1438 lines
52 KiB
Plaintext
1438 lines
52 KiB
Plaintext
Newsgroups: rec.scouting,news.answers
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From: macman@bernina.ethz.ch (Danny Schwendener)
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Subject: rec.scouting FAQ #1: Skits, Yells & Creative Campfires
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Message-ID: <scouts-skits_726117273@bernina.ethz.ch>
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Organization: Pfadi Glockenhof, 8001 Zurich, Switzerland
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Date: Mon, 4 Jan 1993 03:14:44 GMT
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Lines: 1429
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Archive-name: scouting/1_skits-yells-and-campfires
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Last-Modified: 1992/12/24
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This file contains a number of skits and yells collected on
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rec.scouting and scouts-l, for your own Pack meetings and campfires.
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While the yells are rarely useable outside of the english-speaking
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countries, I have found that most skits are very easy to translate,
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and my cubs love them!
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I have also appended a compilation of creative ways to light a
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campfire. If you use them, be careful not to incite the kids to start
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playing with liquid fuels. The results can be devastating.
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If you know a good skit or yell that hasn't been included in this FAQ,
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please do all of us the favour. Write it up and post it on rec.scouting.
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Drop me a copy too to make sure that I include it in this file.
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There are a few books I know on skits, yells and campfires:
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The "BSA Cub Scout Leader How-To Book". It is built to help the
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cub scout pack and den leaders running programs that kids enjoy.
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A section of 15 pages is dedicated to skits, yells and applauses.
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ISBN 0-8395-3831-6.
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"Creative Campfires" is another fine publication. Half of the
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book contains songs, and the rest is crammed with skits, stories,
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yells and tips to set up an entertaining campfire. (Sorry - no ISBN,
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but it can be ordered worldwide from the BSA Supply Division -
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Fax +1-704-588-5822).
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This file is in digested format, like all FAQ files on this newsgroup.
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If you're using nn as newsreader, type 'G %" to split the digest into
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individual postings. In bn or rn, typing control-G should cause the
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reader to skip to the next posting within this file.
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-- Danny Schwendener macman@bernina.ethz.ch
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Wolfsmeute Nidau/Glockenhof, Sihlstr. 33, CH-8001 Zurich, Switzerland
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m.h.c. Troop 14, San Francisco
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--------------------------------
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Date: Thu, 16 Jul 1992 12:47:53 -0400
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From: bk233@CLEVELAND.FREENET.edu (Jack W. Weinmann)
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Subject: Skit - Rowing
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Four or more people sneak up behind the speaker and set chairs down so
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that "the speaker can't see them." They then begin to go through the
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motions of casting a line and reeling it in. After a while the audience
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is watching what the group is doing and then the "speaker" looks over
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and asks, "What are you doing?"
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"We're fishing!" is the reply of the fishermen, after which they go
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back to their motions and the speaker resumes talking. After a short
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time the speaker looks over and says - "But you can't fish here!"
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"Why not?" asks another fisherman.
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"Because there's no water here!" (speaker)
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"Oh, well, they weren't biting anyway!" (fisherman)
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The fishermen then turn their chairs so that they are lined up in
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a single line, facing in the same direction. They go through the
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motions of putting their gear away, and then, acting as if they are
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rowing a boat, slide their chairs backwards across the stage."
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It worked well in a gymnasium and at the hall where we showed it
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to the leaders at roundtable. Perhaps the fishermen could sit on
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plastic garbage bags, or pieces of plastic sheet such as that which
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is used for ground cloths and simply scoot across the ground when it
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is time to "row" away.
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Also, the speaker could be starting what looks like the introduction
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to another skit when the fishermen interrupt his narration.
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--------------------------------
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Date: Thu, 16 Jul 1992 16:04:12 -0400
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From: GARBUTT@WVNVM.bitnet (Garbutt, Keith)
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Subject: Skit - Ging gang gooly
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****Warning long posting of interest to campfire junkies only******
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At WEBELOS camp last week I was teaching the "Skits, songs and cheers"
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activity. We had each den produce a skit a song and a cheer.
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In addition I was teaching other songs so we could have decent volume
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on the communal songs. I was teaching Ging Gang Gooli (which I
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discoverd had never been heard before in this council!!!!!!) when
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a Scouter from a Pittsburg pack (who appears to be as big a nut about
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campfires as I am) asked if I knew the Great Grey Elephat story which
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went with it. I didn't, he told it to me, I shamlessly stole it!!!!
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(with his permision). Apparently this story came to him from Canada
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- so Thanks to our brothers and sisters in the Great Frozen North for
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this one.
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THE GREAT GREY GHOST ELEPHANT
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In deepest darkest Africa there is a legend concerning the Great Grey
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Ghost Elephant. Every year after the rains the great grey ghost
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elephant arose from the mists and wandered throught the land at dawn.
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When he came to a village he would stop and sniff the air, then he
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would either go around the village or through it. If he went around
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the village the village would have a prosporous year, if he went
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through it there would be hunger and drought.
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The village of Wat-cha had been visited three years in a row by the
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elephant and things were very bad indeed, and the village leader
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Ging-ganga, was very worried, as was the village medicine man
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Hay-la-shay. Together they decided to do somthing about the problem.
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Now Ging-ganga and his worriors whe huge men with big shields and
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Spears and they decided to stand in the path of the elephant and
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shake their shields and swords at it to frightenit off.
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Hay-la-shay and his followers were going to cast magic spells to
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deter the elephant by shaking their medicine bags as the elephant
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approached which made the sound shalawally shallawlly shallawally.
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Very early in the morning of the day the Great Grey Elephant came
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the villagers gatherd at the edge of the village on one side were
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Ging-gana and his warriors (indicate right side of camp fire circle)
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on the other was Hay-la-shay and his followers (indicate left side
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of camp fire)
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As they waited the warriors sang softly about their leader
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Ging Gang Gooli, Gooli, Gooli, Gooli Watcha
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Ging Gang Goo Ging Gang Goo
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Ging Gang Gooli, Gooli, Gooli, Gooli Watcha
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Ging Gang Goo Ging Gang Goo
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As they waited the medicine men sang of their leader
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Hayla, Hayla Shayla Heyla Shayla Halya Ho-o-o!
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Hayla, Hayla Shayla Heyla Shayla Halya Ho-o-o!
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And shook their medicine bags
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shallawally shallawlly shallawally shallawally.
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And from the river came the mighty great grey elephants
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reply (Have all the adults do this)
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Oompha Oompah Ompah Oompah!
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The elephat was coming closer so the warriors beat their
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shields and sang louder (signal warriors to stand
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and beat thighs in time)
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Ging Gang Gooli, Gooli, Gooli, Gooli Watcha
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Ging Gang Goo Ging Gang Goo
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Ging Gang Gooli, Gooli, Gooli, Gooli Watcha
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Ging Gang Goo Ging Gang Goo
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then the medicine men rose and sang loudly
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Hayla, Hayla Shayla Heyla Shayla Halya Ho-o-o!
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Hayla, Hayla Shayla Heyla Shayla Halya Ho-o-o!
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And shook their medicine bags
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shallawally shallawlly shallawally shallawally.
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And mighty great grey elephant turn aside and went around the
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village saying
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Oompha Oompah Ompah Oompah!
