Scouting in Puerto Rico

Scouting in Puerto Rico

Puerto Rico Council of the Boy Scouts of America

Boy Scouts attending the opening of the Caribbean National Wildlife Refuge Complex and Caribbean Ecological Service Field Office in Boquerón, Puerto Rico

Scouting in Puerto Rico has a long history, from the 1920s to the present day, serving both boys and girls. Troops, Venturing Crews and Sea Scouting units are part of the Boy Scouts of America, for both boys and girls, or the Girl Scouts of the USA, for girls. Several campsites are owned and maintained by these organizations.

Boy Scouting in Puerto Rico

Puerto Rico Council

Puerto Rico Council

Puerto Rico Council shoulder patch
Concilio de Puerto Rico
Owner Boy Scouts of America
Age range Cub Scouting: 7–10 (Male youth)
Boy Scouts: 11–17 (Male youth)
Venturing and Sea Scouting: 14–20 (Co-ed youth)
All programs: 18 and over (Co-ed adults)
Headquarters Guaynabo, Puerto Rico
Location All 78 municipalities of Puerto Rico, including Vieques and Culebra
Country Puerto Rico
Founded November 15, 1927
Membership 9,700+
President Dr. Ángel Velázquez
Scout Executive María Molinelli, Esq.
Council Commissioner Virginia García
Website
Puerto Rico Council Facebook

Puerto Rican Boy Scouting is served by the Puerto Rico Council (Spanish: Concilio de Puerto Rico) of the Boy Scouts of America. Originally founded in 1927[1] as the Puerto Rico and Virgin Islands Council and part of the Northeast Region of the Boy Scouts of America, but the Virgin Islands District was separated into a new Virgin Islands Council in 1965.[2]

Thousands of youth and volunteers participate in four programs, Cub Scouting, Boy Scouts, Venturing and Sea Scouting, with the mission of preparing youth to make correct choices ethically and morally for their future by learning the Scout Law and Scout Promise. The council serves more than 6,200 youth and 3,500 volunteers in more than 300 units.

Organization

The Puerto Rico Council is divided into six districts, all named based on the Taíno name of each of the districts' base area:

Ideals

Boy Scouts working on a service project

Puerto Rico is the only council of the BSA where the Spanish translation is in primary usage.

Scout Promise

Scout Law

A Scout is: – Un Escucha es:

  • Trustworthy – Honrado
  • Loyal – Leal
  • Helpful – Servicial
  • Friendly – Amigable
  • Courteous – Cortés
  • Kind – Bondadoso
  • Obedient – Obediente
  • Cheerful – Alegre
  • Thrifty – Ahorrativo or Económico
  • Brave – Valiente
  • Clean – Limpio
  • Reverent – Reverente

Guajataka Scout Reservation

Guajataka Scout Reservation
Owner Puerto Rico Council
Headquarters San Sebastián, Puerto Rico
Location Guajataca Lake
Country Puerto Rico
Coordinates 18°22′3.41″N 66°55′12.38″W / 18.3676139°N 66.9201056°W / 18.3676139; -66.9201056
Founded 1938
Director Félix Berríos
Ranger Leopoldo "Junior" Alicea
Program Director Juan Laboy

Guajataka Scout Reservation or Campamento Guajataka, often simply referred to as Guajataka and nicknamed Santuario de Amistad (English: Sanctuary of Friendship), is the Puerto Rico Council's camp reservation, located at the northwest part of the island in San Sebastián annex to Guajataca Lake. Camp Guajataka is the reservation where Scouts and leaders of the Boy Scouts of America program attend for recreational activities, summer camp, seminars, leadership training and Scouting-related meetings.

1938 marked the inauguration of Guajataka Scout Reservation, Puerto Rico's main camp center. It is located in the municipality of San Sebastian and on the shores of Guajataca Lake, from which the camp takes its name. Since then the camp has evolved and has seen many changes, both in structure and program.

Scouts and leaders who visit are lodged in one of the ten campsites, in-campsite cabins or stand-alone cabin campsites of the reservation. These campsites feature a series of concrete-and-wood cabins that house its campers. The campsites have very simple names (Campsites A, B, C, D, M and SP or Swimming Pool Campsite), while there are in-campsite cabins (Paquito Joglar and Palomar) and stand-alone cabin campsites (Manolín and Cobana Negra). The Paquito Joglar and Manolín are cabins named in honor of distinguished Scouting figures of Puerto Rico while the SP or Swimming Pool Campsite, Palomar and Cobana Negra cabins are named based on their location, flora or physical characteristics.

The camp's operations are divided into two seasons, Summertime and Christmastime. The main program is presented during the summer, in which ten weeks are divided for Cub Scouts, Boy Scouts and Venture Scouts. The Christmas season runs for a single week and summarizes the summer's offerings open for both Cub Scouts and Boy Scouts. A short three-to-four-day camp has also been offered during Spring Break with a similar program to the one offered during the Christmas camp. The camp also operates off-season for special troop activities or external groups that wish to experience the outdoor spirit of the reservation.

