Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Venturers raft on the New River. BSA photo by Al Drago

Whitewater Rafting Was Wet and WIld

Published On July 26, 2013 | By Payton Smith | Features, High Adventure
“I was kinda nervous,” Scout Kevin Henderson admitted as he waited in line to board a whitewater raft and paddle his way down the New River.
“I came to jambo looking for fun and found it on the waves of the river,” said Scout Lucas Vireday. Riding a wave of fear was not supposed to be on the list of elements for a rafting ride down the New River.
After conquering  a class 2 rapid on the New River, Venture Scouts load their raft back onto the trailer at the Fayette River Station pull out spot, and pose for a picture on the shore of the New River Gorge Bridge. Photo By Shane Noem
After conquering a class 2 rapid on the New River, Venturersload their raft back onto the trailer at the Fayette River Station. BSA photo By Shane Noem.
Earlier that morning, Scouts and Venturers waited 20 minutes in line, had their paperwork checked, chatted with fellow rafters-t0-be, and took in a 15-minute safety presentation. Boarding blue and white busses, they collectively bolstered courage and cheered as they rolled off the Summit Bechtel Reserve and onto the highway. As the driver whiped around turns through the West Virginia Mountains, some wondered if river will be quite as wild as the bus ride.
Approaching the New River, a feeling of unease settled over the Scouts and Venturers as they try to be brave in the face of uncertainty. No one really wants to say that they’re scared, but it was easy to notice real fear in some of their faces.
Finally at the shoreline, groups of seven or eight board the waiting rafts. They are anxious to be on the water.
The guide stands and chuckles eerily, like a pirate. He has 24 years of experience on the river, interrupted by two tours of service in Afghanistan. One rule is established for the raft… “keep your hand on the T-grip.”
He tells a story of Old Man Rudy who did not like rafters and would fire off his shotgun to scare them.
As the rafts launched from the shore, the guide talked about geological history, the biology of the environment, the cultural history and the rapids themselves.
The first set of rapids, known as “Rudy’s Ripple,” gives a team a glimpse of whitewater downstream. The river, a bit higher than usual because of the recent deluges of rain, is brown but still boiling and swirling. The raft lurched and bumped as Scouts and Venturers hung on.
After failing to hold on tight enough to the side of his raft, 17-year-old Eagle Scout Chris Katzer of O'Fallon, Illinois tumbles over the side into the New River. "It went bump bump and then I fell out," said Katzer who is attending his second National Scout Jamboree.  Photo By Shane Noem
Scouts and Venturers paddle like mad as Eagle Scout Chris Katzer tumbles out of the raft into the churning rapids. BSA photo By Shane Noem
The guide”s description of the upcoming “The Surprise” rapids fueled excitement among the passengers. Sure enough, holding on to the T-grip wasn’t so easy this time. Splashes of water came over the raft. Laughter and shrieks poured out unsolicited.
After failing to hold on tight enough to the side of his raft, Eagle Scout Chris Katzer of O’Fallon, Ill., tumbled over the side into the New River.
“It went bump, bump, and then I fell out,” said Katzer.
Finally, it was calm. The guide stands up at the aft of the raft and hurls his feet over his head, doing a back-flip into the river. The rest of the rafters follow suit, assuring a fully drenched experience on the New River.
“I wish I could do it again,” Scout Tristen Gutbezahl. This was prevailing response among the now-dripping rafters.
Scouts and Venturers who missed rafting on the New River’s whitewater are encouraged to return to the Summit for the summer programs starting in 2014, which will also feature biking, hiking, climbing, shooting sports, and other specialized activities not offered at any other Boy Scouts of America national high adventure base. Whitewater rafting will also be available at the 2017 National Scout Jamboree.
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  • Jamboree Today reporter Chad Rodenberger (l) interviews Anthony DiSalvo, who has attended almost every national jamboree since 1937. Photo by Richard Diesslin.

    Counting Jamborees? Start With 1937 and Anthony DiSalvo

    Published On July 28, 2013 | By Chad Rodenberger | Features, Meet VIPs
    The 2013 National Scout Jamboree had a lot of remarkable people in attendance. His Majesty Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden, a life long Scout. TV host Mike Rowe, an Eagle Scout. There were corporate CEOs and philanthropists, teachers and scientists, artists and Olympians. All contributing to a great jamboree.
    But how many had been in attendance at the 1937 National Scout Jamboree, the very first gathering of Scouts from across America?
    Just one: Anthony DiSalvo.
    Not only that, he has attended almost every national jamboree since 1937. DiSalvo, now member of the 2013 jamboree staff, was eight years old in 1937. He visited his uncle at the jamboree in Washington, D.C. There were 25,000 Scouts in attendance, most of whom arrived by train. President Franklin D. Roosevelt also turned up at that jamboree. Jamboree Today published its first issue there, while NBC and CBS radio broadcast live from the event.
    Since 1937, DiSalvo has attended 17 more jamborees as a Scoutmaster or staff member. He’s missed only two in 76 years
    “All of the jamborees were magnificent,” he says, and each jamboree got “better and better over the years.”
    DiSalvo says his favorite jamboree is the 1960 National Scout Jamboree in Colorado Springs. Over 56,000 Scouts were there, celebrating the golden jubilee of the Boy Scouts of America as the organization turned 50.
    He is impressed very much by this year’s jamboree as well.
    “The new stadium is magnificent and the place is amazing,” DiSalvo says of the Summit Bechtel Reserve.