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There was great rejoicing in the village and all the villagers
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joind to gether to sing
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Ging Gang Gooli ........
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--------------------------------
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Date: Thu, 16 Jul 1992 16:04:12 -0400
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From: GARBUTT@WVNVM.bitnet (Garbutt, Keith)
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Subject: Yells
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My boys love to yell so we do a competitive Yell
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Split the camp fire into two halfs have one side say
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There ain't no flys on us
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There ain't no flys on us
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There may be flys on some of you guys
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But there ain't no flys on us
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The other side responds with
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Give 'em straw
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Give 'em hay
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give 'em somthing to stop that neigh
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Get both sides going at once and wear ear plugs!!!!!
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An old old favourite of mine from my days playing rugby in Wales
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(Leader) Oggy Oggy Oggy
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(Scouts) Oy Oy OY
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(L) Oggy (S)Oy
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(L) Oggy (S)Oy
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(Leader) Oggy Oggy Oggy
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(Scouts) Oy Oy OY
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This next one was made up by a bunch of first year WEBELOS
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They thought it was GREAT we were not so sure but we let
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them do it any way - must encourage creativity!!!!
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(Use with CAUTION!!!)
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Rah Rah Ree Kick 'em in the knee
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Rah Rah Ras Kick ,em in the (pause for parents to go OH!)
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Other knee.
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--------------------------------
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From: wayne@eng.umd.edu (Wayne C. McCullough)
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Subject: Skit - the Medicrin
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The Medicrin
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as recorded by Wayne McCullough
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(original Author unknown)
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There once was a medieval village named Trinsic. This
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village was being terrorized by a vile monster, the
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Medicrin. Each night, the Medicrin would stalk down from
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the hills, and devour one of the villagers.
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The terrified villagers called a meeting, and decided to
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pool their money together to hire the great hero Erik.
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<fanfare>
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Erik came and listened to the complaints of the villagers.
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He consulted his Great Hero's Book of Vile Monsters, and
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learned that Medicrins love to eat Loons.
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So Erik hunted high and low to find a loon. He found one,
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captured it, tied it up, and brought it back to the village.
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He then had the villagers dig a deep pit.
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Erik threw the loon into the pit, hoping to capture the
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Medicrin, and slay it.
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That night, the Medicrin came . . .
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It smelled the loon . . .
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But it also smelled DANGER, and it ran off,
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devouring one of the villagers on the way out.
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After calming the villagers, the next day, Erik again
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consulted his Great Hero's Book of Vile Monsters, and
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learned that Medicrins also love sugar.
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So Erik gathered up all of the sugar in the village, and
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threw it into the pit. The loon, not having eaten in days,
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devoured all of the sugar in a single gulp. Erik was struck
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with panic, and ran to and fro trying to figure out what to
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do next, but night had fallen, and the Medicrin would be
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there soon, so Erik crossed his fingers, and hoped for the
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best.
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That night, the Medicrin came . . .
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It smelled the loon . . .
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It smelled danger . . .
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But it also smelled the sugar, and the
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Medicrin dived into the pit, and devoured the loon. The
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villagers swarmed over the Medicrin, and slew it.
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The moral of the story:
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"A loon full of sugar helps the Medicrin go down."
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Presentation:
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The story calls for a narrator, a Hero, a Medicrin, a Loon,
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and assorted villagers. The narrator should have a loud,
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clear voice. There should be at least three villagers, but
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the more, the merrier (up to ten).
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The narrator should read the story, and the characters
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should act out the parts. I personally feel no props should
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be used, and only the narrator should speak.
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The narrator should read the story slowly and dramatically.
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Purely from the spoken point of view, the only humor in the
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entire story is the final punch-line. However, minor
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slapstick should be employed by the actors.
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This is amusing mostly because of the punch-line. This
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story should not be evoked in excess.
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--------------------------------
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From: Unknown
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Subject: Skit - The little green ball
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Hi Folks.
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The following stunts and sketches were collected from the Xerox
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scouting distribution list and contains items from leaders in
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America and in England.
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Have fun!
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THE LITTLE GREEN BALL
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This one is so old, but it appeals to the lads in my troop.
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First scout comes on and says 'Oh no I've lost it'
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He then starts to search around on the floor.
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Second scout comes in and asks what he is looking for.
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First scout replies that he has lost his little green ball.
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Both scouts continue searching the floor.
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Several more scouts come on and are told about the lost little
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green ball. even members of the audience can be persuaded to join
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in the search. After enough time has been dragged out, the first
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scout, sticks a finger up his nose and says "Don't worry I will
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have to make another one" YUK!!!!!
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--------------------------------
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From: Unknown
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Subject: Skit - THE MAGIC DOCTOR'S CHAIR
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Characters required, 1 doctor and four patients.
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Props required, two chairs.
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Scene begins with doctor sitting on one of the chairs.
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First patient enters twitching their left arm.
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DOCTOR: 'And what's wrong with you sir?'
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Patient 1: 'As you can see doctor I have this terrible twitch'
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DOCTOR: 'Just sit on my magic chair and you'll get better'
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The patient sits on the chair and stops twitching, but the doctor's
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left arm starts twitching.
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Patient 1: 'Oh thank you doctor. you cured me'
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The patient leaves, the doctor still twitching calls for the next
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patient.
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DOCTOR: ' Next '...... 'And what's wrong with you sir?'
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This patient has the hiccups. The process of sitting in the chair
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is repeated. The doctor now has a twitch and the hiccups.
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The third patient is called in, both his legs keep flicking in the air. The
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process is again repeated so that the doctor now has a twitching arm
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the hiccups and both legs flicking in the air.
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The doctor now calls patient four. This patient looks quite normal,
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enters and sits in the magic chair.
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DOCTOR: 'And what may I ask is wrong with you sir?'
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Patient 4: 'I've got a terrible case of the trots doctor'
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The doctor runs off the stage holding his stomach.
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Note: TROTS is English slang for can't stop going to the toilet
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--------------------------------
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From: Unknown
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Subject: Skit - THREE SCOUT LEADERS
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The scene is that three scout leaders are sitting around the campfire
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swapping yarns, after having had a little too much of the amber nectar
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to drink.
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[Note: this skit is adapted from the "We were poor" sketch from
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"Monty Python live at City Center" -- Danny]
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1st leader: These scouts today don't know they're born. I can
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remember the scout hut that we had. There was a hole in the roof,
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which let the water in when it were raining.
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2nd leader: A roof with a hole in it, that were luxury. We had
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an old tarpaulin sheet slung over the rafters. Us older lads had to
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hang onto it during the meetings, case it blew away in the wind.
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3rd leader: Rafters, now theres a luxury. When I was a scout our
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hut had no roof at all, and we kept out the rain with some old bits
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of sack, held up with twigs.
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1st leader: We couldn't get twigs. We had to hold the roof up
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with our bare hands. Those were the days.
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2nd leader: I remember when us lads used to go to camp. We
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loaded all our gear onto an old army truck and drove to the campsite
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singing songs.
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3rd leader: We had no time for singing. We used to pull all our
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gear along on an old cart with wooden wheels. And the wheels used
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to get bogged down in the mud.
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1st leader: A cart with wheels, now thats what I call a luxury.
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We just had an old cardboard box to put all our camping gear in, and
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when it rained all our gear would get soaking wet, and fall into the
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mud, but we were happy.
