CAMPING
- 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, and
blisters.
- Learn the Leave No Trace principles and the Outdoor Code and explain
what they mean. Write a personal plan for implementing these principles on
your next outing.
- Make a written plan for an overnight trek and explain how to get to
your camping spot using a topographical map and compass.
- Make a chart showing how a typical patrol is organized for an overnight
campout. List assignments for each member.
- Do the following:
- Prepare a list of clothing you would need for overnight campouts in
warm weather and in cold weather.
- Discuss footwear for different kinds of weather and how the right
footwear is important for protecting your feet.
- Explain the proper care and storage of camping equipment (clothing,
footwear, bedding).
- Explain the term "layering."
- Present yourself with your pack for inspection. Be correctly
clothed and equipped for an overnight campout.
- Do the following:
- Describe the features of four types of tents and how to care for
tents. Working with another Scout, pitch a tent.
- Discuss the reasons and methods of water purification. Discuss camp
sanitation.
- Tell the difference between "internal" and
"external" frame packs. Discuss the advantages and
disadvantages of each.
- Discuss the types of sleeping bags and what kind would be suitable
for different conditions. Explain the proper care of your sleeping bag.
Make a comfortable ground bed.
- Prepare for an overnight campout with your patrol by doing the
following:
- Make a checklist of personal and patrol gear that will be needed.
- Prepare a camp menu that is right for backpacking. Give recipes and
make a food list for your patrol. Plan two breakfasts, three lunches,
and two suppers. Discuss how to protect your food against bad weather,
animals, and contamination.
- Pack your own gear and your share of the patrol equipment and food
for proper carrying. Show that your pack is right for quickly getting
what is needed first, and that it has been assembled properly for
comfort, weight, balance, size, and neatness.
- Do the following:
- Explain the safety procedures when using a:
- Propane or butane/propane stove
- Liquid fuel stove
- Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of different types of
lightweight cooking stoves.
- Cook for your patrol a trail meal requiring the use of a
lightweight stove.
- Show experience in camping by doing the following:
- Camp out a total of at least 20 days and 20 nights. (You may use a
week of long-term camp toward this requirement.) Sleep each night under
the sky or in a tent you have pitched.
- On any of these camping experiences, you must do TWO of the
following, only with proper preparation and under qualified supervision:
- Hike up a mountain, gaining at least 2,000 vertical feet.
- Backpack for at least four miles.
- Take a bike trip of at least 15 miles or at least four hours.
- Plan and carry out a float trip of at least four hours.
- Rappel down a rappel route of 30 feet or more.
- On one of your campouts, perform a conservation project
approved in advance by the private land owner or public land
management agency.
- Discuss how the things you did to earn this badge have taught you about
personal health and safety, survival, public health, conservation, and good
citizenship.
BSA Advancement ID#: 1
Source: Boy Scout Requirements, #33215E, revised 2002
Webmaster's Note: The 2001 and 2002 editions of Boy Scout Requirements
mistakenly show requirement 9b6 as being 9c. There is no requirement 9c. The
requirements listed above are correct as written. This has been verified twice
through communications with the National Office of the Boy Scouts of America.
return to home page
return to
merit badges