Young Life Savers

While most teenagers were enjoying their Sunday lie in last weekend the group’s young leaders were being trained in the art of advanced first aid.

Young Leaders are Explorer Scouts (14-18 year olds) who volunteer to effectively become apprentice adult leaders with Beavers, Cubs or Scouts and are our next generation of leaders. The first aid course is just one part of their training and equips them to deal with a broad range of emergencies including major bleeds, choking, loss of consciousness and CPR/mouth to mouth.

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The course gives YLs a recognised Red Cross qualification and the skills and ability to cope with any emergency they might encounter.

Any 14-17 year olds interested in getting involved with the Young Leader programme should contact the Group Scout Leader Colin Sills.

Could you be someone’s hero?

Happy Founder’s Day! (And happy Thinking Day to our friends in Girl Guides)

Today is the day that scouts and guides across the world celebrate what would have been the birthday of our founder Lord Robert Baden Powell. In the early 1900s he was a complete maverick and his idea that young people were of real worth, that they worth developing and could be capable of serving their community was in complete contrast to the attitudes of the time when its was said that “children should be seen and not heard”.

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Today the Scout Association is remembering BP with the theme of My Scout Hero where scouts are remembering the people in scouting who most influenced them with lots going on across youtube, twitter and the rest of the internet

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Right now as a group we are looking to recruit new adults, in particular with our cubs and beavers. Heroes come in many shapes and sizes and it can be the most unlikely people who are capable of being someone’s hero, sometimes for doing the smallest of things, teaching them to light a fire or taking them on their first night away from their parents. You certainly don’t need to be superman to do it!

If you want to be someone’s hero then please get in touch. You don’t need experience or qualifications, just a sense of humor and few hours to spare each week.

So what are you waiting for? We’d love to hear from you……

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Walking in a Winter Wonderland

What do you when its the coldest, darkest part of the year? If you’re a bunch of scouts you grab your rucksacks, pack the tents and head off to camp. That’s obvious isn’t it? 🙂

So back in early January a dozen scouts headed to Gilwell Park in Epping Forest along with 3000 other scouts and explorers for a weekend of mud, fun and more mud. An annual event that started back in the 90s Winter Camp is a national event that proves that scouts really can handle anything thrown at them.

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The programme allowed for scouts to pick and chose from everything the site had to offer including, climbing, zorbing, high ropes, horse riding, white water rafting, JCB driving and quad bikes

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And it didn’t stop in the evening! Once the sun went down a disco, cinema, wide games, camp fire and a fair ground kept everyone thoroughly entertained.

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As for the winter weather? After a Friday night deluge we got wall to wall sunshine the rest of the weekend! As for those who stayed at home? You’ll have to come and join the fun next year……..

The first 12th Cambridge UK-Canadian exchange

Way back in the summer the first exchange took place with our friends at 12th Cambridge Scouts in Canada. ASL Jenny Hill tells the story of what was quite an adventure…..  

Summer 2013 saw the first exchange trips take place between our group in Cambridge UK, and our namesake in the Canadian province of Ontario. The exchange kicked off with four daring Canadian scouts and three leaders crossing the Atlantic to join our scouts on summer camp at the international jamboree in Kernow (Cornwall).  Staying with host families here in Cambridge our Canadian friends were also introduced to some of the highlights of our city with punting down the river of course included.

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Severely jet-lagged, the Canadians showed us what they were made of by fearlessly leaping into the chilly water of Jesus Green outdoor pool on their very first afternoon here!

Less than two weeks after our visitors departed came our turn, with two very excited scouts and two sleepy leaders setting out for the airport in the early hours of the morning. On our second day on Canadian soil we climbed aboard the minibus and set off for camp at Haliburton scout reserve, an incredible 5000 acre site of forest and lakes, just south of the famous Algonquin Provincial Park. Our time at Haliburton was truly the wildest camping any of us had experienced for a whole week! Our group’s camping area was accessible only by water, with us all travelling to and from activities, or even to the shop or to collect drinking water, by Canadian canoe

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Lake water was boiled on the fire for the washing of dishes and we learnt to cook traditional Canadian camp food on an open fire

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Our only wash for the week was a shower in a waterfall halfway along a 10 mile hike – very refreshing! I’m certain each of us had our own favourite bits but among my most memorable experiences were waking up to find that racoons had raided our food stores in the night, and taking a barge into the centre of the lake at night to stargaze – we were lucky enough to be watching at the peak of the Perseids meteor shower, and without light pollution I think we were all taken aback by how many more stars we could see.

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Our scouts didn’t hesitate to get stuck in, with William’s skills in Canadian canoeing taking him to represent our group at the gala for all scouts camping on the reserve, and Lucy bringing home the trophy for the highest rifle shooting score at Haliburton all summer.

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Back with our host families in the city we all got to enjoy some proper maple syrup and pancakes, try our first ever root beer floats and spend some chilled out time with our Canadian hosts. Sightseeing included a fascinating tour of a traditional Mennonite farm (Mennonites are a subgroup of the Amish Christian church group), a boat trip under the breath-taking Niagara Falls, and yet more incredible views from the CN tower in Toronto!

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I’d like to finish here by thanking all those who hosted scouts, both in the UK and in Canada, for making this first exchange an exciting adventure and a great success. Following this successful first exchange we hope that we can continue our links with 12th Cambridge Canada in future years so that friendships made this summer may continue, and many more scouts can get involved in promoting our international links!

Farewell to 2013

After yet another marathon year it is time to say farewell to 2013. It was a year that saw us award no less than 5 Chief Scout Golds, have 3 scouts selected for the World Jamboree in 2015 and forge new links with our friends at 12th Cambridge in Canada.

Beyond the headlines though was the week in week out fun and hard work that the scouts created for themselves. So here they are, the highlights of 2013, enjoy……

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Head for the Hills!

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We have been offered a limited number of places on the Initial Mountaineering Course run by Hertfordshire Scouts at their mountaineering centre at Lochearnhead in Perthshire. This is for scouts who will be aged 13+ at Easter and Young Leaders.

We have up to 2 places for the week 5 – 13 April 2013 and up to 4 places for the week 12-20 April.

The content of the course will cover planning/safety, navigation and wild country camping.  Snow permitting we will practise the use of ice axes too.

Anyone that wants to take part should contact Graham as soon as possible.