics belt loop for Chess.
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chool is a big part of your life. You study math, science, language, and other subjects, but you also learn about yourselfwhat subjects you like best, what areas you want to explore further. You learn how to concentrate and how to find out what you want to know. To be a good scholar, you have to be curious and determined to gain everything you possibly can from your education.
Youre probably already doing some things that will help you earn this activity badge: going to school, earning the best grades you can, and behaving well in school. When you complete each requirement, ask your teacher, principal, Webelos den leader, or activity badge counselor to sign it on pages 392393.
Are you doing your best in school? Do you always go to school, except when you are sick? Do you behave well in school? Do you try hard to get good grades? These are things you need to do for requirement 2. Do you take part in school activities, like clubs and sports? Do you do a Good Turn for the school now and then? If you do, you may be earning requirement 3 right now. If you need ideas for ways you can become involved in activities and in helping your school, ask your teacher or principal. When you do requirement 2 or 3, or both, ask your teacher or principal to initial those Scholar requirements.
cub Scout academics Belt loops for language, Mathematics, and chess
If you earned the Language, Mathematics, or Chess belt loop earlier in Cub Scouting, great! But that wont count for require ment 6, 7, or 8 of this Scholar activity badge. You must earn the Language (requirement 6), Mathematics (requirement 7), or Chess (requirement 8) belt loop again while you are a Webelos
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Scout for it to count toward this activity badge. (And if you already earned it for another activity badge, that cannot count for Scholar; you should choose another requirement, instead.)
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Early schools in America. Americas early colonists soon set up schools. The Pilgrims landed in 1620, and by 1647 Mas sachusetts Colony had a law providing for free public schools. Few were started, though. Most schools were still private. The New England Colonies had schools in homes, where children learned Bible verses and the alphabet. Academies trained students for college. The Middle Colonies had both public and churchrun private schools. In the Southern Colonies, each plantation had its own teacher. But by the early 1800s, schools still were not free. There were charity schools, but many parents didnt like them. If they could afford it, parents sent their children to private academies. The main subjects were The Three RsReading, wRiting, and aRithmetic. Usually there was just one room for school. Boys sat on one side and girls on the other. Sometimes, childrenespecially those from farmscame only when there was no work at home. Often, everyone studied aloud at the same time in the class room! This was called a Blab School. The common school movement in America. People were demanding free schools, paid for by taxes. The first com mon schools (public schools) were opened in New York and Pennsylvania. Horace Mann and the state of Massachusetts led in changing the system of education. Mann campaigned successfully for better teachers and buildings. In his state, children between the ages of 8 and 14 had to attend school. Schools were divided into grades. These ideas spread, and by 1855, America had 81,000 com mon schools.
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Since then, schools have continued to change. You learn about many more subjects than The Three Rs. New ideas about the best ways to learn are constantly being brought into schools. Families have choices of public schools, private schools, schools run by churches and other religious groups, and home schooling, where a parent teaches his or her child.
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careers in Education
If youre interested in a career in education, you should know about teaching jobs plus all the other jobs connected with schools. You can think of jobs right in your school. Who works there besides teachers and a principal? Start a list of careers in your school. This will get you started on requirement 12. Also, ask your teacher about the types of careers in your school system. You may be surprised at the different kinds of skills that are needed to run it. Add these careers to your list and be ready to explain what these people do in their jobs.
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Technology Group
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SciEnTiST
Scientist requirements
Requirement Do these:
1. Read Bernoullis principle. Show how it works. 2. Read Pascals law. Tell about some inven tions that use Pascals law. 3. Read Newtons first law of motion. Show in three different ways how inertia works. 4. While you are a Webelos Scout, earn the Cub Scout Academics belt loop for Science.
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12. Show in three different ways how your eyes work together and show what is meant by an optical illusion. 13. While you are a Webelos Scout, earn the Academics belt loop for Weather. 14. While you are a Webelos Scout, earn the Academics belt loop for Astronomy.
cientists know about laws of nature that explain much about the world and the universe. They continue to learn by experimenting, and they make discoveries. They take nothing for granted. They may think an idea is true, but they test it over and over to prove it.
When you earn the Scientist activity badge, youll do scien tific experiments and test some famous scientific laws. Youll explore ideas about how airplanes fly and the way changes in atmospheric pressure can move objects. Youll also experience the strange tricks your eyes and your brain can play on you. When you complete each requirement, ask your Webelos den leader or activity badge counselor to sign it on the previous page or this page.
Physics
Until the beginning of the 20th century, the science of physics was divided into the studies of sound, light, heat, electricity and magnetism, and mechanics (the study of motion and the forces that cause it). Since then, physicists have explored many new and excit ing areas. Some of these fields are called quantum mechanics, nuclear physics, and astrophysics. These terms may sound com plicated, but the basic ideas in physics explain everyday events you may take for grantedlike why you can ride a bike without tipping over and why an airplane can fly.
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Keep reading to learn about several laws of physics and experiments you can do to demonstrate those laws.
Bernoullis Principle
In 1738 a Swiss scientist named Daniel Bernoulli discovered a fact known as Bernoullis principle, which is: The pressure of a moving gas decreases as its speed increases. Bernoullis principle is used to explain how an airplane is able to fly. Air is a gas. Air moves over and underneath the wings of an airplane as it travels. An airplane wing is curved on top and flat on the bottom. Because of that, air travels a longer distance over the wing in the same amount of time that air moves under the wing, which is a shorter distance. This means that the air over the wing travels at a greater speed, causing a lower pressure (Bernoullis principle at work). The air under the wing travels in a straight line, more slowly, so its pressure stays high. The plane is lifted because of this dif ference in pressure: Having lower pressure over the wing and higher pressure under the wing causes lift.
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Another way to explain it is that the molecules of the faster air spread out, so they put less pressure on the top of the wing. A molecule is the smallest possible quantity of a substance that still shows the characteristics of that substance. Mole cules are usually composed of two or more atoms, although some substances are made of singleatom molecules. For instance, a molecule of water is made up of two atoms of hydrogen and one atom of oxygen. Testing Bernoullis Principle These two fascinating experiments demonstrate Bernoullis principle.
1. Push a short pin through the middle of a 3-inch cardboard square.
2. Put the pin into the hole in a thread spool or toy spool, making sure the pin doesnt stick out the open end. 3. Put the spool to your mouth and blow steadily. The cardboard will stay on the spool. The harder you blow, the tighter it will hold.
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The air stream (your breath) is moving. It makes a low pressure area between the cardboard and the bottom of the spool. The air on the other side of the cardboard has more pressure, so it pushes the cardboard against the spool.
Hold a lighted match be-hind a business card and blow hard against the card. The flame will move toward you. Why?
Pascals Law
A French physicist named Blaise Pascal discovered a fact about liquids in 1647. If a liquid is in a closed container, pressure in every direction will be the same. When pressure is added to the top, pressure will increase equally throughout the container. Pascals discovery led to the invention of the hydraulic press, which is used in manufacturing to form threedimensional objects from sheets of metal or plastic. This is the way a hydrau lic press works: It has two connected cylinders filled with oila smaller cylinder and a larger one. Each cylinder has a movable piston. When pressure Simple Hydraulic Press is applied to the smaller piston, it creates extra pressure throughout the oil in both cylinders. This causes the piston in the larger cylinder to move, operating the press. A small amount of force on the small
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piston leads to a stronger force on the large piston, because it has a larger area. Pascals law is used today in the large hydraulic jack a mechanic slides under a car when a tire needs to be changed. When the mechanic presses down on the jack handle, hes put ting pressure on the fluid in the jack. That creates enough force to lift the car. Pascals law is also at work in a cars hydraulic brakes. A small amount of pressure on the brake pedal puts increased pressure on the brake fluid. This in turn activates the cars brakes, slow ing or stopping the car. Other examples of devices that use hydraulics are a fork lift, wing flaps on a plane, and a barbers chair.
Inertia
Sir Isaac Newton, an English mathematician and physicist, discovered many laws of physics. In 1687, his book Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy included his three laws of motion. The first law of motion says that a thing at rest tends to remain at rest until an outside force moves it. The law also says that a thing in motion continues to move at a constant speed in a straight line, unless an outside force acts on it. The law describes inertia. Inertia is what causes an object to resist any change in motion. These experiments may seem like magic tricks, but they dem onstrate inertia.
Set a coin on a card on the top of a jar. Snap the edge of the card. The card will fly out because of the force you are using to move it, and the coin will drop into the jar because of inertia.
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Make a stack of nickels. Try to snap a penny along the table at the bottom coin. If you hit the target just right, the bottom nickel will fly out; the others remain in a stack. Why? Set a glass of water on the end of a long strip of paper. (Use a plastic glass, just in case. Or you can use a book instead of a glass of water.) Pull the paper slowly. The glass moves with it. Give the paper a sudden jerk. The glass stands still. Spin a fresh egg on its side. It will stop soon. Spin a hard-boiled egg. It will spin for a much longer time. When you spin a fresh egg, you spin the outside. The white and yolk inside are loose and tend to remain at rest, slowing down the fresh egg. When you spin the hard-boiled egg, you spin the whole egg, because cooking has made the yolk and white solid. They move right along with the shell.