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2nd leader: Yes, those were the days.
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3rd leader: We had some nice tents though, big green six manners.
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1st leader: Six manners , luxury, our tents were so small, you
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had to sleep sitting up.
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2nd leader: We didn't have any tents at all in my troop. We used
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to curl up in a hole that we'd dug in the ground, but we were happy.
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3rd leader: We couldn't afford a hole in the ground, we used to
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sleep in a puddle.
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1st leader: Yes these youngsters today don't know they're born,
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but if you told them all these things they would never believed you.
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--------------------------------
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From: Unknown
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Subject: Skit - THE SUBMARINE CAPTAIN
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A line of submarine officers on a japanese sub during WWII .
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Captain sights a ship in the parascope
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CAPTAIN; 'Tanker bearing 259, Range 1 mile'
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He yells this to the first mate, who in turn tells second mate,
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down the line until finally the torpedo opperator is told.
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The torpedo operator just shrugs his shoulders.
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CAPTAIN: 'Load main tube # 1 and stand by to fire.'
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He yells this to the first mate, who in turn tells second mate,
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down the line until finally the torpedo opperator is told.
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TORPEDO OPERATOR: 'I don't know How.
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'
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Next the captain gives the order to fire down the line, but the
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TORPEDO OPERATOR. says "I dont know How..."
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This message is returned up the line to the Captain who SCREAMS.
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CAPTAIN : "Press the red button."
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When this message finally gets down to the TORPEDO OPERATOR. he
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follows it, but it took too long so they miss the ship. (More
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message passing if you want.) Finally after about three ships
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(each time the TORPEDO OPERATOR doesnt remember how to fire.)
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The Captain feels disgraced and pulls out a knife and commits
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Sepuku (or incorrectly, Hari Keri) Each officer in turn picks
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up the knife and follows the Captains example until at last the
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knife comes to the Torpedo Officer Who looks at the knife and says;
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TORPEDO OPPERATOR: 'I dont Know How..."
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--------------------------------
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From: Unknown
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Subject: Skit - IS IT TIME YET?
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Line of 5-8 Scouts standing with left foot crossed over right,
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right arm crossed over left.
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First Scout in line asks: "IS IT TIME YET?" -
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Second Scout asks third, etc down the line.
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Last Scout says: "NO"
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Word is passed back to the first Scout, one Scout at a time.
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After a lonnnnnnnng pause,
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First Scout asks: "IS IT TIME YET?"
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It goes down the line as before.
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Last Scout says: "NO"
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Again and the word is passed back.
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Another long pause...............
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First Scout asks again: "IS IT TIME YET?"
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etc and,
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Last Scout says: "YES"
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the answer is passed back.
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Just after the first Scout gets the word, they all change to
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right foot over left and left arm over right.
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Exit groaning
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--------------------------------
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From: Unknown
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Subject: Skit - RAISIN SKIT
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1st Scout comes out: Gets down on all fours, pretenting to be
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a table.
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2nd Scout comes out, looks at the table and declares;
|
|
|
|
2nd SCOUT: "Ahh, a fly, I think I'll pull it's wings off"
|
|
Proceeds to pick it up, pluck the wings, put it back on the table,
|
|
and walks off.
|
|
|
|
3nd Scout comes out, looks at the fly on the table and says;
|
|
|
|
3rd SCOUT: "Oh, a fly with no wings, I think I'll pull it's
|
|
legs off", With great precision and animation, picks up the fly,
|
|
removes it's legs, and puts it back and walks off.
|
|
|
|
4rd Scout comes out, looks at the fly and announces;
|
|
|
|
4th SCOUT: "Say, a fly with no wings and no legs, I think
|
|
I'll pull it's head off."
|
|
Then proceeds as the other Scout before him.
|
|
|
|
Last Scout comes out looks at the table, then carefully inspects
|
|
the object with out picking it up and says very quickly
|
|
|
|
LAST SCOUT: "A raisin !" and quickly picks it up and puts it
|
|
in his mouth
|
|
|
|
--------------------------------
|
|
From: Unknown
|
|
Subject: Skit - THE NUTTY FISHERMAN
|
|
Centre stage is a lad fishing from a billy can or bucket, he keeps
|
|
pulling the rod as though he has something on the line. A passer
|
|
by looks at him as he walks by and then walks on, after a few
|
|
steps the passer by comes back to the lad.
|
|
|
|
Passer by: "What are you doing there then?"
|
|
|
|
Fisher: "I'm fishing, what does it look as though
|
|
I'm doing?"
|
|
Passer by: "Fishing eh!, what are you fishing for."
|
|
|
|
Fisher: "I'm fishing for suckers."
|
|
|
|
Passer by: "Have you caught any?"
|
|
|
|
Fisher: "Yes you're the third today"
|
|
|
|
|
|
--------------------------------
|
|
From: Unknown
|
|
Subject: Skit - BEE STING
|
|
1st scout "OOOOOUCH , OOOOOH , OOOUCH."
|
|
|
|
2nd scout "What's the matter with you?"
|
|
|
|
1st scout "A bee's stung my thumb."
|
|
|
|
2nd scout "Try putting some cream on it then."
|
|
|
|
1st scout "But the bee will be miles away by this time."
|
|
|
|
|
|
--------------------------------
|
|
From: Unknown
|
|
Subject: Skit - "PATIENCE, JACKASS, PATIENCE!"
|
|
|
|
You can ham this up a bit, but here's the jist of it.
|
|
|
|
Two scouts enter (one on all fours if conditions allow) and move
|
|
across stage as the skit procedes. One is the mule and the other
|
|
is the driver. A narrator stands just offstage.
|
|
|
|
Narrator: "In the heat of the Mojave Desert, the mule driver
|
|
pushes his beast toward town. The first day. . ."
|
|
|
|
Mule: "Water, master, water!"
|
|
|
|
Driver: "Patience, Jackass, Patience!"
|
|
|
|
Narrator: "Still they drive on relentlessly. The second day. . ."
|
|
|
|
Mule: "Water, master, water!"
|
|
|
|
Driver: "Patience, Jackass, Patience!"
|
|
|
|
Narrator: "Without mercy, they push to their goal.
|
|
The third day. . ."
|
|
Mule: "Water, master, water!"
|
|
|
|
Driver: "Patience, Jackass, Patience!"
|
|
|
|
Narrator: "Still far from town, they go on. The fifth day. . ."
|
|
|
|
Voice offstage: "What happened to the fourth day?"
|
|
|
|
Driver: "Patience, Jackass, Patience!"
|
|
|
|
|
|
--------------------------------
|
|
From: Unknown
|
|
Subject: Skit - CAMP COFFEE SKETCH
|
|
|
|
You need a large dixie or billy in the centre of the stage and
|
|
four scouts.
|
|
In England we have nesting sets of aluminium cooking pots with
|
|
a steel wire handle. They look like a small straight sided bucket
|
|
or paint pot. These are called Billys or Billycans. We also have
|
|
larger cast iron or steel cooking pots usually oval in shape.
|
|
Most of these are army surplus and are known as Dixies.
