Venturing Ranger Core
Requirements
- First Aid
Complete
a standard first aid course plus the American Red Cross
When Help Is Delayed module or equivalent course.
- Communications
Do
2(a), (b), or (c).
- Take a communications-related training class that
includes at least 15 hours of training. This could be a
nonrequired course at school such as creative writing,
technical writing, American Sign Language, or film
production. It could also be a commercial course such as
speedreading or effective presentations.
- Actively participate in a communications-related
club or organization for at least three months.
Participate in at least three activities of the
organization where you practice or improve your
communications skills. Examples include Toastmasters,
debate clubs, or drama clubs.
- Read at least two books approved by your Advisor on
a communications subject of interest to you. Write a
report on the important communications principles you
learned and how you think you can apply these principles
to improve your communications.
AND
Do 2(d), (e), or (f) in connection with an outdoor
skill or area you are interested in. Have your Advisor approve
your plan before you begin.
- AND
Do 2(g).
- Make a tabletop display or presentation for your
- Make a formal, oral presentation of at least
30 minutes to your crew, another crew, a Cub or Boy Scout group,
or another youth group. Include demonstrations, visual aids,
or other techniques that will help you communicate more effectively.
- Prepare and present an audio/video presentation
at least 15 minutes long to your crew or other group approved
by your Advisor.
- Prepare a written pamphlet, set of instructions,
or description and summary. It should be at least 1,000 words
and provide a complete description of your chosen subject. Include
pictures, charts, and/or diagrams to better communicate your
topic. Have two people, one with expertise in the area you are
presenting and one without expertise, read and critique your
work. Make improvements to your draft based on their input.
If your work is applicable to your crew, such as a work on caving
skills, then share your work with your crew.
- crew, another crew, a Cub or Boy Scout group, or another
youth group on communications equipment used
in the outdoors with emphasis on how this equipment would help
in a wilderness survival situation.
- Cooking
- Plan a menu and purchase the food for at least six
people for a two night campout with at least three
meals.
- On the campout in (a) above, cook the three meals
using at least two of the following three methods of
cooking: fire/coals, charcoal, stove.
- Demonstrate and explain proper safe food handling
methods for outdoor cooking.
- Demonstrate that you can prepare backpacking-type
trail food using a backpacking style stove.
- Without using any cooking utensils, prepare a meal
with the four basic food groups for three people.
- Cook an entree, a bread, and a dessert in a Dutch
oven.
- Emergency Preparedness
(Use Exploring Emergency Management Program Helps,
No. 99-243, for resources.)
- Discuss potential disasters and emergency
preparedness with your family and then set up a family
emergency plan.
- Build a family emergency kit.
- Make a tabletop display or presentation on what you
have learned for your crew, another crew, a Cub or Boy
Scout group, or another youth group.
- Land Navigation
- Using a topographical map for your area or the area
you will be navigating in, demonstrate that you know the
following map symbols:
- Index contour
- Vertical control station
- Hard-surface, heavy-duty road
- Depression
- Railroad, single track
- Ridge
- Power transmission line
- Trail
- Building
- Stream
- Checked spot elevation
- Hard-surface, medium-duty road
- Marsh
- Bridge
- Map scale
- Cemetery
- Intermittent stream
- Campsite
- Water well or spring
- Unimproved dirt road
- Explain contour lines. Be able to tell the contour
interval for your map and be able to show the difference
between a steep and a gentle slope.
- Using a map and compass, navigate an orienteering
course that has at least six legs covering at least 2.5
miles.
- Learn to use a global positioning system (GPS)
receiver. Demonstrate that you can find a fixed
coordinate at night using a GPS receiver.
- Teach the navigating skills you have learned in (a)
through (d) above to your crew, another crew, a Cub or
Boy Scout group, or another group.
- Leave No Trace
- Recite and explain the principles of Leave No Trace.
- Participate in three separate camping/backpacking
trips demonstrating that you know and use Leave No Trace
principles.
- Make a tabletop display or presentation on the Leave
No Trace principles and how they affect the environment
and attitude of campers for your crew, another crew, a
Cub or Boy Scout group, or another group.
-
Wilderness Survival
(Before you begin wilderness
survival, you must have completed the cooking, land navigation,
and first aid core requirements.)
- Write a risk management plan for an upcoming crew
high adventure activity such as a whitewater canoeing or
rockclimbing trip. The plan should include nutrition,
health, first aid, supervision, insurance, safety rules
and regulations, proper equipment, maps and compass,
in-service training, environmental considerations,
emergency and evacuation procedures, and emergency
contacts.
- From memory, list the survival priorities and
explain your use of each in a survival situation.
- Learn about and then make a tabletop display or
presentation for your crew, another crew, a Cub or Boy
Scout group, or another youth group on the following
subjects:
- Emergency signals used in the outdoors
- Search and rescue patterns
- Evacuation procedures and value of when to move
and when not to move in a wilderness emergency
- Explain the following environmental exposure
problems. Discuss what causes them, signs and symptoms,
and treatment.
- Hypothermia
- Frostbite
- Sunburn
- Heat exhaustion
- Heat cramps
- Heat stroke
-
- Explain dehydration and the necessity of
conserving fluids in a survival situation.
- Explain at least four methods of obtaining water
in the outdoors and demonstrate at least two ways to
purify that water.
-
- Demonstrate at least two different fire lays -
one for cooking and one for warmth.
- Learn and discuss the use of fire starters,
tinder, kindling, softwoods, and hardwoods in fire
making.
- Explain and demonstrate how you can gain knowledge
of weather patterns using VHF band radio and other
radios, winds, barometric pressure, air masses and their
movements, clouds, and other indicators.
-
- Explain the different rope materials and
thicknesses that are best for wilderness use and how
to care for them.
- Know the use of and demonstrate how to tie the
following knots and lashings:
- Sheet bend
- Fisherman's knot
- Bowline
- Bowline on a bight
- Two half hitches
- Clove hitch
- Timber hitch
- Taut-line hitch
- Square lashing
- Shear lashing
-
- Explain the usefulness and drawbacks of
obtaining food in the wilderness, including things
to avoid.
- Prepare and eat at least one meal with food you
have found in the outdoors.
-
- Make a list of items you would include in a
wilderness survival kit and then make copies to hand
out to visitors to your wilderness survival outpost
camp.
- Using your list, make a wilderness survival kit.
Explain the use of each item you have included.
-
- Set up a wilderness survival outpost camp and
spend at least two nights and two days in your site.
- Use and demonstrate several knots and lashings
from requirement (h) in your wilderness survival
campsite demonstration.
- Know how to plan a wilderness shelter for three
different environments and then build a shelter as
part of your wilderness survival campsite
demonstration.
- Have your crew, another crew, a Cub or Boy Scout
group, or another youth group visit you in your
outpost for a presentation you make on wilderness
survival (at least one hour).
- Conservation
- As a Venturer, plan, lead, and carry out a
significant conservation project under the guidance of
a natural resources professional.
- Make a tabletop display or presentation on your
conservation project for your crew, another crew, a Cub or Boy Scout
group, or another youth group.
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