Swing a pail of water back and forth at arms length. (Dont fill the pail so full that its too heavy for you.) After a few times, swing it over your head in a full circle. Tell what happens. Do you know why?
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Remember, a moving object tends to travel in a straight line unless an outside force acts on it. Youre the outside force. Your hold on the bucket and your arm action provide centripetal force. Youre constantly changing the direction of the bucket, away from straight line travel, and making it go in a circle. Cen tripetal force makes an object travel a circular route. Some road curves are banked (tilted toward the inside of the curve) to help cars stay on the road. Youll also see banked curves on bobsled tracks, velo dromes (bicycle tracks), and roller coasters. That tilt pro vides centripetal force that causes circular travel.
Atmospheric Pressure
We live under a blanket of air called the earths atmosphere. It is many miles deep. At sea level the atmosphere exerts a pressure of almost 15 pounds per square inch on every surface. A mile above sea level, the blanket of air is thinner, so the atmospheric pressure is less. Experiments With Atmospheric Pressure More magic tricks? Theres a scientific explanation behind each one. Heres one you can do with an egg and a glass bottle with an opening slightly smaller than the egg.
1. Cook the egg in boiling water for 10 minutes. 2. Put it in cold water. Take off the shell. 3. Fold a small piece of newspaper three times in the same direction. 4. Light it. Drop it into the bottle. Quickly put the egg in the top of the bottle. 5. The egg will bounce up and down. Then it will slip neatly into the bottle.
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Air molecules are constantly moving, but heat makes them move faster and spread even farther apart. The burning paper heats the air in the bottle and expands it, pushing much of it out. The expanding air coming out of the bottle makes the egg bounce. As the air left in the bottle cools, the inside air pressure drops. The outside atmospheric pressure pushes the egg into the bottle. Heres another experiment with atmospheric pressure. You need a glass bottle, a shallow pan, and a candle.
1. Pour the water from a half-filled bottle into a pan. Set a 2-inch-high candle in the pan and light it. 2. Hold the empty bottle over the candle with the top a little below the water. The water will bubble. Hold the bottle until the bubbling stops. 3. Lower the bottle. The candle and water will rise up in the bottle.
The candle flame heats the air in the bottle and expands it, pushing part of it out and making the water bubble. The air pressure inside the bottle drops. Outside the bottle, the higher atmospheric pressure on the waters surface pushes the water and the candle up into the bottle. The flame goes out when it burns up all of the oxygen in the bottle.
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For the next experiment, youll need a cork, a toothpick, a small piece of paper for a sail, and glue to make a small cork boat. Youll also need a glass that will fit over the boat and a larger container for the water. (You can do this experiment with or without the cork boat. The boat makes it more fun and easier to see the water line inside the small glass.)
1. Make a cork boat as shown. Float it. 2. Put a glass over it, putting one edge in the water first, and slowly turn the glass bottom up. 3. Raise the glass, but keep the top under water. Half Toothpick Paper Cork
When you lift the glass, the pressure of the air inside it becomes less than the atmospheric pressure acting on the sur face of the water outside. This difference in air pressure sup ports the water column. Have an adult supervise this next experiment. Youll need a very clean, empty screwtop metal gallon can and a metal pail larger than the can. To be sure the can is clean, rinse it at least three times and let it stand open for 24 hours.
1. Fill the pail with cold water. 2. Pour a glass of water into the can. Leave the top off. Put the open can on a stove. Boil the water. Let it steam for a minute or more, but dont let it boil dry. 3. Use a hot pad to take the can off the stove. Screw on the cap. Turn the can over and place it, top down, into the pail of water. The can will be crushed.
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The steam drives nearly all the air out. The water cools the steam, leaving the can almost empty of air and creating a par tial vacuum (a space in which there is very low pressure). The higher outside atmospheric pressure crushes the can.
Air Pressure
If we compress air (put pressure on it), it becomes denser and more forceful and we can use it in machines. For example, a jackhammer that is used to break up pavement uses com pressed air. A tire pump compresses air, and bicycle tires use compressed air to give you a smooth ride. Experiments With Air Pressure Air pressure can do amazing things! For the first experiment, youll need a pop bottle and a small piece of newspaper.
1. Make a ball of a 1-inch-square piece of newspaper. 2. Lay the pop bottle on its side on a table. Put the ball in the neck of the bottle. 3. Blow into the bottle. The ball will come out of the bottle.
You might expect that blowing on the ball will make it move to the back of the bottle. But what really happens is this: The air you blow into the bottle increases the air pressure, which drives the ball outward.
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For the next experiment, you need books and a hot water bottle.
1. On the edge of a table, place several heavy books on top of an empty hot-water bottle. 2. Hold the opening of the bottle tightly against your mouth. Blow hard into the bottle. Your breath will lift the books.
All you need is a balloon and a glass for the next experi ment.
1. Put a balloon into a glass. Have the bottom of the balloon touching the bottom of the glass. 2. Blow up the balloon. Hold it shut. You can lift the glass by the neck of the balloon.
The air pressure inside the balloon holds the balloon against the glass.
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Water Pressure
This experiment shows how water pressure works. Youll need two large juice cans and something to punch holes in them. The tops of the cans should be open.
1. Punch five holes near the bottom of a tall juice can. Make the holes about 12 to 34 inch apart. 2. Fill the can with water. Notice that all the water streams are the same length. 3. Take the other can and punch three holes at different levels (but not one above the other). Fill the can with water. Now notice that the water streams are different lengths.
The amount of water pressure depends on the depth below the surface of the water. In the first can, the water pressure on the holes was equal, since they all were at the same level. The streams of water looked the same. In the second can, the top hole had the least water pressure, and the lowest hole had the most. The lowest stream, with the most pressure, went farthest. When a dam is built on a river, it is thickest at the bottom, because thats where the water pressure is greatest.
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Your finger stops the air coming in, so the atmosphere can not maintain pressure above the water. The upward force of the atmosphere on the water in the bottom hole keeps the water from running out. Heres another experiment that shows how atmospheric pres sure works against water pressure:
1. Slip a balloon onto a faucet. Fill it, supporting the weight with your hand. 2. Hold the neck of the balloon tightly and remove it from the faucet. Set the balloon in a bucket of water or in a sink with water in it. Let go of the neck of the balloon. Atmospheric pressure pushing on the surface of the water around the balloon forces a fountain of water out.
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Though you are not feeding more air into the glass, the amount of air in it when you touch it to the water remains the same. When you push the glass down, you are compressing the air in it and providing the pressure to push the water out of the way.
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Action/Reaction
Youve read about Isaac New ton and his first law of motion early in this chapter. Newton made many other discoveries. His third law of motion says that every action has an equal and opposite reaction. This principle explains how a rocket is pro pelled skyward. Try this simple demonstration for yourself. If you want to buy and build a model rocket kit, you must be at least 10 years old and have an adult helping you during con struction and launching. Follow the kit directions and observe all safety rules.
Reaction
(thrust) Action Blow up a balloon and hold the opening closed. This is like a rocket that hasnt been ignited yet. The energy is stored in the form of compressed air in the balloon. Release the balloon, and the stored air rushes out of the opening. This is the action. The reaction is a force called thrust. Thrust causes the balloon to move in the opposite direction from the rushing air.
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As the rockets fuel is burned, hot exhaust gases are pushed out of the exhaust nozzle at very high speed. The escaping exhaust gases are the action. That action causes an equal but opposite reaction. The thrust propels the rocket through the air. If the rocket burned fuel even more quickly, both the action and the reaction would be greater. Hot exhaust gases escape through the exhaust nozzle.
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Fog
Did you know that air has water in it? The water is in the form of molecules so small you cant see them. If cool air moves in after a warm day, the invisible molecules are drawn together into tiny droplets of water. Billions of these condensed droplets make up fog.
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Making Fog
1. Fill a bottle with hot water. Then pour out most of the water. Leave about 1 inch in the bottom. 2. Hold the bottle to the light. Notice the streams of vapor rising from it. 3. Hold an ice cube in the bottle opening. Hold the bottle toward the light. Notice the thin streams of vapor moving down into the bottle. This is fog. 1. Put about 1 inch of cold water in a quart-sized bottle. 2. Cover the opening with your hand. Shake hard to soak the air in the bottle. Pour out the water. Hold the bottle upside down. 3. Light a wooden match. Quickly blow it out. Put the smoking head into the opening of the bottle. The smoke will help the water vapor change into water droplets. 4. Set the bottle in a good light. Place your mouth on the bottle opening. Press down and blow hardyoull then see clear air in the bottle. 5. Raise your head. The fog forms again.
