FORESTER
Do Five of These :
- Make a map of
the United States. Show the types of forests growing in different parts of
the country. Name some kinds of trees that grow in these forests. For each
type of forest, give one or more examples of uses for the wood of its
trees.
- Draw a picture
to show the plant and tree layers of a forest in your area. Label the area
that does and draw a picture of that forest.)
- Identify six
forest trees common to the area where you live. Tell how both wildlife and
humans use them. (If you don't live in a region that has forests, read
about one type of forest and name six of its trees and their uses.)
- Identify six forest plants
(other than trees)
that are useful to wildlife. Tell which animals use them and for what
purposes.
- Draw a picture
showing:
- How water and
minerals in the soil help a tree grow
- How the tree
uses sunlight to help it grow
- Make a poster showing
how a tree's growth
rings tell its life history.
- Make a chart showing how water and minerals in the soil help a tree
grow.
- Collect pieces of three kinds of wood used for building houses.
- Plant 20 forest tree seedlings.
Tell how you planted
them and what you did to take care of them after planting.
- Describe the harm wildfires
can cause.
Tell how you can
prevent wildfire.
- Draw your own
urban forestry plan for adding trees to a street, yard, or park near your
home. Show what types of trees you would like to see planted.
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GEOLOGIST
Do Five of These:
- Collect five
geologic specimens that have important uses.
- Rocks and
minerals are used in metals, glass, jewelry, road-building products, and
fertilizer. Give examples of minerals used in these products.
- Make a scale of mineral hardness
for objects
found at home. Show how to use the scale by finding the relative hardness
of three samples.
- List some of the geologic materials used in building your home.
- Make a drawing that shows the cause of a volcano, a geyser, or an
earthquake.
- Explain one way in which mountains are formed.
- Describe what a
fossil is. How is it used to tell how old a formation is? Find two
examples of fossils in your area.
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NATURALIST
Do Four of These:
- Keep an "insect zoo" that you have collected. You might have crickets,
ants, or grasshoppers. Study them for a while then release them.
- Set up an aquarium or terrarium. Keep it for at least a month.
- Visit a museum of natural history, nature center, or zoo with your
family, den, or pack. Tell what you saw.
- Watch for birds in your yard, neighborhood, or town for one week.
Identify the birds you see and write down where and when you saw them.
- Learn about the bird flyways closest to your home. Find out
which birds
use these flyways.
- Learn to identify poisonous plants and
venomous
reptiles found in your area.
- Watch six wild animals (snakes, turtles, fish, birds, or mammals) in
the wild. Describe the kind of place (forest, field, marsh, yard, or park)
where you saw them. Tell what they were doing.
- Give examples
of:
- A producer, a
consumer, and a decomposer in the food chain of an ecosystem
- One way humans
have changed the balance of nature
- How you can
help protect the balance of nature
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OUTDOORSMAN
Do Five of These:
- Show your ability to tie the following knots:
- Square knot,
- Bowline,
- Clove hitch,
- Two half hitches,
- Taut-line hitch
- Pitch a tent
using two half hitches and a tautline hitch.
- With your adult partner, take part in a Webelos overnighter or camp
overnight with a Boy Scout troop.
- Help with a
two-night campout away from home with your family. Or go on two
one-night
campouts with your family.
- With your family or Webelos den, plan and take part in an evening
outdoor activity that includes a campfire.
- Help cook your own lunch or supper outdoors with
a parent or
another adult.
Clean up afterward.
- Know and practice the rules of outdoor fire safety.
- Visit a nearby
Boy Scout camp with your den.
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