|
|
|
|
|
|
1st scout (Walks to billy carrying his mug. He dips his mug
|
|
in and brings it up to his lips for a drink. )
|
|
|
|
" THIS CAMP COFFEE IS GETTING WORSE! "
|
|
|
|
2nd scout (Walks to billy carrying his mug. He dips his
|
|
mug in and brings it up to his lips for a drink. )
|
|
|
|
" THIS CAMP TEA IS GETTING WORSE! "
|
|
|
|
3rd scout (Walks to billy carrying his mug. He dips his
|
|
mug in and brings it up to his lips for a drink. )
|
|
|
|
" THIS CAMP CHOCOLATE IS GETTING WORSE! "
|
|
4th scout (Walks to billy, dips his hands in and takes out
|
|
a pair of wet socks. As he wrings them out he says. )
|
|
|
|
"I THOUGHT THAT WOULD GET THEM CLEAN!"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
--------------------------------
|
|
From: Unknown
|
|
Subject: Skit - THE SLEEP WALKER
|
|
|
|
You will need three scouts or male scout leaders and one girl scout
|
|
or lady leader. You can do this with adults or youngsters, but
|
|
do not mix adults and youngsters.
|
|
|
|
The scene is that three boys are chatting in a group when from
|
|
the side of the stage, a young lady walks on, hands in front of her,
|
|
sleep walking.
|
|
She walks up to the first boy, takes off his tie and walks off
|
|
taking his his tie with her.
|
|
|
|
1st boy " Hey she's pinched my tie." (another word for
|
|
Pinched is stole or took)
|
|
|
|
2nd boy " It's dangerous to wake sleep walkers, don't worry
|
|
she'll bring it back when she wakes up."
|
|
|
|
The girl walks back and takes the second boys jacket, she walks off
|
|
carrying it with her.
|
|
|
|
2nd boy "Hey she's pinched my jacket."
|
|
|
|
3rd boy "It's dangerous to wake sleep walkers, don't worry
|
|
she'll bring it back, when she wakes up."
|
|
|
|
The girl walks back still sleep walking, grabs the 3rd boy by the
|
|
arm and walks off with him.
|
|
|
|
3rd boy "It's dangerous to wake sleep walkers, but don't worry
|
|
she'll bring me back when she wakes up."
|
|
|
|
|
|
--------------------------------
|
|
From: Unknown
|
|
Subject: Skit - WE'RE GOING ON SAFARI
|
|
This is an action chant, which can be performed by as many scouts
|
|
as you wish. It can be made into something really good, by
|
|
dressing up in safari gear and carrying rifles.
|
|
|
|
1st scout:We're going on safari.
|
|
ALL:We're going on safari.
|
|
1st scout:We're gonna catch a big one.
|
|
ALL:We're gonna catch a big one.
|
|
1st scout: Ooh look a snake.
|
|
ALL:Ooh look a snake.
|
|
1st scout: Hiss, hiss.
|
|
ALL:Hiss, hiss.
|
|
|
|
2nd scout: We're going on safari.
|
|
ALL: We're going on safari.
|
|
2nd scout: We're gonna catch a big one.
|
|
ALL: We're gonna catch a big one.
|
|
2nd scout : Ooh look a crocodile.
|
|
ALL: Ooh look a crocodile.
|
|
2nd scout: Snap, snap.
|
|
ALL: Snap, snap.
|
|
1st scout: Hiss, hiss.
|
|
ALL: Hiss, hiss.
|
|
|
|
3rd scout: We're going on safari.
|
|
ALL: We're going on safari.
|
|
3rd scout: We're gonna catch a big one.
|
|
ALL: We're gonna catch a big one.
|
|
3rd scout: Ooh look a panther.
|
|
ALL: Ooh look a panther.
|
|
3rd scout: Poof, poof.
|
|
ALL: POOF, POOF.......Why on Earth poof poof?
|
|
3rd scout: Well, he was pink!
|
|
2nd scout: Snap, snap.
|
|
ALL: Snap, snap.
|
|
1st scout: Hiss, hiss.
|
|
ALL: Hiss, hiss.
|
|
|
|
AND SO ON.
|
|
To finish you can have someone dressed in a gorilla suit.
|
|
The last scout starts to sing ooh look a gorilla, then all the
|
|
others see the gorilla as he comes on stage and chases them all
|
|
off screaming.
|
|
|
|
--------------------------------
|
|
From: Unknown
|
|
Subject: Skit - CRAZY NEWS FLASHES
|
|
Today, Lady Blenkinsop Smythe, laid a foundation stone.
|
|
Both are said to be doing well.
|
|
|
|
A lorry load of artificial hair has just overturned on the motorway.
|
|
The police are combing the countryside.
|
|
|
|
This afternoon, two girl scouts, went for a tramp in the woods.
|
|
The tramp got away.
|
|
|
|
A hundred dollar bill has just been found on the campsite.
|
|
Will the owner, please form an orderly queue outside the mess
|
|
tent to claim it.
|
|
Doctors have just discovered, that people with hairs starting to
|
|
grow on the palms of their hands are going mad.
|
|
PAUSE.
|
|
They also tell us that people looking for hairs on the palms of
|
|
their hands are already mad.
|
|
|
|
Today thieves broke into the local police station and stole
|
|
fifty pairs of trousers.
|
|
The police are looking, pretty silly.
|
|
|
|
Yesterday a chicken swallowed a YoYo.
|
|
It laid the same egg seventy five times.
|
|
|
|
Here is a late railway annoncement.
|
|
The train now arriving at platforms 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10
|
|
is coming in sideways.
|
|
|
|
Will the man who has just left the train standing on platform 5.
|
|
Please come and collect it as we have enough of our own.
|
|
|
|
|
|
--------------------------------
|
|
From: Unknown
|
|
Subject: Skit - THE LIGHTHOUSE.
|
|
|
|
cast: 1 narrator
|
|
3-6 Scouts for the lighthouse walls
|
|
3-6 leaders, counselors, kitchen staff, etc., number to equal
|
|
the Scouts and will be 'recruited' during the skit
|
|
1 flashlight, or 2 if using 5-6 Scouts
|
|
|
|
Scouts stand in a circle, facing out, feet spread 2' - 3' apart
|
|
but touching feet of Scouts on each side. The flashlight is held
|
|
at eye level and is passed around the circle. Scouts stand tall
|
|
and hold the beacon's beam steady.
|
|
Narrator: "Many years ago the people of a seaside village built
|
|
a lighthouse to warn approaching ships of a dangerous shoal near
|
|
their harbor. It's beacon could be seen for miles, even in fog
|
|
and storms. For many decades, the lighthouse stood firm and give
|
|
safe passage to all who sailed by the village.
|
|
But as the years went by, the villagers grew old and so
|
|
did the lighthouse. The villagers could no longer make repairs,
|
|
the ocean's waves wore away the foundation, the lighthouse started
|
|
to sag and failed at its duty."
|
|
The Scouts now stoop, heads lean to the side and bend their knees
|
|
slightly; the light 'travels' a zig-zag path around.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Narrator: "When the schooners and square riggers started to go
|
|
aground on the shoals, the old villagers knew they had to call
|
|
in experienced people to help with their problem. People who
|
|
were pillars in their own communities and who were solid as a rock."
|
|
|
|
Recruit your favorite 'I'm gonna get you now' people and instruct
|
|
them to go down on their hands an knees and into the walls.
