Scout Note Book

How to write Scout Note Book? Firstly take a notebook and number all the pages

From the Front of the Book

Page 1:
Name of Patrol on the right hand Corner
Your Name and Address in the middle of the Page
Page 2: Index

   Sl.no
Topic
Page no
1.
Members of my Patrol
3
2.
Scout Promise and Law
4
3.



Page 3: Members of my Patrol
Page 4: Scout Promise & Law
Page 5: Session Notes

From the backside of the Book

Last 3 pages is for STA (Spare Time Activities)

Sl.no.
Topic
Scoutmaster
Signature
1.



2.



3.



Next 5 pages for daily sketches
Next 7 pages for Songs and Yells
Next 2 pages for Games
Next 1 page for Reference Books 

Hand and Whistle Signals

Hand and Whistle signals are necessary because orders either through hand or whistle signals make the scouts very attentive and alert in execution of an order.
Regular use of clear and simple signals promotes alertness and smartness amongst the young people.  Here are some whistle and hand signals.
Any signal must be instantly obeyed at the double as fast as you can run – no matter what other jobs you may be doing at the time.

Hand Signals
In campfire yarn 7 of the book ‘Scouting for Boys’ certain hand signals have been given (p. 100).  They are the following;
  • Hand waved several times across the face from side to side or flag waved horizontally from side opposite the face means ‘NO’, ‘NEVER MIND’, ‘AS YOU WERE’.
  • Hand or flag held high and waved very slowly from side to side at full extent of Arm means ‘EXTEND’, ‘GO FURTHER OUT’, ‘SCATTER’
  • Hand or flag held high and waved quickly from side to side at full extend of arm means ‘CLOSE IN’, ‘RALLY’, ‘COME HERE’.
  • Hand or flag pointing in any direction mean ‘GO IN THAT DIRECTION’
  • Clenched hand or flag jumped rapidly up and down several times means ‘RUN’
  • Hand or flag held straight up over head means ‘STOP’, ‘HALT’

When a leader is shouting an order or message to a scout who is some way off, the scout, if he hears what is being said should hold up his hand level with his head all the time.  If he cannot hear, he should stand still, making no sign. The leader will then repeats louder, or beckon to the scout to come in nearer.

Whistle Signals
  • One long blast means “SILENCE”, “ALERT”, or “LOOK OUT FOR MY NEXT SIGNAL”.
  • A succession of long, slow blasts means “GO OUT”, “GET FURTHER AWAY”, “ADVANCE”, or “SCATTER”.
  • A succession of short, sharp blasts means “RALLY”, “CLOSE IN”, “FALL IN”, or “COME TOGETHER”.
  • A succession of short and long blasts alternatively means “ALARM”, “LOOK OUT”, or “BE READY”.
  • Three short blasts followed by one long blast calls up the Patrol Leaders.
  • Two short blasts followed by one long blast calls up the Assistant Patrol Leaders.

Rope and Ropework

Rope
A rope is a good friend of Scout and he should know much about his friend.
There are many kinds of rope based on the material with which it is made such as: coir, hemp, manila, cotton, nylon etc.

Fibers twisted in one direction to make thread; thread twisted in opposite direction to make strands; strands laid up together to make rope. In your Troop you will be using – cotton, jute or coir ropes.

Three strands lay up together right-handed form a hawser-laid rope and it is the strongest type.

There are two parts – running end and standing part. The end which is used to tie is known as running end and the other part is known as standing part.

The size of the rope is the circumference measured in inches and the length is measured in feet or fathoms. Cordage less than 1 inch is known as line or cord.

Rope work
Knots are made, not tied. E.g.(reef knot, sheet bend, fisherman’s knot etc.)

A hitch is a method of making a rope fast to another rope or an object, and is incomplete in itself. E.g. to make fast (clove-hitch, timber hitch, rolling hitch etc.)

A bend is a method of joining ropes together.

Lashings
Joining of two or more spars together with rope is called lashing.
There are different types of lashings like square lashing, diagonal lashing, sheer lashing, figure of eight etc.

Care of Rope
  • The ends of the rope should be protected with whipping or splicing.
  • The ropes should be in a coil or hank. Always coil with the lay i.e. hawser laid (right hand laid) rope should be coiled clock wise.
  • Store in an even temperature.
  • If wet, dry it and store (suspend on hooks)
  • Don’t drag the rope on the ground. Mud or sand in between the strands will weaken the rope.
  • Before storing remove knots and mud if any.
  • Before using a new rope strain it.
  • Faulty ropes should not be used especially for bridge building, life saving etc.
  • Label it showing the length and circumference.