Blowing helps compress and heat the air. This evaporates the fog. When you raise your head, the compressed air expands and cools. Cooling condenses water vapor into tiny water drops you can see, so the fog forms in the bottle again.
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Crystals
When some liquids become solid, they form tiny shapes called crystals. Each crystal formed by one liquid is the same shape. Many minerals are made up of crystals. Crystal Candy Heres a great experi mentyou can eat it when its finished! Youll need sugar, Quartz Crystal water, a saucepan, a spoon for stirring, clean white string, a pencil, and a glass or jar. Bring 1 cup of water to boil in a saucepan. Turn off the heat and add 2 cups of sugar. Stir until the sugar is dissolved. Let it cool. Then pour the solution into a tall glass or a glass jar. Tie a clean white string to a pencil. Moisten the string in water and drag it through dry sugar so some sugar crystals stick to it. Hang the string in the glass. Store it in a cool place. In a few days youll see crystals forming on the sides of the glass. By your next den meeting, big hard crystals will have formed on the string. Look at them through a magnifying glass. Thenenjoy!
Pencil With Clean, White String Crystals Will Grow on the String, and You Can Eat Them.
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Center of Gravity
Gravity is the force that holds objects to the earth. The same force holds the moon and planets in their orbits. Sir Isaac New tons law of universal gravitation explained this in 1687. Did you ever sit still on a bike with your feet on the pedals and try to keep your balance? You had to keep shifting your weight, right? Why? Because each time you moved, your center of gravitythe point in your body where your weight is concen tratedshifted a little. (A persons center of gravity is usually somewhere behind the navel.) Normally, when you stand or walk, you unconsciously keep your center of gravity over your feet, which are your base. But if you try to walk along a straight line on the floor, youll find yourself moving your arms to adjust your center of gravity and keep your balance. Try these experiments to see what happens when your center of gravity is a bit beyond your control.
Sit in a chair with your feet on the floor and keep your arms folded across your chest. See if you can stand up, but obey this rule: You may not lean forward. Your center of gravity remains too far back to allow you to stand. Now try to stand up by leaning forward first. This allows you to adjust your center of gravity and move it over your feet.
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Place a chair against the wall. Bend over it with your head touching the wall. Move your feet back. Your legs, from ankles to hips, should slant toward the wall. Lift the chair. Try to stand straight without moving your feet.
Stand with one shoulder, arm, leg, and foot close against a wall. Try to bring your outside foot up to touch the one next to the wall. Stop at the point where you feel yourself losing your balance. The wall is in your way, so you cant move your body that direction to adjust your center of gravity and keep your balance.
Cut a bird out of a 6-by-6-inch piece of light cardboard. Glue or tape a penny at the front end of each wing. The middle of each penny should be just in front of the birds beak. Set the beak on the end of your finger or put it on the corner of a table or a book. It wont fall. Where do you think its center of gravity is?
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Optical Illusions
How Your Eyes Work Together Your eyes are wonderful instruments. They are like amazing cameras that can work together. Each of your eyes focuses a picture of what you are seeing on the retina that lines the eye. The optic nerve carries these two pictures to the brain. Then your brain makes one image out of the two. Sometimes your eyes and brain can trick you. Using what it already under stands about the world, your brain does the best it can with the images it receives. It might make you believe youre seeing something impossible! Try these easy experiments that show how the eyes work.
Our eyes and the lens of a camera are similar. Both focus light rays to produce images.
Roll a sheet of paper into a tube. Hold the edge of your hand against the side of the tube. With one eye, look at a distant object through the tube. Look at your hand with the other eye. There seems to be a hole in your hand. What do you think is happening?
One eye sees the distant object through the paper tube, and the other eye sees your hand. Your brain combines the two images in one view.
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Hold two pencils, as shown, at arms length. Look past the pencils at the far corner of the room. Youll see two sets of pencils. Do this again with the pencils held about 1 inch apart. Youll see four pencils.
Place the tips of two fingers together about 6 inches from your eyes. Look past them at the far corner of the room and youll see a small sausage. Pull the fingers apart slowly. The sausage will seem to hang in the air.
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Light and Dark The pupils of your eyes adjust for the level of light that is available.
Stand in a corner of the room, facing the corner, with your back to the light. Look in a mirror. Notice the size of the opening in the pupil of each eye. The openings will be large. Turn around with your face toward the light. Look in the mirror again. The pupils will be smaller.
Look at something far away. Cup your hands into tubes. Look through them as you would through field glasses. You see more clearly because your pupils get bigger. They receive more light from the faraway objects when they are protected from other light.
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Brain Teasers In some of the optical illusions below, you might be fooled about measurements, sizes, and distance. When your brain tries to make sense out of what your eyes are seeing, it uses what it has already learned about how things usually look. That doesnt mean its always right!
Draw a 12-inch square inside a 1-inch square. Connect the corners. Look at it steadily. The inside square seems to move closer, then farther away.
Draw a box as shown. Look at it steadily. Sometimes it seems youre looking at the top of the box. Sometimes it seems to be the bottom.
Is the high silk hat longer or shorter from A to B than from C to D? Measure it. C B D
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Does it look like you could put a dime on top of this box so the coin wont touch the edges? Try it.
Which of the two designs at left is longer? Better get your ruler.
cub Scout academics Belt loops for Science, Weather, and astronomy
If you earned the Science, Weather, or Astronomy belt loop earlier in Cub Scouting, great! But that wont count for require ment 4, 13, or 14 of this Scientist activity badge. You must earn the Science (requirement 4), Weather (requirement 13), or Astronomy (requirement 14) belt loop again while you are a Webelos Scout for it to count toward this activity badge.
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Showman requirements
Requirement Do this:
1. Complete six activities of your choice; these can be from any area (puppetry, music, and or drama). Webelos den leader or activity badge counselor: Be sure to sign approval both here and for each of the activities below that are completed to fulfill requirement 1.
Approved by
Puppetry
And do one of these not already done for requirement 1:
2. Write a puppet play about one of your Webelos den activities or a subject of your choice. 3. Make a set of puppets or marionettes for the play you have written or for another play. 4. Build a simple stage for marionettes or puppets. 5. Alone or with the help of others, put on a puppet show for your den or pack. 6. Make a set of four paper bag puppets for a singing group. With the help of three other den members, sing a song with the puppets as the performers. 7. There are sock, stick, and finger puppets. There are paper bag puppets and mari onettes. Explain their differences and show any puppets you have made for this badge.
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Music
And do one of these not already done for requirement 1:
8. Play four tunes on any band or orchestra instrument. Read these from music. 9. Sing one song indoors and one song out doors, either alone or with a group. Tell what you need to do differently when sing ing outdoors. 10. Make a collection of three or more records, tapes, or music CDs. Tell what you like about each one. 11. Tell what folk music is. Hum, sing, or play a folk tune on a musical instrument. 1 2. Name three American composers. Name a famous work by each. 13. Draw a staff. Draw on it a clef, a sharp, flat, natural, note, and rest. Tell what each is used for. 14. Show the difference between 2/4, 3/4, and 4/4 time by beating time or playing an instrument. 15. While you are a Webelos Scout, earn the Cub Scout Academics belt loop for Music.
Drama
And do one of these not already done for requirement 1:
16. Give a monologue (a talk) on a patriotic, humorous, or holiday subject or another subject of your choice. 17. Attend a play. Describe the story. Tell what you liked about it. 18. Read a play. Make a model stage setting for one of the acts. 19. Write, put on, and take part in a oneact play.
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20. Make a list of stage directions. Tell what they mean. 21. Describe a theaterintheround. What are its good and bad points? 22. Explain the difference between grand opera and light opera. Explain the difference between a musical and a play. 23. Read about William Shakespeare. Draw a picture of his Globe Theater.
verybody loves to see a show. And its fun to be on stage. Behind the scenes are people who enjoyed creat ing the script, songs, and scenery.
For requirement 1 of the Showman activity badge, youll choose six activities from puppetry, music, or drama. Then later youll do one additional activity in each of these areas, for a total of nine activities. For puppetry, you might decide to write a play for puppets, make the puppets, and put on the play. For music, you can learn a folk song, play a musical instru ment, or tell about music you like. For drama, you can be an actor in a play for your den. Or you can attend a play or read one. You have a lot of choices! On with the show!