|
|
Leaders are facing in with their derrieres out, and are straddled
|
|
by the Scouts who again stand tall and give a steady light.
|
|
|
|
Narrator: "Now with these new rocks placed into the foundation,
|
|
the lighthouse once again shines a bright beacon and stands firm
|
|
in the stormy surf to withstand the pounding of the waves."
|
|
|
|
Scouts drop the flashlight and then hand paddle the leaders.
|
|
|
|
|
|
--------------------------------
|
|
From: Unknown
|
|
Subject: Skit - SARGE AND THE PRIVATE
|
|
|
|
Sarge and private walking.
|
|
|
|
Private: "I want to rest!"
|
|
|
|
Sarge: "No! we have to finish this hike keep going!"
|
|
|
|
Private: "But my feet hurt" etc. (Whining.)
|
|
Here you can be creative, add a few more excuses...
|
|
|
|
Sarge: "Absolutely NOT!!!"
|
|
|
|
Private: "Ill cry..."
|
|
|
|
Sarge: "Go ahead!"
|
|
|
|
Private: "WaaaaaaHHHHHHHHhhhhhhhhhhh!!!!!!!!!!!"
|
|
Here Sarge gives in and they rest. Next the private wants to stop
|
|
and ' take a wee' (you can always use the "Weeee!" when the Sarge
|
|
finally gives in after the same Rigamarole. and next a drink, and
|
|
finally food. But this is only a day hike so there is no food.
|
|
After more tears, the sarge finds a worm and the private will only
|
|
eat it (on the threat of more tears) if the sarge eats half.
|
|
Of course when he finally does, the private starts bawling again and
|
|
screams
|
|
|
|
Private: "You ate my half."
|
|
|
|
|
|
--------------------------------
|
|
From: stolz@fnusgd.fnal.gov (Mike Stolz)
|
|
Subject: Creative Campfires Compilation
|
|
Date: 19 Jun 92 20:18:47 GMT
|
|
|
|
I have attempted to collect all the Creative Campfire suggestions
|
|
into a single extract. I have ordered and edited them in an effort
|
|
to make them as succinct and readable as possible. I left in the
|
|
Internet addresses of the posters (I hope I got them all straight).
|
|
If anyone has additions, corrections, etc. regarding these
|
|
accumulated suggestions, my address is: stolz@fnusgd.fnal.gov
|
|
============================ cut here +================================
|
|
|
|
In article <1992Jun7.213045.1992@desire.wright.edu>,
|
|
bschroeder@desire.wright.edu says:
|
|
|
|
I am looking for an impressive way to start a campfire. In the past,
|
|
we had been burying a wire to the campfire and using a rocket igniter
|
|
to light it, but that has lost it's thrill as we have been using it
|
|
for too long... Does anyone have any ideas as to how to start a fire
|
|
in a way that will attract some "oohs and ahhhs" ?
|
|
Any help would be greatly appreciated...
|
|
====================
|
|
~From: ALLAN H. YAMAKAWA <U43367@uicvm.uic.edu>
|
|
~Date: Monday, 8 Jun 1992 00:41:51 CDT
|
|
|
|
If you have enough distance between the fire and the nearest Scout so
|
|
that you don't asphyxiate anyone, finely ground potassium permanganate
|
|
heaped into a pyramid with an indented top into which glycerine is
|
|
poured produces a spectacular violet flame which does a nice job of
|
|
starting a fire.
|
|
|
|
Also on the slightly risky side is using a "flaming arrow" which is
|
|
guided on a piano wire into the fire.
|
|
|
|
We used both of those at Scout camps at which I served on staff, with
|
|
lots of oohs and aahs.
|
|
|
|
====================
|
|
|
|
~From: mwilson@orl.mmc.com (Mark Wilson)
|
|
~Date: 8 Jun 92 17:48:26 GMT
|
|
Mark Wilson, Eagle Class of 1973, SM, Troop 565, Deltona, FL
|
|
|
|
Not all impressive openings require pyrotechnic special effects.
|
|
|
|
Near a lake? Have some boys in indian clothing (OA members?) bring
|
|
a lighted torch by canoe from some unseen place to the council ring.
|
|
After a solemn ceremony, or a BRIEF speach, the torch bearer lights
|
|
the fire. Be sure those in the ceremony stay in character.
|
|
|
|
(these two messages inserted as safety follow-ups)
|
|
====================
|
|
|
|
~From: hellmann@cs.scarolina.edu (Douglas R Hellmann)
|
|
~Date: 11 Jun 92 03:27:28 GMT
|
|
|
|
We used to do this for OA ceremonies. The principles would come
|
|
across the lake in canoes which had highway signal flares burning
|
|
from inside the bottom of the canoe. This cast an erie red light
|
|
on them which made a great effect until the camp ranger started
|
|
making them wear life jackets. I can see the reasoning, but the
|
|
ceremony was never the same.
|
|
====================
|
|
|
|
~From: jjohnson@utkvx3.utk.edu (Jay Johnson, UTKVX)
|
|
~Date: 14 Jun 92 06:43:00 GMT
|
|
Jay Johnson, Aquatics Instructor, BSA, Great Smoky Mountain Council, TN
|
|
|
|
The lifejackets (PFDs) can be deleted from the ceremony if the
|
|
protection of the "Indians" can be assured in another fashion
|
|
such as having an emergency boat manned and ready to go with
|
|
trained lifeguards. Also a must is to have the PFDs for the
|
|
"Indians" in the canoe (for this is the law). Another way to
|
|
provide protection for the "Indians" is to keep the boat running
|
|
near the shore instead of coming across the lake with lifeguards
|
|
posted along the the route. If the right measures can be taken,
|
|
the "Indians" can canoe without wearing PFDs, but every possible
|
|
means available must be used to protect the canoeists.
|
|
In short, BSA policy makes the exception for "Special Ceremonies"
|
|
ie OA and camp lighting when special precautions are made.
|
|
This is the ONLY time scouts can be allowed in boats without PFDs.
|
|
|
|
====================
|
|
(initial message continued)
|
|
|
|
Not near a lake? Same as above, but they walk in.
|
|
|
|
Prelight the fire (prevents embarassment), then have someone in period
|
|
dress carry in an historic US Flag, talk about it BRIEFLY then lead
|
|
the Pledge to the Flag.
|
|
|
|
Spotlight the Flag as Red Skelton's "Pledge of Allegience" is played.
|
|
Then everyone joins in the Pledge.
|
|
|
|
Prelight the fire, then, once everyone is present, everyone joins
|
|
in an almost in control rendition of "We're All Together Again."
|
|
|
|
Most any Court of Honor opening can be adapted as a campfire opening.
|
|
|
|
Build your campfire program around a theme, then develop an opening
|
|
that fits.
|
|
|
|
In the pyro arena - adding a small quantity of petro-chemical to
|
|
chlorine (1-2 oz. break fluid and .5 bag powdered HTH are good)
|
|
will generate a very hot, smokey flame. It takes about 15 to
|
|
20 seconds for the reaction. There is an audible hiss several
|
|
seconds before ignition that can be used for cueing. Any number
|
|
of devices can be used to deposit the brake fluid.
|
|
CAUTION: This effect gives off a quantity of potentially harmful
|
|
gas. It should only be used when the fire is some distance from
|
|
the audience. (You should not store pool supplies and automotive
|
|
supplies near each other, either, for the same reason.)