The Membership Badge


The membership badge is a symbol of brotherhood that exists amongst the scouts and it promotes a sense of belonging.  The scouts on fulfilling the membership badge requirements shall be awarded the membership badge.  The membership badge must be worn at the center of the left shirt pocket or on the gho or tego. 

The encircling rope with alternate strands of yellow and orange signifies the unity of the secular authority of the King and that of the Spiritual Leader of the kingdom.

The reef knot at the bottom stands for the fraternal bond of Solidarity amongst Scouts.

The three leaves of the Fluer-De-Lis, like the three finger scout salute, represent the Scout Promise of allegiance to serve the King, Country and People.

The white Silken Knot binding the three leaves symbolizes the strong bond of friendship and purity in thought and action.

The arrowhead in the middle of the center leaf shows the right direction to proceed.

BP Story

Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden Powell
Date of Birth              : 22nd February 1857
Place of Birth             : 6, Stanpole Street, Lancaster Gate, London.

The first two names are from his God-father Robert Stephenson (famous Engineer & constructor of the ‘Rocket’ Locomotive).  He was known as ‘Stephe’ or ‘Sty’.  He was the sixth son of the eight children.

His father - Rev. Prof. Herbert George Baden Powell, a professor of Geometry at Oxford, a simple clergyman, a lover of God and a great Naturalist.

His mother - Henrietta Grace Smyth was the daughter of British Admiral W.T. Smith.
B.P’s father died in 1860 when he was only 3 years old leaving behind his mother with seven children. B.P learned much about hiking, camping, tramping, and canoeing with the help of his eldest brother Warington.

His Wife – In 1912 B.P married to Miss Olave St. Clair Soames on 30th Oct. Lady B.P was born on 22nd February 1889. She was thirty two years younger to B.P.

His Children:
-        In 1913, Son Authur Robert was born on 30 October.
-        In 1915, Daughter Heather Grace was born on 1st June.
-        In 1917, Daughter Betty St. Clair was born on 16th April.

Nicknames:
1869 - 1876 - B.P was first admitted to Dame School in Kensington from there Rose Hill, a Prepatory School at Ton Bridge and in 1870 he entered the Charter House School in London as a Gownboy Foundation Scholarship.
In those days it was a common tradition in England that any student who was admitted on scholarship had to do some service to the senior students without any remuneration. So B.P took the job of giving bathing towels to his seniors and he was named as “Bathing Towel”

1895 - B.P captured Ashanti Tribe. It was here in the Ashanti that B.P got the practice of pioneering work. He wore the cowboy hat and was called by the natives “Kantankye” (“He, of the Big hat”) His experiences with his own dress gave ideas for the future Scout Uniform.

1896 - B.P was appointed as the Chief of Staff to the General Officer Commanding, Sir F. Carrington and was responsible for all Scouting Information to suppress a native rising in Matabele Land. The natives called B.P “Impesa” (The Wolf that never sleeps). B.P got the Kudu Horn as a trophy. Of all the trophies the Dini Zulu’s Necklace and Kudu Horn are the two articles of great sentimental value and General Scout interest that have been presented to Gilwell Park by B.P

Publications:
-        1884 - He wrote and published his first book “Reconnaissance and Scouting”. He wrote this book for the practice in the army but became very popular in the British Schools.
-        1908: “Scouting for Boys” was published in six fortnightly parts.
-        1912 -B.P with the assistance of his sister Miss Agnes Baden Powell wrote a hand book for Girls and published in 1912
-        1916 -B.P wrote “The Wolf Cubs handbook”.
-        1919 - “Aids to Scout mastership” published.
-        1922 -B.P published “Rovering to Success
-        1935 - B.P Published “Scouting Round the World”.  He received King George V Silver Jubilee medal. Lady B.P also received the same medal.

1938 - B.P’s Second Home - Paxtu Kenya: At a place called Nyeri Kenya Colony, Mr. Eric Walker a former Scout Headquarters Staff was running a Hotel. In the ground floor of this Hotel the Chief had a small house built for himself and Lady B.P. They called it Paxtu.


On 8th January 1941 B.P died at Nyeri, Kenya. He was buried at Nyeri in the view of Mount Kenya.

