Though we called it pioneering and backwoodsmanship back then, it was most definitely Scouting that alerted myself to what became Bush crafting and yeah back then we was constructing shelters from the green and kipping out in our creations and with pretty much sod all kit beyond what we were taught to fashion from the environment, fire hardened bone knives anyone? In fact the only steel that was commonly accepted was that of the common folding pocket knife though we had hatchets from time to time, to know I did all my early bush craft cutting with a Victorinox Handyman.
So did any of you find your inspiration for bush crafting from the Scout movement, and if you did, did you stay with the programme to it's Queen's scout completion, to potentially become a leader yerself ?
TeeDee said:
## apologies in advance - I realise its a thread tangent !! ##
I think this has come up before and been discussed somewhat and others here whom are scout leaders ( can't remember the forum members name ) have disagreed with me - but I can't help but feel that there should be a few bastions of 'Boyhood' left to be filled with boys.
Its a tricky age for many ( Boys and Girls ) and I honestly do think Scouts should be scouts and Guides should be guides - if the activities are not appealing to Guides that guides tend to run then they need to address that by changing.
Not having a go at you Biscuit - I just feel Boys need their own space as much as Girls.
Maybe 2020s Girlguiding offers that wider scope now
It probably depends upon the leaders, but we have a Guides group who meet in a church hall next door to our scout hut. They do different activities to Scouts, possibly more traditional ones, and their leader has apparently made reference to girls going to scouts instead if they want to do some activities that they do not do.I can see your point, and I know you're not having a go at me
It's a tricksy and sensitive thing to navigate, especially when those of us who tend to the more tomboyish (including me) didn't get on with the culture in 1980s Guides, which seemed to hold particular expectations of what it meant to *be* a girl. If you didn't fit in with that, the adults back then didn't get it and nor did most of the other girls.
so it may be less to do with activities as such, even though that's still part of it given my earlier comment about how there was nothing outside the school hall. It's both the doing and the being, and widening the scope of both. Maybe 2020s Girlguiding offers that wider scope now.
and I guess this also picks up the original thread, in that what wasn't available to me then is there for the learning now, via coming into bushcraft as an adult.
The waiting lists are long because there is a problem with recruiting adult leaders for beyond anything else modern working practices and hours can hinder involvement.I was never in the Scouts at all. I was in the Sea Cadets for a year or so but left having never so much as touched a boat in my time there.
I've no idea why I didn't join the scouts though, possibly total ignorance to it as I'm sure I would have enjoyed it.
However I was the perfect age for the "Country tracks" episodes with Ray Mears and they were fundamental to my interest in it all.
I'd really like to get my boys into Scouts if I can but the waiting lists are eye wateringly long.
Cheers
Andy

Out of curiosity; what are the statistics on Guiding and female scoutage currently?
The British army knife was our favourite when you could get them for next to nothing.Though we called it pioneering and backwoodsmanship back then, it was most definitely Scouting that alerted myself to what became Bush crafting and yeah back then we was constructing shelters from the green and kipping out in our creations and with pretty much sod all kit beyond what we were taught to fashion from the environment, fire hardened bone knives anyone? In fact the only steel that was commonly accepted was that of the common folding pocket knife though we had hatchets from time to time, to know I did all my early bush craft cutting with a Victorinox Handyman.
I went all the way from cubs to leader. Queen's Scout was before my time, however, I knew one and once a year he got an invite to a palace garden party.So did any of you find your inspiration for bush crafting from the Scout movement, and if you did, did you stay with the programme to it's Queen's scout completion, to potentially become a leader yerself ?
Fireball - that’s going back a while alright! I have a memory of a fireball medallion too.It was only after I'd been here for a while that I actually remembered what the initial impetus was, a free gift with Bullet comic, a little document titled "Survival The Fireball Way", I could remember getting books from the library, heading up the hill & glen near our house with early versions of a tobacco tin kit and a little very dodgy fishing and trapping, but only after seeing a repro of the comic gift here did I actually remember that that's what it was, that was the spark, that's why it wasn't skateboards or Raleigh Choppers and thats why my avatar here is what it is.
Didnt he mention that his teaching was good for girls too in his book? I have a copy somewhere but not to hand.Scouting for boys was based upon one of Powell’s military works (forgotten which) that had become a best seller as a”boys book”. The Scouting version was indeed influenced by The Boys Brigade but by all sorts of youth movements as well.
A small group of girls decided that they wanted to be scouts and went along to the first Jamboree without being asked. When Powell saw them he just said “No.” One of them gave a radio interview many years later.
You are right, it was his wife who heard about it and started the Guide movement which was then primarily run by his sister.
One of my leaders had been very close to earning his King’s Scout badge when George VI died. He loudly regretted that he wouldn’t be a King’s Scout and had to be a Queen’s Scout.. (Such were the times.)
For many of us it was the Gilwell woggle and a woodcraft name that mattered.
3 Alt was a bloody school troop lead by teachers. We were expected to know the life of BP!