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Puppetry
When you complete each requirement, ask your Webelos den leader or activity badge counselor to sign it on page 430. Be sure your Webelos den leader or activity badge counselor signs all the requirements you do for requirement 1.
activity. Notice how the plot starts out with an easy task for two Webelos Scouts, but then they deal with one challenge after another. Title: The Adventures of the Pebble Pups Characters: Two Webelos Scouts, Jason and Brian; their Webe los den leader, Mr. Mason; a bull Props (things you need): Poison ivy plants (made of paper), a huge outcropping of granite (made of something lightweight), a small piece of granite a puppet can hold Plot idea: Jason and Brian are looking for samples of granite to complete their rock collections for the Geologist activity badge. Mr. Mason tells them he is sure there is a granite outcrop on a hill not far away. Jason and Brian start out. They climb a steep hill. They cross a pasture and are chased by a bull. They walk through poison ivy and start itching. Finally they get to the granite outcrop on a hill. Suddenly they realize they forgot to bring a hammer and chisel. As they start back, Jason stumbles over a rock. Its a piece of granite! They hike back to Mr. Mason. He says, Well boys, how did it go? Jason shows him the rock and says, It was easy. Heres the stone, Mr. Mason. How to put your play on paper: Put down what each charac ter says and does. Heres an example of the way the middle part of the above play could be written: Brian: Lets cut through this pasture. (They walk along.) Jason: Hey, Brian, whats really big and runs fast? Brian: I dont know. What? Jason: That! (He points offstage right.) Brian: A bull! Come on, run! (They run offstage left and the bull follows them across.) The characters have to talk about where theyre going and what theyre seeing so the audience understands what is hap pening. They have to show how they feelhappy, excited, scared.
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Make your play a different idea from the example. If you work with another puppeteer, give him a copy of your play script to study so he is familiar with his lines and the action. Have a rehearsal before you present your play to the den.
Making Puppets
Simple Puppets Paper Bag Puppet. Use a small paper bag. Use crepe paper or yarn for hair and mustaches. Mark features with felttip pens. Look at the picture: Draw the upper lip on the edge of the sacks bottom and the lower lip on the side of the sack so you can make the mouth open and close.
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Finger Puppet. Draw a puppet without legs on heavy paper. Make it 2 or 3 inches high. Cut holes for your first two fingers where the legs should go. You may want to wear a glove as a costume for your fingers. Stick Puppet. This is the simplest kind of puppet. Draw the figure on cardboard and cut it out. Glue on a handle of heavy cardboard or use a craft stick. Puppets in Motion Moving stick puppet. May be cut from cardboard or light wood. Join with paper fasteners so parts can be moved. Use a dowel or balsa wood stick for the body stick and thin ner balsa wood sticks for the moving parts. Hold the body stick in one hand while moving the other sticks to make the legs walk, tail thrash, or jaws bite (depend ing on your puppet). You can make a stick puppet of a per son with only one moving arm or leg, which is easier to work.
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Sock Puppet. Cut the foot off the sock as shown. Take the ankle part and stuff it into the toe to make the puppets head. Fasten it in with a strong rubber band or ribbon. Use felttip marking pens to draw features. Cut holes on each side of the body for the arms (your thumb and middle finger). You can put on a glove first, if you want to cover your fingers. Your forefinger moves the head.
Marionettes. Traditional marionettes are jointed, which means their necks, wrists, knees, and ankles can bend. Their strings are attached to a crosspiece made of two wooden sticks. The puppeteer holds the crosspiece and tilts it to make the mari onette move in different ways. You can make marionettes from simpler materials, as shown here. The football player is cut from cardboard. The parts are connected by paper fasteners. Attach threads or string to the head and hands. Tie the threads to a wooden dowel or a balsa wood stick. Hold the stick in one hand and use your other hand to pull strings and make the arms move.
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Puppet Stages
Carefully turn table on its side. Kneel behind it and hold puppets over edge of table.
Hang a cloth across a doorway. Keep the room behind the stage dark. Light the front.
Take the top off a heavy cardboard carton that is not too deep. Cut the stage opening out of the bottom and decorate it. Put it on a table with cloth draped around the legs.
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A Marionette Stage
Drape a cloth or old sheet behind a doorway. The performer is hidden behind the backdrop, which is a folding table on its side or a large carton. Tape paper scenery to the backdrop.
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Music
When you complete each requirement, ask your Webelos den leader or activity badge counselor to sign it on page 431. Be sure your Webelos den leader or activity badge counselor initials all the requirements you do for requirement 1. If you are taking music lessons, the music requirements will be easy for you.
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Why not form a den band or singing group and perform at a pack meeting? You will have fun, and so will the other boys and their parents.
Folk Music
The folk music tradition is based on tunes that have been handed down from generation to generation, with no known composer. People heard them, learned to play them, and sang them, often in different versions. Many years later, someone wrote down the music and words. Many folk tunes we hear today came from other countries. Other tunes and songs were made up by people in America. The songs tell of the joys and sorrows of the people living then. Some songs are humorous, and some music is for dancing. The fiddle, guitar, banjo, and dulcimer are often used to play folk music or accompany folk singers. Songwriters have continued to compose in the folk style, so you may know newer songs that fit in with the folk tradition. An example is This Land Is Your Land, written by Woody Guth rie, in the 1930s. In the late 1950s and early 1960s, folk singing became especially popular. Folk artists such as Pete Seeger, Joan Baez, Judy Collins, and Peter, Paul, and Mary rose to fame. Arlo Guthrie followed in his fathers footsteps and writes folk songs, some about social issues, as does Bob Dylan. In the 21st century, Pete Seegers grandson, Tao Rodriguez, and Woody Guthries grandchildren (and Arlos children), Abe and Sarah Lee Guthrie, are rising folk singers and songwriters. If you dont know much folk music, you have fun ahead of you. Look for a folk song book at your library and learn a few folk songs. Some libraries might have recordings of folk music and videos of performers, so you can hear the music. The Inter net is a good resource, too.
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American Composers
Ragtime, blues, jazz, classical, and popular musicAmerican composers have created wonderful music in many styles. Here are just a few titles from six composers: Stevie Wonder (1950) Singer and writer of popular songs. Some of his songs: You Are the Sunshine of My Life Superstition Isnt She Lovely
John Williams (1932) Conductor and composer, has scored and composed music for many major films, including The Harry Potter movies The Star Wars movies The Home Alone movies The Indiana Jones movies E. T.: The Extra-Terrestrial
W. C. Handy (18731958) Composer of the blues; wrote a book called, and came to be known as, Father of the Blues. Some of his songs: Memphis Blues Beale Street Blues St. Louis Blues
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George Gershwin (18981937) Composer of popular songs, folk opera, and jazz compositions. Some of his works and songs: Porgy and Bess Rhapsody in Blue Piano Concerto in F An American in Paris Swanee I Got Rhythm
Woody Guthrie (19121967) Folk singer and composer. Some of his songs: This Land Is Your Land So Long, Its Been Good to Know You This Train Is Bound for Glory His son, Arlo, is a composer, too.
Leonard Bernstein (19181990) Composer of musicals and sym phonies. Some of his works: West Side Story Wonderful Town Fancy Free Jeremiah Mass
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Flat
Natural
Notes
Quarter note
Bass clef
Staff
Written Music
Written music is how composers communicate their music to musicians and singers. They draw notes and other symbols on a staff. The horizontal and vertical lines above make up a treble staff (for higher notes) and a bass staff (for lower notes). Each line and each space on the staff stands for a particular pitch (sound), and they are named A through G. The sharp and flat symbols tell you to raise or lower the pitch a little from its natural pitch. Notes can be drawn as whole notes, half notes (held for half as long), quarter notes, and so on. When a note is drawn on a certain line or a space, it tells you what pitch to play or sing, and how long to hold it. You read music just like you read words: from left to right, top to bottom. Once you learn to read the language of music, you can play or sing a tune or song just like you read a favorite book!
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Drama
When you complete each requirement, ask your Webe los den leader or activity badge counselor to sign it on pages 431432. Be sure your Webe los den leader or activity badge counselor signs all the require ments you do for requirement 1.
Performing a Monologue
A single actor recites or acts out a monologue. It can be a poem, a story, or an essay. It may be on a serious subject, such as patriotism. Or it may be a funny story. Choose a short story or long poem that you like. Try to memo rize it. Practice often and show all the humor, sadness, or excite ment that is in it. Then perform your monologue for the den.
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Attending Plays
Have you ever been to a play in a theater? Its different from watching a comedy or drama on television. Its almost as if the actors are living their roles right before your eyes. Stage actors have demanding jobs. They must become the character, remember the lines and actions exactly, and portray every emotion so it is believable. The cast does this again and again, for every performance. Actors in television and movies also have demanding roles, but they often have many chances to get it right. A scene can be filmed many times until no one makes a mistake and the direc tor is satisfied. You see the best of their work on the screen. Ask an adult to take you to a play staged by a local high school drama club, college drama department, or theater group. Some groups put on plays just for children.
write your own oneact play, you can get some tips from the sec tion above on writing a play for puppets (pages 433435).
Stage Setting
A play director often makes a Figure 1 model of the stage setting for a play to help him or her plan the action. Set designers also make models. You can make one, too. Read a play and then make a Construction paper model stage setting for it. First, sketch your idea on paper. Draw it as the audi ence would see it. Then draw it as a floor plan of the stage, as if you were looking down at the stage. Show where furniture or other large objects will go. Use these sketches as a guide. (You can change your mind about your design at any time.) Cut two strips of light Figure 2 cardboard about 10 inches long and 3 inches wide. Make two length wise folds, so the ends look like a Z shape. Glue them to a box as shown in figure 1. These represent the curtains at the side of the stage. Shirt For the backdrop, curve box a sheet of construction paper and slide it into place (figure 2). Or fold it to make two corners of a room. This is the backdrop. If it is an indoor scene, mark lightly in pencil the places where you want doors and windows on the backdrop. Then remove the backdrop and use crayons or paints to add line and color.