|
|
|
|
Anything used repeatedly loses it's power. The trick is to gather
|
|
a bag full of ideas, use them, throw out the flops and add
|
|
new ones as they come along.
|
|
|
|
There are a number of chemicals that will add color to a flame.
|
|
For example, copper sulfate adds blue-green. I'm at a loss for
|
|
the others. Any help from all you experts. You E-mail it and
|
|
I'll post the results.
|
|
====================
|
|
|
|
~From: hellmann@hickory.cs.scarolina.edu (Douglas R Hellmann)
|
|
~Date: Mon, 8 Jun 92 12:28:02 GMT
|
|
Doug Hellmann, Eagle Scout, Asst. SM, Troop 333, Indian Waters
|
|
Council, Columbia, SC
|
|
|
|
We used to do something extremely cool at summer camp to start our
|
|
OA fires, but the camp ranger won't let them do it any more
|
|
(for reasons you will see).
|
|
|
|
Fill a styrofoam coffee cup about 2/3 full of heavy duty break fluid
|
|
and put it down in the fire. (We also coated the fire with some
|
|
diesel fuel from the camp tractor so it would start quickly.)
|
|
|
|
Then make up some sort of ceremony that ends with someone standing
|
|
near the fire (prefereably in the back). This person then pours a
|
|
handful of hth pool cleaner into the cup of break fluid, says
|
|
something appropriate ("Let there be fire!"), and steps back
|
|
(especially if you used diesel). The hth and the break fluid
|
|
will make some popping noises and then burst into flames.
|
|
|
|
After we perfected the ceremony, it had a really great effect.
|
|
Imagine someone walking up to the fire and commanding it to light,
|
|
and then it bursts into flame! Great imagery, but of course it is
|
|
terribly dangerous.
|
|
|
|
I understand that all of those chemicals were nothing for kids
|
|
to be playing with (I wonder how anyone found out about them in
|
|
the first place!?) and as I said, the camp ranger no longer allows
|
|
this sort of stuff to go on. It might give you something to think
|
|
about though.
|
|
|
|
Another idea that someone presented as a replacement was to have
|
|
a wire strung from a tree or something else high, in such a way
|
|
that it couldn't be seen. Then when the command comes for the
|
|
fire to be lit, something somes shooting down the wire into the
|
|
fire and lights it. Sort of like lightning or a big fire ball
|
|
or something.
|
|
====================
|
|
|
|
~From: kell@lark.jsc.nasa.gov (TED KELL)
|
|
~Date: 9 Jun 92 13:05:46 GMT
|
|
|
|
Pine 'o Pine (a pine oil based soap) and pool shocking compound
|
|
(Calcium Hypoclorite) - dust from the last campfile makes a hell
|
|
of a bang. At my woodbadge course the staff did this. They had
|
|
the scoutmaster put on the dust. The fire went off with a bang,
|
|
blew off the scoutmasters campaign hat. First time I have ever
|
|
seen anyone teleport himself. He refused to help start anymore
|
|
campfires for the rest of the course. Be careful.
|
|
Another approach would be to have someone start the fire with one
|
|
of those fire by friction sets sold in _every_ trading post, and
|
|
used by _no one_.
|
|
Build the fire in front of the group, explaining what you are
|
|
doing as you do it. Who knows, some of it might seep into their
|
|
heads.
|
|
====================
|
|
|
|
~From: mcghee@hpscit.sc.hp.com (Glenn McGhee)
|
|
~Date: Tue, 9 Jun 1992 17:37:52 GMT
|
|
Glenn Mcghee, Assistant Scoutmaster, Troop 80 Mt. View, CA
|
|
|
|
Years ago when I was a scout, the leaders let the scouts
|
|
"take charge" of the campfire ceremony. One of the most successful
|
|
campfire lightings was done by using a 6-volt lantern battery,
|
|
an old Ford spark coil, some wire and charcoal lighter.
|
|
On command like "let there be fire" an accomplice connects the
|
|
battery to the spark coil and the spark starts the fire.
|
|
The setup....
|
|
|
|
Place the spark coil as near the fire as possible to keep
|
|
from having to un the high-voltage the wires any farther
|
|
that necessary. The coil can be hidden, out of view, in rocks
|
|
near the fire. The high-voltage wire and the return ground
|
|
wire can be buried in the dirt. Run the wires for the lantern
|
|
battery to the place where your accomplice will be and cover
|
|
the wires deep enough that no will see them or trip on them.
|
|
|
|
Use a small jar lid to hold the liquid charcoal lighter. Fill
|
|
the lid wi h paper towel and add the charcoal lighter. This
|
|
lid is placed in the center of the fire. The ground wire is
|
|
placed under the lid. There is no reason to make a good
|
|
connection to the lid because the spark from the high-voltage
|
|
wire will jump to the lid and then the ground wire. The
|
|
high-voltage wire must be placed above the lid so the spark will
|
|
jump into the paper towel and liquid charcoal lighter and thereby
|
|
light the liquid. Build a tee-pee of kindling around and over
|
|
this setup so the lid and wires are hidden. Build a log-cabin
|
|
campfire around the tee-pee. Inside the log-cabin, add more
|
|
kindling. Add about twice as much as you think you need.
|
|
The more kindling you add the faster the fire will grow.
|
|
The lighting.....
|
|
|
|
Upon command from the ceremony fire lighter, the accomplice
|
|
connects the battery to the wires and the spark coil generates
|
|
the high-voltage spark. This spark lights the liquid charcoal
|
|
lighter and the liquid will burn long enough to start the kindling.
|
|
|
|
Problems and Failures...
|
|
|
|
Failure to use the proper wire for the high-voltage.
|
|
Once use twisted "bell" wire to go from the spark coil to
|
|
the fire. The insulation broke-down and there were sparks
|
|
all along the twisted wire but none in the fire! You can use
|
|
old automobile ignition wire -BUT- remember the wire will be
|
|
distroied by the fire.
|
|
|
|
Between the time the fire was set and the time the ceremony
|
|
was to start, the high-voltage wire was no longer over the
|
|
lid and the spark jumped from the high-voltage wire to the
|
|
OUTSIDE of the lid and didn't start the liquid charcoal lighter.
|
|
|
|
Lantern battery was nearly dead. It did work but there were
|
|
some time of helplessness before the fire started.
|
|
|
|
The spark coil was not well hidden and someone spotted it.
|
|
When the spark coil operates there is a vibrating reed that
|
|
makes noise and gives off sparks that are easily seen at night.
|
|
|
|
I STRONGLY suggest that you experment with lighting a lid of
|
|
charcoal lighting fluid before you make this setup for the
|
|
ceremony. This could save you from the embarrassment of
|
|
turning to the crowd and saying "Anyone got a match?".
|
|
I know.....I have been there.
|
|
====================
|
|
|
|
~From: bschroeder@desire.wright.edu
|
|
~Date: 9 Jun 92 14:00:45 EST
|
|
|
|
What we have been doing was a bit safer than that. We bury
|
|
an outdoor extension cord just a couple inches underground.