    Monday, July 29, 2013

    jambo-hands

    My top 10 jamboree memories

    After 10 phenomenal days at the 2013 National Scout Jamboree earlier this month, I have just one regret: I couldn’t see it all.
    I never rolled by the skate park or BMX track, didn’t take a dip in the Pools, and bailed on whitewater rafting. (Fortunately, the fine folks at the Summit Blog and Jamboree Today covered all that and more.)
    No two jamboree experiences were alike, and so rather than focusing on what mine lacked, here’s a look back at my top 10 jamboree memories. As for everything I didn’t get to see? The countdown to the 2017 jamboree has already begun.

    20130721-171122.jpg10. Helping break a world record — maybe

    Thousands of Scouts, Scouters and Venturers assembled in a light drizzle to attempt to set the Guinness World Record for “most people keeping beach balls in the air.”
    Read the post.

    20130720-002827.jpg9. All-weather fun with the Jamboree Jazz Band

    In Charleston, W.Va., rain clouds formed during the Jamboree Jazz Band’s performance, but the Scouts played on. Raindrops fell at an angle, soaking the tuba, trombone and trumpet sections, but the Scouts played on. At one point, the power was shut down because of a lightning risk in the area, but the Scouts played on. To say the band played the lights out would be accurate on two levels.
    Read the post.

    20130717-182537.jpg8. Scouts going ga-ga for Israeli dodgeball

    This is what I love about jamborees. You hear all about rock climbing, zip-lining, and skateboarding going in, but nobody mentions ga-ga. It’s just another jamboree surprise awaiting Scouts and Venturers around each turn.
    Read the post.

    20130715-130941.jpg7. Watching Troop D424 set up its campsite

    Over here, Scouts unfold and assemble cots with robot-like precision. Over there, tents take shape in no time. Troop D424 represents another impressive example of a boy-led troop getting things done without intervention from adults. But there’s more that caught my eye: Troop D424 is comprised of 12 different troops back home, meaning most of these Scouts met for the first time at pre-jamboree meetings.
    Read the post.

    20130716-144549.jpg6. Fox hunting with Scouts from North Carolina

    The beeping on Bram’s handheld radio intensified, and then: “I’m getting something!” Like a trio of bloodhounds, three Scouts from Troop A120 out of Durham, N.C., were off to follow the digital scent. In fox hunting — part geocaching, part orienteering — Scouts use radios and homemade antennas to locate a hidden “fox,” or transmitter. I can definitely see the appeal.
    Read the post.

    20130717-174417.jpg5. Giving back with Venturers from Hawaii and Colorado

    I spent most of a day tagging along with Crew F206, a jamboree unit that combines Venturers from the Maui County Council in Hawaii and the Denver Area Council in Colorado. Joined by two outstanding Arrowmen from the Order of the Arrow, the group spent four hours creating hiking and biking trails near Raleigh County Memorial Airport in Beckley, W.Va., about 30 minutes from the Summit. This is just one of hundreds of Messengers of Peace Day of Service projects.
    Read the post.

    20130722-192107.jpg4. Shooting arrows with Matt from Georgia

    While waiting in line for action archery at the Bows, I met Matt, a Scout from Troop A210 in Georgia. He challenged me to a friendly competition to see who could hit the higher number of targets at this difficult but exciting activity at the 2013 National Jamboree.
    Read the post.

    20130720-133254.jpg3. Meeting Hunter, my blog’s biggest fan

    It’s not every day you see a stranger holding a sign with your name on it. In fact, I can say it’s never happened to me — until one day, strolling near the AT&T Summit Stadium this afternoon, I happened across Hunter, a Scout from C346 out of Georgia. Turns out he’s my biggest fan, and I couldn’t be more humbled.
    Read the post.

    9329345503_08c23c9056_b2. Mike Rowe inspires thousands

    At the jamboree’s stadium show, Eagle Scout Mike Rowe rewrote some bad advice, telling the crowd of tens of thousands of Scouts, Scouters and Venturers that the key is to “work smart and hard.” And he needs the help of all of us in the Boy Scouts of America.
    Read the post and see the video.

    20130725-122525.jpg1. Receiving a post-jamboree letter from a Scout mom

    The jamboree was a success, but rather than taking my word for it, now you can hear directly from one Hudson Valley Council mom who “spent $1,600 and many hours of meetings and travel preparing for an event that I was sure would be too strenuous, too long and too difficult for my often-scattered and unfocused 12-year-old son.”
    Read her letter.