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If its outdoors, paint trees and other features. Glue or tape the backdrop in place when its ready. Keep it simple. The audience comes to the theater ready to use imagination, so you dont have to fill in every detail. Make simple furniture from cardboard or use dollhouse min iatures. Dont clutter the scene with things that wont be used. The action in the play will tell you what must be there.
Stage Directions
As the director of the play you write, you will have to give stage directions to the actors. Read your play and think about what each character does. Make notes in your script where you want each actor to stand, sit, and move on the stage. Heres a way to note the locations:
DDown (toward audience); UUp (toward back of stage); LLeft (your left as you face audience); RRight (your right as you face audience); CCenter; DCDown center; UCUp center; LCLeft center; RCRight center
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For the play you write, your stage may be an area of your den meeting place. Keep the setting simple. Use the furniture that is available and movable. Let the audience imagine a sofa when you line up three folding chairs.
Theater Styles
Three main kinds of stages are used today. One is the kind of stage you usually think of when you hear the word stage. Its a raised platform at one end of the room, with a curtain between it and the audience that can be opened and closed. Another kind of stage is called theater-in-the-round. The stage is in the center of the room. The audience sits around all sides of it. There is no curtain. Instead of a curtain closing, the theater is darkened between scenes or acts. Theaterintheround works well for plays with small casts and action that needs to be seen close up. The actors enter and leave the stage along aisles through the audience. Theres no backdrop or solid scenery that would block anyones view of the actors. A window frame hanging from the ceiling might be the only suggestion of a wall of a house.
450 Activity Badges
If the theater is small, everyone in the audience is fairly close to the stagemuch closer than most people would be in a tradi tional theater. Watching a play this way can make the audience feel very involved in it. For a director, staging the play can be challenging. Actors moves must be planned so they dont have their backs to one part of the audience for too long a time. For plays with a large cast or a lot of action, theaterinthe round is not a good choice. The audience is too close to the stage to see everything clearly when many actors are moving about. A great deal of fast action can be confusing. A third kind of stage, the thrust stage, starts at one end of the room like the most common kind of stage, but it thrusts out into the audience area so that three sides of it are surrounded by the audience. It has some of the advantages of theaterintheround but the actors can still enter and exit using the wings and dont have to use the aisles. The thrust stage is not as widely used as the other two kinds of stage.
Showman
451
Musicals A musical can be serious or funny. Much of the plot unfolds in the spoken lines. There may be a great deal of variety, with solo singers and choruses, a lot of action, and exciting dance numbers. Actors in musicals are talented in acting, singing, and dancing. Some examples of musicals: Oklahoma!, with music by Richard Rodgers and lyrics (words) by Oscar Hammerstein II My Fair Lady, with music by Frederick Loewe and lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner West Side Story, with music by Leonard Bernstein and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim Cats and Phantom of the Opera, with music by Andrew Lloyd Webber You may have a chance to see an opera or a musical on stage. That will be quite an experience. If you can view videos at home, find out if your public library loans out videos of musicals and operas.
452 Activity Badges
Showman
453
S
S P o rT S M a n
Sportsman requirements
Requirement Do these:
1. Show the signals used by officials in one of these sports: football, basketball, baseball, soccer, or hockey. 2. Explain what good sportsmanship means. 3. While you are a Webelos Scout, earn Cub Scout Sports belt loops for two individual sports (badminton, bicycling, bowling, fish ing, golf, gymnastics, marbles, physical fit ness, ice skating, roller skating, snow ski and board sports, swimming, table tennis, or tennis). 4. While you are a Webelos Scout, earn Cub Scouting Sports belt loops for two team sports (baseball, basketball, soccer, softball, volleyball, flag football, or ultimate).
Approved by
456
Activity Badges
merica is a sportsloving country. We cheer our school teams. College and professional games draw crowds, and we watch all kinds of sports on television. These games are great fun to watch, but too many Ameri cans are spectators. Be a player! In the Sportsman activity badge, youll play team sports like basketball, baseball, and soccer. Youll go out for indi vidual sports like bicycling, swimming, and tennis. You may try a sport youll play all your life.
Sports build your body and improve your skills. Some sports sharpen your eye and your accuracy. Some require you to move carefully and deliberately, while others demand quick thinking, speed, and endurance. Choose your sports and play! When you complete a requirement, ask your Webelos den leader or activity badge counselor to sign it on page 456.
Good Sportsmanship
What is good sportsmanship? You may say, Its being a good loser. Thats part of it. If you lose, try to take the loss bravely. Dont gripe about bad luck or blame the officials or your teammates. Practice, do your best, and see what happens the next time you compete.
Sportsman
457
Good sportsmanship also means being a good winner. Youll be happy, but dont put the other team down. Take time to tell your opponent he played a good game. A good sport plays by the rules and never cheats. Playing fairly is a matter of honor and selfrespect, as well as respect for opponents. Play hard and play to winbut to win fairly.
Playing Sports
For requirements 3 and 4, youll earn the belt loops for two individual sports and two team sports in the Cub Scout Aca demics and Sports program. If you earned some of those awards when you were in a Cub Scout den, they wont count toward these requirements. You could choose different sports this time, or you could earn a second belt loop in any sport you want to repeat for this badge. The book called Cub Scout Academics and Sports Program Guide tells you what you need to do to earn a belt loop for each of the sports listed in requirements 3 and 4. Generally, you need to under stand the rules of the sport, practice some of the skills, and then play a game of the sport itself.
458 Activity Badges
oFFicialS SiGnalS
FOOTBALL BASKETBALL
Offside
Illegal procedure
Illegal motion
Time outFoul
Technical Foul
Illegal use of hands Illegal shift Illegal return Delay of game Traveling
Clipping
Pushing Charging
Cancel Score Pass interference Roughing the kicker Ineligible receiver downfield
BASEBALL
Strike Incomplete pass Touchdown Penalty declined or field No play goal No Score Safe Time Out Out Fair ball points toward outfield Time out First Down Start the clock Foul ball points away from outfield Time in
Sportsman
459
HOCKEY
Elbowing
Wash out
Fighting (Roughing)
Charging
Butt-ending
Slashing
Hooking
Misconduct
Cross-checking
Goal scored
Icing
SOCCER
Goal-kick Off-side Penalty kick Direct free-kick Corner kick
Caution or expulsion
Substitution
Off-side
Throw-in
Off-side
Goal-kick
460
Activity Badges
T
T r aV E l E r
Traveler requirements
Requirement Do five of these:
1. Get a map or timetable from a railroad, bus line, airline, subway, or light rail. The line should serve the place where you live or near where you live. Look up some places it goes. 2. Use a timetable to plan a trip from your home to a city in another state by railroad, bus, airline, or ferry. 3. With the help of your parent, guardian, teacher, or librarian, use a map site on the Internet to plan a trip from your home to a nearby place of interest. Download and/or print the directions and a street map show ing how to go from your home to the place you chose. 4. With your parent or guardian, take a trip to a place that interests you. Go by car, bus, boat, train, or plane. 5. Figure out what it costs per mile for the trip you took or planned to fulfill requirement 2, 4, 6, or 7. (Dont forget to include getting back to your starting point!) 6. Decide on four nearby trips you would like to take with your parents or guardian. Draw the route of each trip on a highway map. Using the map, act as navigator on one of these trips. It should start at your home, be at least 25 miles long, and have six or more turns.
462 Activity Badges
Approved by
7. Decide on a trip you would like to take that lasts at least two days. Pack everything you would need for that trip. 8. Check the first aid kit in the family car to see if it contains what is needed. Explain what you found. 9. Look at the map legend on a road map of your area. Learn what the symbols mean. Show your den members what you have learned. 10. On a road map of your area, find a place of interest and draw two different routes between it and your home. Use the map legend to determine which route is shorter in miles. 11. Make a list of safety precautions you, as a traveler, should take for travel by each of the following: car, bus, plane, boat, train. 12. While you are a Webelos Scout, earn the Cub Scout Academics belt loop for Geography. 13. While you are a Webelos Scout, earn the Cub Scout Academics belt loop for Map and Compass.
Traveler
463
raveling is one of humankinds greatest adventures. Early explorers sailed across vast oceans, floated down mighty rivers, and journeyed through high mountain coun try to see what they could find. You can be an explorer, too. You wont be traveling in unknown territory, but it will be new to you. Youll enjoy the thrill of discovery wherever you travel. Be curious, ask questions, read signs about points of interest, notice the sights and sounds.