|
|
We plug an old, thin extension cord into the end of the outdoor
|
|
one and make sure the junction is secure and buried. We then
|
|
ran the loose end of the cheap cord into the fire and attached
|
|
a rocked igniter on the end. We put that in a bundle of
|
|
matches, being sure the igniter touched at least one match.
|
|
Then we built the fire around that (and used a bit of kerosene
|
|
to be sure it lit). Then all we had to do was use a 6V battery
|
|
and touch the two prongs on the outdoor extension cord to the
|
|
battery terminals (the person who did this was well hidden
|
|
behind trees or whatever). Then, on command, the fire would
|
|
light. It was VERY impressive the first few times we used it,
|
|
but now it is getting a bit old. I am thinking about just
|
|
lighting it with a torch for a while, and then in a couple
|
|
years, using the wir /igniter method again...
|
|
====================
|
|
~From: wjh0265@tamsun.tamu.edu (William Hobson)
|
|
~Date: Tue, 9 Jun 1992 17:35:02 GMT
|
|
|
|
How about mixing salt peter and sugar in a 2 to 1 ratio.
|
|
You can put a big pile of it in the middle of the campfire
|
|
and string a trail of it away from the campfire and then
|
|
light the trail. It burns hot and smokey, so use caution
|
|
- it beats the heck out of gasoline. I used to use this
|
|
mixture for low cost smoke bombs as a kid. The salt peter
|
|
I used came from the drug store and was used as an animal duiretic.
|
|
|
|
====================
|
|
|
|
~From: wayne@eng.umd.edu (Wayne C. McCullough)
|
|
~Date: Wed, 10 Jun 92 18:57:38 GMT
|
|
|
|
One thing our OA group did once was use matches. No kerosene,
|
|
nothing like that. Only matches to start the fire. It went up
|
|
very quickly. Let me explain:
|
|
|
|
We bought about 20-30 boxes of matchbooks. We then built an
|
|
ignitor by taking 2 bricks, and puting a bunch of ignitors on
|
|
one of the faces of each brick. Then we stapeled a bunch of
|
|
the books together so that it formed a long row, sort of like:
|
|
|
|
+--------------------+
|
|
| Brick! |
|
|
+--------------------+
|
|
//////////////////// <----ignitors
|
|
ooooooooooooooooooo Match heads
|
|
-<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< Matchbooks
|
|
ooooooooooooooooooo More Match heads
|
|
\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ More ignitors
|
|
+--------------------+ ( ^up)
|
|
| Other Brick! |
|
|
+--------------------+
|
|
|
|
A string is tied to the matchbooks, and so when it is pulled,
|
|
a flame is started. This ignitor contraption should take about
|
|
1-2 boxes of matches. all the others spread them out loosly
|
|
around the contraption. This is a lot of matches, and should
|
|
go up quickly.
|
|
|
|
The big advantage of this is that it is safe, and can be used
|
|
at sites that prohibit kerosene and other GS water. Practice
|
|
it first tho, so you know how hard to pull the ignitor.
|
|
You only get one shot.
|
|
|
|
One important thing with all of this is to have a decent
|
|
accompanying open cerimony. Having a guy walk up and
|
|
throw a lit match into the fire can be just as impressive
|
|
if it is accompanied by the right words.
|
|
====================
|
|
|
|
~From: kdc5072@cs.rit.edu (Kevin D Colagio)
|
|
~Date: 10 Jun 92 20:37:36 GMT
|
|
|
|
An idea that I had when I worked at a camp was the following
|
|
(it was for the OA campfire...)
|
|
|
|
Put a small pile (about 2 or 3 inches around) of blackpowder in
|
|
the center of the fire wood to be. Run a small line of blackpowder
|
|
to the pile and out to a small (1 inch in diameter) pile located
|
|
on a flat rock. Put a fireing cap (used in a muzzleloader) on the
|
|
edge of the (1 inch) pile....have another "fuse" running to the
|
|
fire wood to be (we had 2 fires). At some point in the ceremony,
|
|
have someone stike the ground (the firing cap, actually) with a
|
|
"tomahawk" or other hammer like item. This would cause 2 strips
|
|
of fire to ignite the wood....(of course, the wood would have
|
|
kero or other ignitable liquid on it....)
|
|
The only problem would be if someone steps on (and breaks) a "fuse"...
|
|
|
|
====================
|
|
|
|
~From: stu@voodoo.boeing.com (Stuart Liddle)
|
|
~Date: 12 Jun 92 18:25:15 GMT
|
|
|
|
When I worked on camp staff we regularly came up with innovative
|
|
ways to start the campfire. At one camp we used to use a car
|
|
battery, flash bulb filaments and some kind of quickly combustible
|
|
material (dryer lint soaked in lighter fluid, dry tinder, etc).
|
|
There was a couple of wires buried in the ground leading from
|
|
the campfire to a point out of sight (behind some bushes) where
|
|
a staffer would touch the wires to the battery terminals causing
|
|
the filaments to flash and ignite the combustible material,
|
|
thus starting the fire as if by "magic". Now, this was coupled
|
|
with a pseudo-native American "ritual" to light the fire by
|
|
calling on the "spirits."
|
|
At another camp we started the fire with an Indian ceremony
|
|
where the "Indian" shot an arrow out into the water (our campfire
|
|
area was on a point jutting out into Puget Sound). Then the fire
|
|
was lit (I forget exactly how, doesn't really matter). Then the
|
|
first song=leader came clambering up over the rocks leading up
|
|
from the water wearing a wet-suit with the arrow in the back!
|
|
Of course he led everyone in "What do you do with a Drunken Sailor?"
|
|
;^)
|
|
This was one of the best campfire openings I've ever been involved
|
|
with.
|
|
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
From: anet@penumbra.West.Sun.COM (Annette Thomas)
|
|
Subject: Words to "ANNOUNCEMENTS"
|
|
Date: Mon, 14 Dec 1992 20:33:54 EST
|
|
|
|
Does anyone out there know the words to the song "Announcements"?
|
|
|
|
|
|
~From: alee3@mach1.wlu.ca (allan lee 9207 U)
|
|
|
|
The words I remember are:
|
|
|
|
ANOUNCEMENTS, ANNOUNCEMENTS, ANNOUNCEMENTS.
|
|
|
|
A HORRIBLE DEATH TO DIE, A HORRIBLE DEATH TO DIE
|
|
A HORRIBLE DEATH TO BE BORED TO DEATH
|
|
A HORRIBLE DEATH TO DIE
|
|
|
|
ANNOUNCEMENTS, ANNOUNCEMENTS, ANNOUNCEMENTS
|
|
|
|
I'M FALLING ASLEEP ON MY FEET, I'M FALLING ASLEEP ON MY FEET
|
|
I AM FALLING ASLEEP AS HE BORES ALONG
|
|
I'M FALLING ASLEEP ON MY FEET
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
|
~From: Paul_Parry@brown.edu (Paul Parry)
|
|
|
|
Here's the version I was harassed :-) with as a camp program director..
|
|
|
|
Announcements, Announcements, Announcements
|
|
[Paul] has got another one, another one, another one,
|
|
[Paul] has got another one he has them all the time.
|
|
Announcements, Announcements, Announcements...
|
|
|
|
We sold our cow, we sold our cow,
|
|
We have no use for your bull now, For Your Bull Now.
|
|
Announcements, Announcements, Announcements.
|
|
|
|
We love you [Paul], oh yes we do-oo.
|
|
We love you [Paul], and we'll be true
|
|
When your not with us, YA-HOOOOOO
|
|
Oh, [Paul] we love you.
|
|
|
|
I'd then say something like "If anyone is interested in a staff position,
|
|
there will be a number of openings after this meal."
