Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Secret Agent Blue and Gold Banquet



Our Blue and Gold banquet this year was a lot of fun.  Everyone had a blast (even the leaders)!  Here's what we did.  I'll attach the Reader's Digest version here.

Invitations
Two weeks ahead of time we had a "secret agent" stop by and deliver the invitations  to our denner.  He was taken back to say the least.  It was fun to watch.  I think his eyes doubled in size!  We had one of the boys from our troop dressed in a suit with sunglasses and a Fedora.  This picture is very similar to what our secret agent looked like.  Having him stop by really got our boys excited for the banquet.


Decorations
For our table centerpieces we made briefcases with Top Secret signs on each side.  The briefcases were made of cereal boxes spray painted black.  The handles were also made out of cardboard and hooked on with brads. 

The only other decorations was bright yellow caution tape which we had all over the room.  This was the first thing the boys noticed when they walked in.  It really added to the ambiance.   

A fun tradition our pack has done for years is make a placemat wordsearch with all the boys names.  This is a great way to keep kids busy while you're taking care of those last minute details.  You can make these very easily at: puzzlemaker.com

One final prep item was preparing a playlist of  "spy" music to play in the background when the boys and their families arrived.  Songs included: Pink Panther theme, James Bond theme, Mission Impossible and a few others.

The Big Night Arrives
When guests arrived they were given a mustache to aid with their disguise, a spy name and secret agent badge.  To make the badges I used 8163 size labels, an excel spreadsheet and mail merged them.  Super easy! Once they picked their name we had them put their thumb print on the badge. 

For dinner we had sloppy joes, chips, vegetables and dip.  For dessert we made chocolate cupcakes with chocolate frosting and a red shoe string piece of licorice to make it look like a bomb.  I'm not sure the kids could tell what they were but enjoyed them nonetheless.

Awards were presented to the Scouts by Sherlock Holmes who pulled them out of his top secret briefcase. 

Activities
Following the awards we played a fun family game called Bring It On.  This is a great game that can be played almost anywhere and with almost any age.  Items needed: 
  • rectangle banquet type table set up at the front of the room
  • list of items to Bring It On
  • an announcer (the person that tells the families what to bring up)
  • at least a couple of judges
Playing is really simple (another plus).  The announcer gives the family the names of 1 or 2 items to bring to the table.  We divided the audience into 2 teams. The first team to get the item(s) to the table gets the point.  Very easy.  The key is to pick general items that someone in the room will most likely have such as a article of clothing with a college name, something round, something you can read.  Encourage creativity such as if you say a picture of a man it doesn't have to be an actual picture, it could be a cell phone picture, a dollar bill, quarter or anything along these lines that have a picture of a man. If you say something green, it could be someone's green eyes, a jacket, bead, piece of candy or anything else you can think of that's green.  It's nice to play a practice round to make sure everyone is on the same page.  We ended up playing for about 20 minutes.  It could have gone longer but we wanted to end while people were having fun.  It helps to give them warning that you're wrapping up, "Ok, 5 more rounds."  I think people loved this game because all ages got involved. 

Another game we played that began when the boys walked in was Spy.  Some may know this game by the name Assassin.  We chose to call it Spy and instead of "killing" people we had them reveal the spy they've been assigned.  When the boys walked in they chose a name from a basket.  Once the opening ceremony was over everyone was free game, meaning spies could be revealed.  To reveal a spy the boys had to get near enough to their target to tap them on the shoulder twice.  If they were tapped this meant they had been exposed and are now out of the game.  The revealed spy would then give the revealer the name they were targeting.  The spy then goes after this spy.  If it all works out right it will come down to two spies and then ultimately a final "Master Spy".  It was fun to watch the boys be so paranoid and worried about anyone getting close to them.  Some thought we should let all the kids play and not just the Scouts.  Due to the varying ages and understanding levels we ended keeping it to just the Scouts but had the families be the body guards to protect their secret agent.   

Everything was set up, carried out and taken down in less than 3 hours. This theme was nice because everything was so easy, boys loved pretending to be spies and the whole family was able to get involved. 

Your mission should you choose to accept it is....do this with your Pack!

Friday, March 20, 2015

Giving Back

I wear lots of hats including, Mom, wife, employee, Camp Director, Cub Scout Den Leader, Order of the Arrow Advisor, Relief Society Homemaking Leader and a few more I won't bore you with.  I love Pinterest!  I get a tons of ideas there.  I'm starting this blog as a way to give back.  Occasionally, I have a light bulb moment and think I should share this.   My posts will likely be few and far between and probably pretty random, so you'll never know what's coming.  Here goes!

Marble Madness Pack Night


A couple of nights ago we had a Pack Night where the theme was Marble Madness.  It was great fun for all involved.  Here's what we did.

