- Show that you know first aid for injuries or illnesses that could
occur while camping, including hypothermia, heatstroke, heat exhaustion, frostbite,
dehydration, sunburn, insect stings, tick bites, snakebite, blisters, and
hyperventilation.
- Make a layout of a typical patrol campsite. Show cooking spots, dining fly, latrine,
and at least three two-man tents. Explain how and why weather, season, and
water supply are considered when choosing a site. Explain what care to take with
regard to safe water, sanitary facilities, and emergencies.
- Make a written plan for getting to and from a camping spot on foot or by vehicle.
- Make a chart showing how a typical patrol is organized for an overnight campout.
List assignments for each member.
- Prepare a list of clothing you would need for an overnight campout in:
- Summer
- Winter
Discuss the kinds of footwear for different kinds of weather. Explain care of the
feet.
- Describe four kinds of tents. Cite their good and bad points.
- Prepare for an overnight campout with your patrol by doing the following*:
- Make a checklist of personal gear that will be needed.
- Prepare a camp menu that is right for the time of the year. Give recipes.
Make a food list for your patrol. List foods you can get from your grocery
store. Supplies should be lightweight, though some canned foods may be
used. Plan two breakfasts, three lunches, and two suppers.
- Pack your own gear and your share of the patrol gear and food for proper
carrying. Protect it against bad weather. Show that your pack is right for
getting what's needed first, and that it has been assembled properly for
comfort, weight, balance, size, and neatness. Explain how the rest of the
patrol gear and food is divided among members.
- Show the right way to pack your full gear in your pack. (Explain the
principles of packing in external and internal frame packs.)
- Complete the following while on an overnight campout:
- Present yourself with your pack for inspection. Be correctly clothed and
equipped for an overnight camping trip.
- Working with another Scout, pitch a two-man tent. Consider weather and
terrain. On this campsite, where allowed, make a latrine for your patrol.
(Where not allowed, as in state parks, etc., describe how to build it.)
- Make a comfortable ground bed. Use it for 2 nights. Use ground cloth and
padding of clothing, pack, grass, leaves, or straw.
- Where it's allowed, build up a fireplace area of nonburnable soil. Show
proper use of woods tools in getting and preparing fuel for a cooking fire.
Show how you would get, prepare, and protect your wood on a rainy day.
Show how you would prepare a meal properly when it's raining.
- Build three kinds of top-of-the-ground fires. Use charcoal for one. Show
how to put out a fire properly. (Where open fires cannot be used, show
how to build the fires, but don't light them.)
- Show the right way to protect your camp including your food and gear,
against animals, insects, and wet or bad weather. Discuss how you would
protect yourself against all kinds of weather if caught out on the trail with
only a pocketknife.
- Strike camp. Fold or roll your tent for packing. Pack all gear. Leave a
clean camp. Show the right way to get rid of garbage and rubbish.
- Show experience in camping by doing the following:
- Camp out a total of at least 20 days and 20 nights. Sleep each night under
the sky or under a tent you have pitched. (You may use a week of summer
camp as part of the 20 days and 20 nights.)
- On one of these camping trips, hike 1.5 miles or more each way to and
from your campsite. Pack your own gear plus your share of patrol gear and
food.
- Serve as one of the cooks for your patrol for at least five meals prepared in
camp.
- Discuss how the things you did to earn this badge have taught you personal health
and safety, survival, public health, conservation, and good citizenship.
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