- Scouting New Zealand
Infobox WorldScouting
name =Scouting New Zealand
image-size =
caption =
type =
owner =
age =
headquarters =
location =
country =New Zealand
coords =
f-date =1908
defunct =
founders =
founder =David Cossgrove
award-for =
members =18,007
chiefscouttitle =
chiefscout =
chiefscouttitle2 =
chiefscout2 =
chiefscouttitle3 =
chiefscout3 =
website = [http://www.scouts.org.nz/ Scouting New Zealand]
affiliation =World Organization of the Scout Movement
next =
prev =New Zealand has 18,007 Scouts (as of mid 2008cite web |title=Triennial Report 2005-2008 |url=http://scout.org/en/content/download/11615/94838/file/Triennial_Report_EN.pdf |publisher=World Organization of the Scout Movement |accessdate=2008-07-13] ) served by Scouting New Zealand.Scouting was introduced to New Zealand in 1908 by ColDavid Cossgrove and the island nation became a member of theWorld Organization of the Scout Movement in 1953.Scouting New Zealand is very internationally minded, participating in many Asia-Pacific Region and World Scout camps and Jamborees.
There is a strong emphasis on conservation of natural resources. Scouts frequently help in natural disasters such as sand bagging rivers during flooding.
History
Scouting in New Zealand began in 1908 and spread rapidly throughout the country. In 1909, the first Sea Scouting units were founded followed by Cub Scouts in 1916 and the Rover section in 1918.
In 1963, the Venturer Scout section was introduced.
In 1976, the first females became members of the Venturer section, on a trial basis. Because of the great success, in 1979, females were formally admitted and the Venturer section became co-ed. In 1987, girls were formally admitted into the Scout section. This was followed by girls being admitted into the Kea and Cub sections in 1989.
In 1979, Mr.
Arthur W.V. Reeve was awarded the "Bronze Wolf ", the only distinction of theWorld Organization of the Scout Movement , awarded by theWorld Scout Committee for exceptional services to world Scouting.Jamborees
A
Jamboree is a large gathering of scouts with camp for nine days (usally 28th December-5th Janurary) at a certain location. There are 3 different types of Jamborees. One is a World Jamboree which any scout from around the world can enter in. Another is a region Jamboree (New Zealands isAsia-Pacific ), where a whole group of countries can go to. The last type is a country Jamboree, where any scout from that country can enter, as well as a small number from other countries, generally in the same region. The Asia-Pacific Jamborees in New Zealand run during the New Zealands Jamboree. Jamborees are held every three years.The first New Zealand Jamboree was held in
Dunedin in the years 1925-6. Only an estimated 200 people attended. The next was held inAuckland in 1958-9. Since then they are held every three years. The most recent New Zealand Jamboree , the eighteenth, was held inChristchurch . Because it celebrated 100 years of scouting, up to 3000 scouts and 1500 leaders attended (theNorovirus and thechickenpox outbreaks brought the numbers down with about 300quarantined ).Badges
Every Jamboree has a badge stating the date and the location. Every Scout who attends receives them for collecting or trading. Because of scarcity of some Jamboree badges, they were remade. The most common difference between original and remade is the old one most likely had its details
embroidered in the badge so it had a 3D look.Fact|date=August 2008Program sections
*Keas-ages 6 and 7
*Cubs-ages 8 to 11
*Scouts-ages 11 to 14
*Venturers-ages 14 to 19
*Rovers-ages 18 to 26 (associate 26 - 34)All sections are coeducational. Scouting New Zealand has similar Scouting sections as
the Scout Association in theUnited Kingdom , although the names are slightly different: Beavers are called Keas, Venturers in place of Explorers, and Rovers in place of theScout Network .Keas
The Keas' promise: :"I will try to share my fun and help others".
Cubs
The Cubs' Promise::"I promise to do my best":"To do my duty to my God, to the Queen and my country,":"To help other people and to live by the Cub Law"
couts
The
Scout Motto is "Be Prepared".The Scout Oath is::"On my honour I promise to do my best,":"To do my duty to my God, to the Queen and my country,":"To help other people and to live by the Scout Law."
The Scout Law:
*"A Scout is loyal and trustworthy"
*"A Scout is considerate and tolerant"
*"A Scout is a friend to all"
*"A Scout accepts challenges with courage"
*"A Scout uses resources wisely"
*"A Scout respects the environment"
*"A Scout has self respect and is sincere"There have been 18 Jamborees in New Zealand. The first New Zealand jamboree, the New Zealand Exhibition Jamboree, was held in Dunedin in 1926. The 18th New Zealand Jamboree was held in Christchurch from 28 December 2007 to 5 January 2008. [ [http://jamboree.scouts.org.nz/ Scouting New Zealand - 18th New Zealand Jamboree ] ]
Scouting New Zealand elsewhere
Non-sovereign territories with Scouting run by Scouting New Zealand include
*
*Niue -Scouting on Niue
*External links
* [http://www.scouts.org.nz/ Scouting New Zealand website]
* [http://www.rovers.org.nz/ New Zealand Rover Scouts website]
* [http://www.venturer.org.nz/ New Zealand Venturer Scouts website]ee also
*
GirlGuiding New Zealand References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.