In earning the Traveler activity badge, youll learn how to help plan family trips. Youll also learn how to use public transporta tionbuses, planes, and trains. Lets go! When you complete each requirement, ask your Webelos den leader or activity badge counselor to sign it on page 462463.
all aboard!
Has most of your traveling been by car? Its fun to find out about other kinds of travelby bus, ship, train, or plane. Then when you do take a trip, youll know how to read schedules and plan. Each kind of travel has advantages and disadvantages. Buses go to more places, like small towns, than planes and passenger
464 Activity Badges
trains do. Usually the bus is the least expensive of these three, but not always. Airlines sometimes have special low fares. Many people choose a long train trip mainly to enjoy seeing the country. Longdistance trains have more room for moving about than other forms of transportation, and everything a pas senger needs is on the train. These trains usually have lounge cars and dining cars. Some even have observation cars, where you sit up high for an even better view of the countryside. You may have your own room, called a compartment. It is a tiny living room, bedroom, and washroom, all in one. A plane is the fastest way of traveling on long trips. The view of the earth from high in the sky is breathtaking. You have a birds eye view of mountains, rivers, and cities far below. Flying through and above clouds gives you a feeling of being in another world.
Your Schedule
Railroads, buses, airlines, and ship lines have schedules called timetables. These list the places they go and show the times they leave and arrive at each place.
Traveler 465
Timetables look hard to read. But theyre not, when you learn how. For instance, some timetables use arrows to show the direction of travel. Noon to midnight hours (p.m.) are usually shown in heavy type. Look at the beginning of the timetable for instructions on how to use it. Read your timetable with care when you are planning a trip. Be sure the train, bus, airplane, or ferry goes on the day you want. Check with a ticket agent for any recent changes in the departure and arrival times. You can get a timetable at a railroad or bus station, ferry line, airline terminal, or travel agency.
466
Activity Badges
Packing
Make a list of things youll need. Check it with an adult mem ber of your family. Select the suitcase, duffel bag, backpack, etc., that you will need. Fold your clothes and press down on them as you pack so you can take as many as you need. If youre using a suitcase, pack shoes so that when the suit case is standing up, the shoes will be on the bottom. Tuck socks into shoes to save room.
Traveler 467
Put things that might break and spread throughout your clothes, such as toothbrush, toothpaste, and shampoo, in a plastic jar or reseal able plastic bag. (A jar wont crush easily.) If youre using public trans portation, you should have name tags on all your lug gage. Some tag holders have a cover that opens so the name and address arent vis ible to everyone who passes by. The tag helps if your luggage is lost or if several passengers have similar bags. Some people also tie a piece of brightly colored yarn to the handle so they can find their luggage quickly when they arrive at their desti nation.
If an adult family member belongs to an automobile club, it can provide maps of states and street maps of large cities. A club may also plan your route for you. See Internet Travel Resources on page 466 for more information. Study the maps. For a long trip, decide how far youll travel each day. Where will you stop? At a hotel, a motel, or a camp ing ground? An adult family member may need to phone and make reservations. Find out whether your library has recent travel guides that list places to stay. Automobile clubs may have these, too.
Traveler
469
National Monuments National monuments are places that preserve Prehistoric sites, such as Petroglyph National Monument in New Mexico Historic sites, such as Fort McHenry National Monument in Maryland Places of scientific interest, such as Agate Fossil Beds National Monument in Nebraska A national monument could be almost anywherein the heart of a city or in the wilderness. Some have camping places, or there might be a campground nearby. Check the map for national monuments along your route. They are worth a visit. State Parks Each state has state parks. Some of them are for day use only, for picnics and other recreation. Others may have campgrounds ranging from basic campsites to those with showers and laundry facilities. Most have a small daily charge.
Traveler
471
Finding Places to Camp Perhaps your family would like to know more about camp sites. Check some current guidebooks on camping. Find out where to write for more information about camps in each state you plan to visit. Before you go on a camping vacation, try to earn your Out doorsman activity badge. Everything you learn about outdoor living will be helpful on your trip.
Safety First!
As a Webelos Scout, you need to be aware of safety precau tions that seasoned travelers use when traveling by car or other types of transportation.
Do not take with you any toy or other object that could look like a weapon. Be aware of your surroundings. Do not speak to strangers unless an adult you know and trust is present.
cub Scout academics Belt loops for Geography and Map and compass
If you earned the Geography or Map and Compass belt loop earlier in Cub Scouting, great! But that wont count for require ments 12 and 13 of this Traveler activity badge. You must earn those belt loops again while you are a Webelos Scout for them to count toward this activity badge.
Traveler
473
a
A
Index
placement on uniform, 33 requirements, 6364 shown, 62 Arrow Points, placement on uniform, 33 Art belt loop, 121 Art medium, choosing, 104 Art supplies, 10809 Artist activity badge, 10121 Athlete activity badge, 12341 Athlete Progress Record, 132 Atmospheric pressure, 40912 Attitude, positive, 8, 45, 392, 395 Automobile, see car, 302 Awards, placement on uniform, 3233 Awards, special, 6873
Academics and Sports program, Cub Scout, 7172 Art belt loop, 121 Astronomy belt loop, 428 Belt loops, 32 Chess belt loop, 396 Computers and Communicating belt loop, 196 Geography belt loop, 473 Geology belt loop, 298 Heritages belt loop, 244 Language belt loop, 396 Map and Compass belt loop, 473 Mathematics belt loop, 226, 396 Music belt loop, 445 Physical Fitness pin, 126 Science belt loop, 428 Swimming belt loop, 100 Weather belt loop, 428 Wildlife Conservation belt loop, 342 Accident, what to do after, 369 Acting out a joke, 435 Action/reaction, 41718 Activity badge groups, 74 Activity badge tracking chart, 7578 Activity badges, 5, 1314, 81473 and Academics and Sports, 71 earning, 7578 placement on uniform, 32 Advancement, 5, 3980 ceremony, 29 Air pressure, 40406, 41213 Alcohol, dangers of, 257 All the Way exercise, 135 American Sign Language, Cub Scout Promise in, 18185 Animal watching, 33738 Ants, keeping, 32223 Application to join, 25 Aquanaut activity badge, 83100 Aquariums, 328 Arm Wrestle dual contest, 139 Arrow of Light Award, 6267 earning, 6267 476
B
B
Backstroke, elementary, 89 Badges of rank, placement on uniform, 32 Be Courageous, 368 Bear badge, placement on uniform, 33 Bed made of blankets, 34849 Bee and wasp stings, first aid for, 381 Belt buckle, Webelos, 30 Belt loops, see Academics and Sports program Belt, Cub Scout, 20, 30 Bernoullis Principle, 40406 BEST steps to a positive attitude, 395 Biceps Builder exercise, 133 Bicycle safety, 38687 Bicycle, taking care of a, 30608 Bicycling, 131 Birds, 33133 Bites and stings, first aid for, 38182 Bleeding, stopping severe, 37475 Blisters, first aid for, 380 Block and tackle, 22123 Boating safety, 98101 Bobcat badge, 6, 25, 33, 4147 Body language, 16870 Bowline, tying, 351 Boy Scout, becoming a, 7980 Boy Scout uniform, parts of, 66 Boy Scouting, 7980 Index and Credits
c
C