Camp Anthem སྒར་གླུ།

༆ས་གནས་ཤར་ལྷོ་ནུབ་བྱང་ཕྱོགས་བཞི་ལས།། 
རྒྱ་མཚོ་ནང་ལུ་འབབ་པའི་ཆུ་ཆེན་བཟུམ།། 
སེམས་ཀྱི་གདིང་ལས་དགའ་སྤྲོ་འབག་སྟེ་གིས།། 
ང་བཅས་བསླབ་སྟོན་གནས་གར་འདི་ནང་འཛོམས།།

གྲ་སྒྲིག་ཡོད་པའི་ང་བཅས་བསམ་འཆར་འདི།། 
ཐབས་ཤེས་དམངས་ལུ་བགོ་བཤའ་རྐྱབ་ནི་དང་།། 
ག་ར་ཨིན་རུང་ཤེས་ཐབས་བཟོ་ནི་གི།། 
ཐབས་དང་གནས་སྐབས་འདི་ནང་སྟོན་ནི་ཡོད།།

མི་དབང་མངའ་བདག་ཐུགས་བསྐྱེད་འགྲུབ་ཐབས་ལུ།། 
རྒྱལ་ཁབ་རྒྱབ་སྐྱོར་ང་བཅས་གྲ་སྒྲིག་ཡོད།།     
ང་བཅས་རྒྱལ་དར་གནམ་མཁའི་དགུངས་ལུ་འཕྱར།། 
རུ་སྒྲིག་ཐོག་ལས་རྒྱལ་ཁབ་བརྟན་བཅུག་ནི།།


Lyrics by Lop. Choki Gyeltshen SM (BYDA 1992)

Scouting Ideals

The Scouting ideals are: the Scout Salute, the Scout Sign, and the Scout Handshake. It is for our members to identify with others in the Movement.

The Scout Salute
Hold together the three middle fingers of the right hand and touch together the thumb and little finger. With palm facing the front, bring up the hand smartly to the head until the forefinger touches the forehead. Bring down the hand to the side.
Make the Scout Salute only when in full uniform. It’s sign of respect, courtesy and friendliness.

The Scout Sign
The right hand position is the same as for the salute: three fingers up, thumb and little finger touching, and palm out. Begin as with the salute, but hold the hand straight up beside the head.
The three upright fingers represent the three parts of the Scout Promise: duty to God, duty to self, and duty to others. It represents the three broad principles that represent its fundamental laws and beliefs.

The Scout Handshake
Scouts shake with the left hand as a sign of brother-hood and trust.
B.P. took the idea from South Africa during his military carrier in 1896. When once Lord Baden-Powell (B.P) wanted to shake hands with an Ashanti Chieftain, the Chieftain offered the left hand saying in his tribe the bravest of the brave offers his left hand to a friend. This was a charming compliment to B.P and later the founder introduced his left handshake in scouting and wished the scouts to be “the bravest of the brave”
Another reason is that the left hand is nearest to the heart, so when a scout shakes hands with his left hand, it shows that it is a hearty handshake.

Scout Law

  1. A Scout is trustworthy.
  2. A Scout is loyal to the Tsa-wa-sum.
  3. A Scout is a friend to all and a brother/sister to every other scout.
  4. A Scout is polite and considerate.
  5. A Scout is kind to animals and loves nature.
  6. A Scout is self-disciplined.
  7. A Scout is cheerful under all difficulties.
  8. A Scout is thrifty.
  9.  A Scout is pure in thought, word and deed.

Scout Law (ཨིས་ཀའུཊ་ཀྱི་ཁས་བླང་དམ་བཅའ།)

ང་གིས་ ཧིང་དྭངས་མའི་ དཀྱིལ་ལས་རང་ དཀོན་མཆོག་གསུམ་ དཔང་ལུ་བཙུགས་ཏེ་ འབྲུག་གི་ རྩ་བ་གསུམ་ དེ་ལས་ རང་གི་ཕམ་དང་ གཞན་ཚུ་ལུ་ ཨིས་ཀའུཊ་ཀྱི་ ལམ་ལུགས་དང་འཁྲིལ་ཏེ་ ཅི་ལྕོགས་ གང་ལྕོགས་ ཐོག་ལས་ ཕྱག་ཞུ་ནི་གི་ ཁས་བླང་ དམ་བཅའ་ཕུལཝ་ཨིན།

Scout Promise

On my honour, I promise that I will do my best,

To do my duty to God,

Duty to tsa-wa-sum (King, Country and People),

Duty to self, parents, others 

and to obey the Scout Law