Guajataka is the official home of the council's Order of the Arrow Lodge Yokahu 506. Most of Yokahu Lodge's activities are celebrated in the camp and for years the Order has given service to the facilities. The OA has its own campsite, called "The Cabin", which occupancy has been discontinued due to structural damages, but remains standing. In the past, the Paquito Joglar campsite area was considered the official gathering place for the Lodge, later becoming a campers area due to the need of space for the many Scouts that attended camp in summer.[3]

Camp staff

The staff of the camp are structured based on Scouting's patrol system. These patrols are based on different specialization areas in the camp's program. The current patrols are known as Program Aide (Scoutcraft/Scout skills), Nature Team (Ecology/Conservation), Aquatic Team, Sport Team, Staff Administrativo and Voyagers (High Adventure, Treks and Project C.O.P.E.). Other former patrols are Administration Team, Order of the Arrow Patrol, Guías de Expedición and Ranger Team.

The patrols are led by a Director, which serves as an administrative official, and a Patrol Leader, in charge of the patrol's specific program. In the past, each patrol had its own campsite in which they pitched their own tents and worked on pioneering gates that awed campers and visitors alike. As of 2006, all staff members were located in a single house cabin called "Casa Staff" (Staff House). Since the relocation, only the Program Aide patrol builds pioneering gates to their work area with the inclusion of the Sport Team patrol as of 2013.

The Counselor In Training (CIT) program works in a special way, compared to other camps. Any Scout or Venturer that becomes a Staff member, regardless of age, is considered a CIT during his or her first year in camp. During this first year, the CIT learns the basics of the patrol and gets to know the "traditions" on which it is based. After successfully completing the CIT year, the Scout or Venturer is considered a full Staff Member. Staff members are known for their passion and loyalty toward their patrol, and it is very rare in current times to see a Scout that actually transfers from one patrol to another.

Due to its long history, the patrol system has served to develop a series of traditions inside each patrol. A tradition shared by all patrols is a simple recognition, symbolized by a neckerchief. The neckerchief symbolizes a Staff member that has truly served the patrol and the camp, demonstrates and shares his knowledge, and, most of the times, has been a member of the patrol for two or more years. Each patrol has its own prerequisites for this recognition, and each has its own induction ceremony. Their neckerchiefs as well as their shoelaces (a tradition of Guajataka Camp patrols) have different colors, each color representing a specific patrol: red (Program Aide), forest green (Nature Team), light blue (Aquatic Team), purple (Sport Team), yellow (Administrative Staff), and navy blue (Expedition Voyagers).

Order of the Arrow

Main article: Yokahu Lodge

Yokahu Lodge 506 is the Order of the Arrow Lodge of the Puerto Rico Council of the Boy Scouts of America, founded in 1954 by Luis Matías Ferrer and Dr. Frank H. Wadsworth.

Girl Scouting in Puerto Rico

Caribe Girl Scout Council

Caribe Girl Scout Council

Map of Caribe Girl Scout Council and its campsites
Owner Girl Scouts of the USA
Headquarters San Juan, Puerto Rico
Location All 78 municipalities of Puerto Rico, including Vieques and Culebra
Country United States
Founded 1926 (1926)
Executive Director Ness Marie Tollinche
Website
Caribe Girl Scout Council official website

Girl Scouting in Puerto Rico is administered by the Caribe Girl Scout Council of the Girl Scouts of the USA. It is headquartered in San Juan. The first troop was formed in 1926 in Cabo Rojo by Elisa Colberg.

The Council owns three campsites. These are Camp Elisa Colberg in Rio Grande, Camp María Emilia in Añasco and Camp Provi Biaggi, in Ponce.[4] Campamento Elisa Colberg was established in 1948.[5]

The Spanish translation of Girl Scout is Niña Escucha but it is also widely understood and used in English in Puerto Rico. The Council's newsletter is called Niña Escucha.

Girl Scouts earn a badge created as well as uniquely designed by the council, called Los Faros de Puerto Rico (English: The Lighthouses of Puerto Rico).

In 2006, Moisés Fragela donated one of his paintings entitled Quedo en Nada (English: Left in Nothing) to the Caribe Council.[6] to be sold by auction for funding part of renovations and improvements to the council's campsites.[6]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Scouting in Puerto Rico.

References

  1. "...the Boy Scouts of America had just arranged to send Porto Rico its first Scout Executive, Mr. A. S. MacFarlane, recently of the Philippines (where he organized Scouting and placed it on a sound basis)...Boys' Life, Vol. XVIII, No. 11, Nov 1928.
  2. Hook, James; Franck, Dave; Austin, Steve (1982). An Aid to Collecting Selected Council Shoulder Patches with Valuation.
  3. "Guajataka Scout Reservation". Guajataka Scout Reservation. Archived from the original on October 24, 2009. Retrieved May 25, 2009.
  4. "Campamentos". Caribe Girl Scouts Council. Retrieved August 18, 2008.
  5. "El Yunque National Forest — Centennial Timeline". USDA Forest Service. Retrieved August 18, 2008.
  6. 1 2 "Arte a beneficio de nuestro Concilio". Niña Escucha (in Spanish). Caribe Girl Scouts Council: 10. January–March 2006.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/14/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.