Breathing, rescue, 372, 373 Bridges, 21820 Brushes for painting, 108 Buddy system, 87, 96, 385 Budget, family, 23536 Burns and scalds, first aid for, 37879 Butterflies and moths, keeping, 32627 Butterfly exercise, 136 Camp activities, 354 Camp, places to, 472 Campfire program, 354 Campgrounds, 47071 Camping, 34560 away from home, 35253 practice at home, 347 safety and comfort, 35455 Campouts, 1820 family trips, 470 packing for, 35253 Cap, Webelos Scout, 30 Capulin Volcano, 291 Car, taking care of, 302 Car safety, 390 Car trips, planning, 46869 Cataput, making and using, 22425 Center of gravity experiments, 42223 Ceramics, 20810 Character Connections, 7 Citizenship, 144 Courage, 366 Faith, 5051 Health and Fitness, 246 Honesty, 42, 44, 64 Perseverance, 124 Positive Attitude, 392 Respect, 318 Responsibility, 300 Character Development, 7 Chartered organization contribution, 21 Chest Push dual contest, 141 Chigger bites, first aid for, 381 Child abuse prevention, 12, 42, 19295 Choking, first aid for, 37980 Citizen activity badge, 14363 Citizenship, 6, 8, 143163 Clay projects, 20810 Cleanliness as a family duty, 23132 Cleanup in camp, 360 Index and Credits
Clothing for hikes, 36162 Clove hitch, tying, 351 Codes, secret, 175 Collages, making, 12021 Collections, geologic, 288 Color wheel, 110 Communication, careers in, 196 Communication methods, 174, 18084 Communicator activity badge, 16595 Community Group, 74 Citizen activity badge, 14363 Communicator activity badge, 16595 Family member activity badge, 22744 Readyman activity badge, 36590 Community support for Scouting, 21 Community volunteer groups, 163 Community, learning about, 157 Compact disks (CDs), 188 Compass points emblem, 36 earning, 6061 placement on uniform, 33 Compassion, 8 Composers, American music, 44244 Computer, taking care of, 19091 Computers, 18795 Computer designs, 11314 Computers in a newsroom, 178 Computers in engineering, 22526 Conservation, 72, 156, 237, 34042 Conservation Award, Cub Scout World, 342 Construction, geologic materials in, 289 Construction site, visiting, 215 Constructions, artistic, 11920 Contributors to Scouting, 2122 Cooking in camp, 35660 Cooperation, 8 Core values of Cub Scouting, 8 Costs of Scouting, 2122 Council support, 2122 Courage, 8, 56, 366, 368 CPR, 37274 Crafts projects, choosing, 200 protection when giving, 372 Craftsman activity badge, 197210 Crawl stroke, 91 Crickets, keeping, 321 Crystals, making, 421 477
D
D
Cub Scout Academics and Sports program, see Academics and Sports program, Cub Scout Cub Scout handshake, 42, 46 Cub Scout motto, 16, 17, 28, 42, 394 Cub Scout Promise, meaning of, 4345 Cub Scout Promise in sign language, 18185 Cub Scout salute, 42, 47, 53, 152 Cub Scout sign, 42, 46 Cub Scout Sports, see Academics and Sports program, Cub Scout Cub Scout World Conservation Award, 342 Curlups, 127 Cuts and scratches, first aid for, 37778 Danger spots at home, 389 Dangerous materials, storing safely, 310 Den, Webelos Scout, 2337 Den chief, Webelos, 29 Den leader Webelos, 28 Denner, 29 Denner cords, placement on uniform, 34 Digital video disks (DVDs), 188 Display stands and frames, making, 205 Dive, surface, 92 Do Your Best, 16, 17, 28, 42, 43, 46, 62, 66, 243, 392, 394, 457 Do your best in school, 394 Drama, 44553 Drawing, 105 floor plans, 214 Drawing media, 105 Drugs, 12, 25758 Drugs: A Deadly Game, 258 Dual contests, 13941 Duck Fight dual contest, 141 Duties and rights of a citizen, 15556 Duty to family, 230
F
F
Electricity, 21618 Emergency, getting help for an, 37071 Energy, saving, 237 Engineer activity badge, 21126 Environment, natural, 34041 Exercise, 12743 Faith, 8, 1617, 5051, 56, 59, 65 Family, 22930 budget, 23536 camping trips, 470 duty to, 230 fun, 238 jobs, 23132 meetings, 230, 24243 you and your, 22930 Family Member activity badge, 22744 Fat in the diet, 254 Fees, 21 50yard dash, 130 Fins, swim, how to use, 95 Fire building, 35659 Fire escape plan, home, 38788 Fire in the forest, 27476 Fire lay, 35859 First aid, 369 for hurry cases, 371 kit for car, 472 kits, 38889 First Class Scout badge, meaning of, 65 Fitness activity badge, 24558 Fitness and health, 8, 87, 124, 125, 126, 234, 238, 240, 24558, 384 Fitness for swimming, 87 Flag, U.S., 14853 Flag ceremony, planning and leading, 53 Floating, 88 Fog, making, 419 Folk music, 441 Food Guide Pyramid, 24849 Food serving size, 25051 Food, helping with family, 23941 Food, shopping for, 240 Forest fire, 27476 Forest regions of the United States, 262 Forest structure, 26465 Forest tree types, 26667 Forest trees and plants, identifying, 26970 Index and Credits
E
E
478
Earths crust and core, 282 Earthquakes, 293 Ecosystems, 33841 Education, careers in, 400 Education, value of, 395
G
G
Forester activity badge, 25977 Forestry, urban, 27677 Forests, animals and humans depend on, 26869 Forests, human uses of, 26869 Fossils, 29596 Frame, making a, 112 Friends, 34 Friends of Scouting, 22 Frostbite, first aid for, 383 Fun, family, 238 Garbage and trash disposal, 234 Geologic materials in construction, 289 Geologic specimens, collecting, 28687 Geologist activity badge, 27998 Geologist in the city, 29697 Geologists equipment, 287 Geysers, 292 Good citizen, how to be a, 15759 Government and laws, why we need, 16061 Government and you, 14748 Government officials names, knowing, 148 Government, paying for, 161 Grasshoppers, keeping, 32425 Groups, activity badge, 74
i
I J
J K l
K L
Igneous rock, 28283 Inertia, 40709 Ingredient labels, 25456 Inhalants, dangers of, 25758 Insect zoo, 32027 Insignia, placement on uniform, 3334 Internet, 19195 Jobs, family, 23132 Joining the pack, 25 Joke acted out, 435 Knots for camping, 35051 Knowledge skills, 396 Languages, learning other, 186 Laundry, helping with, 239 Law of the Pack, meaning of, 44 Lawn, caring for, 314 Laws and government, why we need, 16061 Leatherworking, 20507 Leave No Trace Awareness Award, 18, 7273 Leg Stretch exercise, 137 Leg Wrestle dual contest, 141 Letter holder, making, 20203 Library, using, 17677 Light bulb, replacing, 310 Local council support, 2122 Lost camper, prevention of, 355
h
H
Handshake, Cub Scout, 42, 46 Handyman activity badge, 299316 Handyman around the house, 31013 Hardware, computer, choices, 191 Headlight, replacing, 304 Health, physical and mental, 126 Health and fitness, 8, 87, 124, 125, 126, 234, 238, 240, 24558, 384 Health and safety guidelines, 18 attack, signs of, 376 Help, getting, 37071 Hike, first, 361 Hiking, 18 with your den, 36063 Honesty, 8, 42, 5, 55, 64, 159 Housecleaning, helping with, 23839 How to Protect Your Children from Child Abuse, 47 Hurry cases, first aid for, 371 Index and Credits
M
M
Marionette stage, 439 Mask, snorkeling, how to use, 94 Meals, planning, 240, 24856 Meals, preparing, 24142 Media, art, 10407, 114 Meetings, 27, 29 Meetings, family, 230, 24243 Mental health, 126 Mental Skills Group, 74 Artist activity badge, 10121 Scholar activity badge, 391402 Showman activity badge, 42953 479
n
N
Traveler activity badge, 46173 Menu, sample, 253 Metamorphic rock, 284 Mineral hardness scale, 289 Minerals, useful, 28486 Mobile, making a, 11718 Money, family, 23436 Monologue, performing a, 446 Moths and butterflies, keeping, 32627 Motto, Cub Scout, 16, 17, 28, 42, 394 Mountains, how they are formed, 29495 Music, 440 Musicals and operas, 45152 National anthem, 149, 154 National forest campgrounds, 470 National monument campgrounds, 471 National park campgrounds, 470 Natural resources, saving, 156 Naturalist activity badge, 31742 Nature centers, visiting, 330 Nature, balance of, 34041 Neat and clean, being, 23132 Neck Builder exercise, 136 Neckerchief, 20, 2931 Neckerchief slide, 30 Necktie rack, making, 202 News story, writing, 17879 Newsroom, visiting, 17778 Newton, Sir Isaac, 407 Nutrition, 24856
P
P
o
O
Oil and tire pressure, checking, 305 1mile bicycle ride, 131 Operas and musicals, 45152 Optical illusions, 42428 Outdoor Code, 59, 346 Outdoor Essentials, 363 Outdoor Group, 74 Forester activity badge, 25977 Geologist activity badge, 27998 Naturalist activity badge, 31742 Outdoorsman activity badge, 34363 Outdoor jobs, 314 Outdoor program, 1820 Outdoorsman activity badge, 34363 Overnight campouts, 1820 480
Q r
Q R