We started off with our pre-opener making marble art.  It's so simple.  It can be done in lots of different ways.  We chose to keep it really simple.  Start out with cardboard flats from your local grocery story.  Put in a piece of regular copy paper  2-3 marbles (it's fun if one is a shooter) and 2-3 colors of acrylic paint (you can get this at any craft store).  Simply drop 1 dime size drop of each color on the sheet of paper.  It doesn't really matter where you drop the paint.  It often looks easier to spread the paint and cover the white if they're spread out in a triangle shape.  Have the artist tilt the box to roll the marbles through the paint to spread it around and mix the colors.  Once they're done set it aside to dry (takes about 15-20 minutes.)

We don't do much singing but opted to share a song we had just learned at our district Cub Scout Belt Loop Camp.  It's called Oh, I Wish I Were - sung to the tune of "If You're Happy and You Know It".  Here are the words:

Oh I wish I were a little hunk of mud, (HUNK OF MUD) - echo
Oh I wish I were a little hunk of mud, (HUNK OF MUD)
I'd be ooey, ooey, gooey
Under everybody's shoey,
Oh I wish I were a little hunk of mud. (HUNK OF MUD)

Oh I wish I were a little stripe –ed skunk, (STRIPE – ED SKUNK)
Oh I wish I were a little stripe –ed skunk, (STRIPE – ED SKUNK)
I'd sit up in the treezies
And perfume all the breezies
Oh I wish I were a little stripe –ed skunk, (STRIPE – ED SKUNK)

Oh I wish I were a little bar of soap, (BAR OF SOAP)
Oh I wish I were a little bar of soap, (BAR OF SOAP)
I’d go slippy, slippy,  slidey
Over Everybody's Hidey
Oh I wish I were a little bar of soap, (BAR OF SOAP)
Oh I wish I was a little radio (radio)
Oh I wish I was a little radio (radio)
I’d turn off with a click

For our activity we broke up into 3 areas which rotated between every 10 minutes:
  • Marble Racers
  • Ringer - A Marble Game
  • Marble Alley
Marble Racers
I've attached the pattern for these. They need to be copied on cardstock.  The secret to making these is to keep the sides straight.  The marble has to be able to move back and forth for it to tumble.  Again, we kept this really simple.  We  had the patterns cut out so we the youth would have lots of time to race.  We used a 8 foot banquet table with one leg folded down covered with a sheet for our ramp.  (The sheet provides just enough friction to keep it from sliding straight down).  The kids folded their own and then glued them with a glue stick (liquid works okay but often bubbles the paper and takes a while to dry).  Once they're dry (about 1 minute) go over and race away.  We just had a free-for-all but organized races would have been fun as well.
If you're racer is working correctly it should go down the ramp like the illustration shows.  If it doesn't it's likely one of these reasons: 1 - not enough friction or 2 - the marble doesn't move freely inside the casing. Kids of all ages get a kick out of seeing something so simple work.

Ringer - A Marble Game
Ringer is probably the most well known marble game.  Sadly, kids these days don't play marbles like they used to.  (I have actually not ever played marbles except for Cub Scouts either).  Due to our time constraints we played a simplified version of the game.  It also helped that we had been working on the new Cub Scout Marble Adventure for several weeks so the boys had some idea how to shoot their marbles.   Here are the rules for the game:
  1. Draw a ring (a large circle – usually about 5 to 10 feet across) and put 13 marbles in it . The marbles should be in a cross and spaced 3 inches apart.
  2. Each player shoots in turn from outside the circle, trying to hit a marble out of the ring while keeping his shooter inside the ring.
  3. If the shooter has a miss, his turn is over and he picks up the shooter.
  4. If the shooter has a hit but the shooter also rolls out of the ring, he keeps the marbles that rolled out and his turn is over.
  5. If the shooter has a hit and the shooter stays in the ring then player shoots again from the place where the shooter stayed.
  6. On each new turn a player shoots from anywhere outside the ring.
  7. The person who collects the most marbles is the winner.
Marble Alley
For this game we used blankets and towels to make a perimeter (so we didn't have marble
 everywhere).  Inside the boundary we put all sorts of things that the youth could try and hit when they shot their marble.  Each item had a point value.  The youth had to decide if they wanted to go for items that were close but low in point value or go for a difficult target that would get lots of points.

To finish off the night we closed with a Cubmaster's minute (How to Treat People - see below) that went along with the core value - Compassion.  We then gave the youth a Good Turn coin and explained how it worked.  We challenged the youth to put the coin in their right pocket.  At some point they would do a good turn and move their coin to their left pocket.  Each night they should place it on their dresser and start over the next morning putting the coin in their right pocket. 

What would a Pack Night be without refreshments?  Since our Pack Night was held on St. Patrick's Day we served Chocolate Mint ice cream.  Our other idea was doughnut holes.

Here's a few links so you don't have to re-invent the wheel:
Happy Scouting!
 

St. Patrick's Day Printable

It's hard to find St. Patrick's Day decorations so when I ran across this quote I knew I had to make it into a printable.  This is formatted to 8.5 X 11 size paper.  Enjoy!