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
|
~From: anthropo@carina.unm.edu (Dominick V. Zurlo)
|
|
|
|
Another version that we used, and I don't remember all of the verses:
|
|
(also, each verse uses it's own original tune):
|
|
|
|
Announcements, Announcements, Announcements
|
|
When you're up you're up (all stand)
|
|
When you're down you're down (all sit)
|
|
But when you're only half-way up (half-stand)
|
|
You're neither up (stand up) or down(sit).
|
|
|
|
Announcements Announcements, Announcements
|
|
Row, row, row the boat gently down the stream,
|
|
merrily, merrily, merrily, merrily
|
|
we're a submarine....
|
|
|
|
Announcements Announcements, Announcements
|
|
What a terrible way to die,
|
|
a terrible way to die,
|
|
a terrible way to be talked to death,
|
|
a terrible way to die...
|
|
|
|
Announcements, Announcements, Announcements
|
|
Swing low sweet Chariot (sing this line slow, and with all the
|
|
feeling of the original)
|
|
SCRAPE!! (slight pause)
|
|
|
|
Announcements, Announcements, Announcements
|
|
Here comes Peter Cottontail,
|
|
Hoppin' down the bunny trail...
|
|
BANG!
|
|
|
|
Announcements, Announcements, Announcements.
|
|
|
|
There are many more verses along these lines, but I can't
|
|
remember them all. Happy singing....
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
|
~From: pnsf01dw@UMASSD.EDU (Dennis J. Wilkinson)
|
|
|
|
I was always assaulted with this version...
|
|
|
|
A terrible death to die, a terrible death to die
|
|
A terrible death to be talked to death
|
|
A terrible death to die
|
|
Announcements, announcements, announcements, please
|
|
|
|
Row row row your boat gently down the stream
|
|
Ha ha fooled ya' I'm a submarine
|
|
Announcements, announcements, announcements, please
|
|
|
|
Mary had a little lamb little lamb little lamb
|
|
Mary had a little lamb
|
|
The doctors were surprised...
|
|
Announce.... (oh, you get it...)
|
|
|
|
When Mary had a little lamb the doctors were surprised
|
|
But when Old MacDonald had a farm they couldn't beleive their eyes...
|
|
|
|
|
|
(My staff eventually figured out that it was a bit more taunting to give
|
|
just enough pause in between verses to make me or whoever think that they'd
|
|
wrapped it up... luckily, I catch on quicker than they did most of the time.
|
|
|
|
To any fledgling Program-Directorish person or Scoutmasterish person out
|
|
there... it helps to have some signal with your staff to let them know when it's
|
|
*not* a good time for this song... either don't say you're up for announcements
|
|
or have that Scout Sign at the ready...)
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
|
~From: mdtanner@athena.mit.edu (Marc Tanner)
|
|
|
|
Announcements, Announcements, Annooouuncements.
|
|
|
|
[tune of "The Farmer in the Dell":]
|
|
What a terrible way to die! What a terrible way to die!
|
|
What a terrible way to be bored to death,
|
|
What a terrible way to die!
|
|
|
|
Announcements, Announcements, Annooouuncements.
|
|
|
|
[At this point, someone would stand up and do a monologue, and then
|
|
the whole group would repeat the chourus. We did as many monologues
|
|
interspersed with choruses as we could get in before the program
|
|
director made us shut up (which was in itself a hit with the campers)
|
|
Here are a sampling. Some had a tune, others were just spoken.]
|
|
|
|
[...]
|
|
Little Miss Muffett sat on her tuffett
|
|
Eating her curds and whey;
|
|
Along came a spider and sat down beside her
|
|
So she beat it over the head with a spoon.
|
|
|
|
Cow, cow, we have no cow;
|
|
We have no need for your bull now.
|
|
|
|
Spider, spider, on the wall
|
|
Haven't you got no sense at all?
|
|
Can't you see this wall's been plastered?
|
|
Can't you see, you little...spider.
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
|
~From: wjturner@iastate.edu (William J Turner)
|
|
|
|
[...]
|
|
Make announcements short and sweet,
|
|
Short and sweet, short and sweet.
|
|
Make announcements short and sweet.
|
|
They're so BORING!!!
|
|
|
|
--------------
|
|
~From: donm@hplsla.hp.com (Don Mathiesen)
|
|
|
|
Have you ever heard a windbag, a windbag a wingbag.
|
|
Have you ever heard a windbag. You'll here one right now.
|
|
They go this way and that way. This way and that way.
|
|
Have you ever heard a windbag. You'll here one right now.
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
|
~From: susan@noaapmel.gov (Susan Collicott)
|
|
|
|
We always sang:
|
|
|
|
Announcements, announcements, announcements.
|
|
When you're up you're up,
|
|
and when you're down you're down,
|
|
and when you're only halfway up
|
|
you're neither up nor down.
|
|
Announcements, announcements, announcements.
|
|
|
|
We stood up on 'up', sat down on 'down', and stood half-way up on 'halfway up'.
|
|
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
From: stephen.a.mohr@cdc.com (Stephen Mohr 612-482-5634)
|
|
Subject: Words to Song "Ain't Goina Rain no More"
|
|
|
|
I've been looking all over for the words to the song "Ain't Gona Rain no More"
|
|
I have only two verses, the kids love this song. I know of another verse about
|
|
a sailor, but not all the words. This is what I do have:
|
|
|
|
[Refrain]
|
|
Oh, it ain't gona rain no more, no more
|
|
It ain't gona rain no more
|
|
How in heck can I wash my neck
|
|
if it ain't gona rain no more
|
|
[1st Verse]
|
|
A bum sat by the sewer
|
|
And by the sewer he died
|
|
And at the corners inquist
|
|
They call it sewer side
|
|
[2nd Verse]
|
|
A peanut sat on the railroad track
|
|
It's heart was all a-flutter
|
|
Along came the 415
|
|
Toot toot, peanut butter
|
|
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
|
~From: pnsf01dw@UMASSD.EDU (Dennis J. Wilkinson)
|
|
|
|
How 'bout:
|
|
|
|
My father is a butcher
|
|
My mother is a cook
|
|
And I'm the little hot-dog
|
|
That runs around the brook
|
|
[Chorus]
|
|
My father built a chimney
|
|
HE built itup so high
|
|
He had to take it down each night
|
|
To let the moon go by
|
|
[Chorus]
|
|
|
|
---------------
|
|
~From: DRPORTER@SUVM.SYR.EDU (Brad Porter)
|
|
|
|
My dady is a doctor,
|
|
my mommy is a nurse,
|
|
and I'm the little needle
|
|
that gets you where it hurts...
|
|
|
|
Mary had a little lamb,
|
|
her father shot it dead
|
|
and now she takes it to school
|
|
between two slices of bread...
|
|
|
|
This is a great song to sing at the opening of a rainy campfire - which for
|
|
some reason we had a lot of this year!!! Hope you find thiese useful - I've
|
|
just know them from singing them, I can't tell you where they come from.
|