Pack budget, 21 Pack meetings, 1415, 29 Pack structure, 9 Packing for a campout, 35253 Packing for travel, 46768 Painting, 10611 Paper Crunch exercise, 133 Parent Guide, 122 Pascals Law, 40607 Pebbles and rocks, 281 Perseverance, 8, 124 Personal flotation devices, 99 Photosynthesis, 271 Physical health, 126 Physical skills group, 74 Aquanaut activity badge, 83100 Athlete actvity badge, 12341 Fitness activity badge, 24558 Sportsman activity badge, 45560 Physics, 40318 Picture writing, 172 Plans, drawing, 214 Planting trees, 27374 Plants, poisonous, 334 Plays, 44647 Pledge of Allegiance, meaning of, 153 Poisoning by mouth, treating, 376 Police, helping, 157 Positive attitude, 8, 45, 392, 395 Praying mantises, keeping, 32425 Pressure, water, 40607 Profile, drawing, 106 Projects, choosing, 200 Promise, Cub Scout, meaning of, 4345 Pull Apart dual contest, 140 Pullups, 128 Puppetry, 43339 Purposes of Cub Scouting, 6 Pushups, 128 Quartermile run or walk, 130 Quartermile swim, 131 Rank advancement and special awards, 3980
S
S
Reach, throw, row, go with support, 9799 Readyman activity badge, 36590 Recycling, 234 Religious duties, 6869 Religious emblems, 59, 6869 Reptiles, venomous, 33536 Requirements activity badge, see each activity badge Arrow of Light Award, 6364 Bobcat badge, 42 Compass Points emblem, 61 Cub Scout World Conservation Award, 70 Leave No Trace Awareness Award, 73 Webelos badge, 4951 Rescue, water, 9799 Resourcefulness, 8 Respect, 6, 8, 55, 56, 58, 144, 145, 151, 153, 156, 157, 159, 318, 346, 458 Responsibilities of parent and Webelos Scout, 1518 Responsibility, 4, 8, 10, 14, 15, 29, 79, 155, 300 Rights of a citizen, 155 Riparian forest, 263 Rock collecting, 28688 Rock, kinds of, 28284 Rocks and minerals, identifying, 28889 Rocks and pebbles, 281 Rocks, how they break down, 284 Rope, fusing, 350 Rope, whipping, 349 Running, 130 Safe Swim Defense, 38485 Safety, bicycle, 38687 Safety, camping, 35455 Safety, home, 23233, 389 Safety checklist, home, 233 Safety guidelines, and helath, 18 Safety in a car, 390 Safety notebook, making a, 247 Safety rules, fire, 357 Safety when handing wounds and giving CPR, 372 Safety when traveling, 47273 Index and Credits
Salute, Cub Scout, 42, 47, 53, 152 Sawhorse, making, 31112 Scholar activity badge, 391402 School, 397400 Science, fun with, 419 Scientist activity badge, 40128 Scout camp, visit, 362 Scout handshake, 49, 53, 58 Scout Law, meaning of, 5556 Scout motto, meaning of, 57 Scout oath, meaning of, 5455 Scout salute, how to make, 58 Scout sign, how to make, 58 Scout slogan, meaning of, 57 Scrapbook, making a, 103 Sculpture, 11416 Secret codes, 175 Sedimentary rock, 28384 Selfrespect, 458 Shakespeare and his theater, 453 Sheet bend, tying, 351 Shock, first aid for, 37677 Shoes for hikes, 36263 Showman activity badge, 42953 Sidestroke, 90 Sign language, Cub Scout Promise in, 18185 Sign language, invented, 173 Sign, Cub Scout, 42, 46 Skateboards and skates, taking care of, 309 Sleeping on the ground, 34849 Smoking, dangers of, 256 Snacks, healthful, 252 Snakebite, first aid for, 382 Snorkeling, 9397 Software, computer, choices, 191 Special awards, 6873 Spider bites, first aid for, 381 Spiritual development, parents role in, 1618 Sports officials signals, learning, 457, 45960 Sports pin, Physical Fitness, 126 Sports program, see Academics and Sports program, Cub Scout Sports, playing, 458 Sportsman activity badge, 45560 Sportsmanship, good, 45758 Square knot, tying, 350 481
T
T
Squat Thrust exercise, 138 Stage direction, 449 Stage setting, 44748 Stages, puppet and marionette, 43839 Standing long jump, 129 StarSpangled Banner, 149, 154 State park campgrounds, 471 Stick Pull dual contest, 140 Stick Wrestle dual contest, 139 Stings and bites, first aid for, 38182 Stool, making a, 313 Stretcher exercise, 135 Sun protection, 363 Sunburn, first aid for, 383 Support of Scouting, 2122 Surface dive, 92 Surveyors, 215 Swim fins, how to use, 95 Swimming, 83100, 131, 355 Swimming belt loop, 100 Swimming safety, 8687, 38485 Swimming skills, 8892 Swimming underwater, 92 Tadpoles, keeping, 328 Taillight, replacing, 304 Talk, giving a, 17172 Tautline hitch, tying, 350 Technology Group, 74 Craftsman activity badge, 197210 Engineer activity badge, 21126 Handyman activity badge, 299316 Scientist activity badge, 40128 Temporary insignia, placement on uni form, 33 Tent, homemade, 34748 Terrariums, 32930 Theater styles, 45051 Theater, Shakespeare and his, 453 Tick bites, first aid for, 38081 Tire, changing, 30304 Tire pressure and oil, checking, 305 Tobacco, dangers of, 256 Toe exercise, 138 Toolbox, making a, 316 Tools, taking care of, 31516 Tools, using safely, 199200 Tools for woodworking, 201 Trash and garbage disposal, 234 482
U
U V
Travel, kinds of, 46465 Travel, packing for, 46768 Travel by car, family, 46873 Travel costs, estimating, 467 Travel resources, Internet, 466 Travel safety, 47273 Travel schedules, 46566 Traveler activity badge, 46173 Tree planting, 27374 Tree, how one grows, 27071 Tree, inside structure, 272 Trees, fall color, 275 Trees, types of forest, 26667 Trunk Bend exercise, 137 Trunk Stretch exercise, 134 12 core values, 8 Two half hitches, tying, 351 U.S. flag, 14853 Underwater swimming, 92 Uniform, Boy Scout, parts of, 66 Uniform Webelos, obtaining, 20 Uniform Webelos, paying for, 20, 32 Uniform, Webeos, when to wear, 52 Uniform and insignia, 20, 2934 Urban forestry, 27677 Urban geology, 29697 Vertical jump, 129 Volcanoes, 29091 Volunteer groups, 163
V W
W
Walking, 130, 134 Walkingsticks, keeping, 32425 Wall shelf, making a, 204 Wasp and bee stings, first aid for, 381 Water pressure, 41416 Water rescue methods, 9799 Waterfront rules, 87 Weather vane, making, 202 Webelos, meaning of, 45 Webelos badge, 36 requirements, 4951 earning, 48 meaning of, 52 placement on uniform, 3234 shown, 48 Index and Credits
Y
Y
Webelos colors, 32 Webelos den, 9, 1315, 2337 fun and adventure in the, 26 how it works, 13 meetings, 27 outdoor program, 1820 welcome to parents, 412 Webelos den chief, 29 Webelos den leader, 28 Webelos denner, 29 Webelos Scout, 4 becoming a, 48 differences from Cub Scout, 1011 uniform, 2934, 52 Webelos trail, 22, 3537 Wild animals, watching, 33738 Wildlife uses of forests, 268 Wolf badge, placement on uniform, 33 Wood samples, collecting, 273 Woodworking jobs, 31113 Woodworking projects, 20105 World citizenship, 162 World Conservation Award, Cub Scout, 70 World Friendship Fund, 162 World Wide Web, exploring, 19195 Wounds, protection when handling, 372 Writing a news story, 17879 Writing a puppet play, 43335 Written music, 444 Youth protection guide, 3
483
Credits
Courtesy of American Airlinespages 404, 464 Courtesy of AMTRAKpage 464 Steve Andersonpage 470 Courtesy of Linda Blas, Dallas Theater Centerpage 447 Jack Brownpages 3, 28, 35, 83, 101, 121, 143, 156, 157, 176, 177, 214, 223, 227, 231, 237, 238, 241, 242, 259, 296, 299, 303, 306, 308, 310, 315, 330, 365, 370, 391, 396, 401, 428, 440, 445, 466, 473 Dan Bryantpage 352 Courtesy of Casa Manana, Fort Worth, Texaspage 450 Jack Kelly Clark, courtesy of University of California Statewide IPM Projectpage 327 Tina Collinspage 220 Courtesy of Dallas Area Rapid Transitpage 464 Courtesy of Dallas Opera, Dallas, Texaspage 452 Philip Greenspunpages 263, 356 Philip Greenspun/Roy Jansenpage 165 Roy Jansenpages 26, 27, 86, 99, 104, 105, 108, 109, 111, 131, 159, 178, 187, 190, 197, 211, 215, 230, 234, 239, 240, 241, 243, 269, 276, 281, 295, 297, 321, 343, 352, 357, 361, 386, 429, 433, 446, 458, 468, 469, Roy Jansen/KFWB-News 98page 177 Kitty Kohout, The Morton Arboretum, Lisle, Illinoispage 334 Courtesy of Carl S. Lieb, University of Texas at El Pasopages 335, 336 Chris Michaelspages 121, 155 Courtesy of NASApage 417 Randy Pilandpage 279 Joe Schwartzpage 409 Courtesy of U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, David A. Johnston Cascades Volcano Observatory, Vancouver, Washingtonpage 290 Courtesy of Pat Vanecek, University of Texas Health Science Center, Dallas Department of Ophthalmologypage 424
484
2005
LEFT SLEEVE
RIGHT SLEEVE
Youll have a lot of opportunities to learn and try new and exciting things as you work on the 20 activity badges.
community service make your time in the Webelos den a great time.
#33452
BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA 1325 West Walnut Hill Lane P.O. Box 152079 Irving, Texas 75015-2079 http://www.scouting.org
30176 33452