Now the disco – finishes at 2.00
Tag: scouts Page 12 of 15
The Fifth has doubled in size in 10 years and, to match the growth, we have had to buy an awful lot of kit. We welcomed girls in 2007 and that meant we needed more new tents, toilets and changing areas. We are careful with your money and we shop around for months to find the best deals for The Fifth. How about some examples?
An excellent turnout from the explorers who got all their kit out ready for a weekend at gilwell. Thus will include 24hrs of continuous activities from Saturday to Sunday
They can be genuinely useful! It makes Phil’s job much easier when they all muck in.
The hut is a hive of activity with John and Oliver building 8 new benches for camp. They are only bickering a little but over measurements and there’s been no metric v imperial confusion yet!
Sun was shining so we built catapults tonight to fire water-soaked sponges at each other.
More pics to follow on the photo website.
Do you know what the worst job for a leader is? It’s telling kids that they can’t join the group.
We refuse a couple of kids per week and we hate it. Our waiting list is not something to be proud of. It doesn’t show how succesful we are, it just shows that there are dozens of kids who don’t have the benefit of all the fun, friendship and adventure that they deserve.
We know this. We do our best to get as many kids in as possible. Â We’ve nearly doubled in size in ten years.
We could open a new beaver colony, cub pack and scout troop tomorrow with the numbers on the list. Isn’t that awful? we have just taken 8 kids from the list into cubs and that gives us 165 youth members but we have another 96 kids aged from 6 to 14 who want to get in.
Have you seen this? It’s rather good
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We’ll keep trying to grow. We’ll keep recruiting adults and we’ll keep offering everyday adventure to as many kids as possible. Â For now, click on the tab marked links at the top of the page and you can choose to see the waiting list policy on there.
We have brought our Tilley lamps back to life. Each of these is worth £120.
All they needed was a bit of TLC and some new washers.
They run on paraffin and that is much cheaper than gas so it will save us a fortune (a couple of hundred quid this summer).
They give a lovely soft light and keep their pressure for 2 or 3 hours before they need pumping again.
And now we just have to teach the scouts how to light them!