Troop 33 is sponsored by First Lutheran Church in DeKalb, Illinois and has been serving area youth since 1925. Troop 33 is a very active outdoor troop. Our troop slogan is "Always an Adventure".
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
SEPTEMBER FEST
September 21, 22, 23, 2012
September Fest is a family oriented weekend event aimed at raising money to support St Mary's School in DeKalb. It includes a carnival, book sale, bake sale, community stage programs, soundstage country and rock bands, beer garden, and food booths.
Troop 33 had two purposes at September Fest.
SERVICE PROJECT
Our first purpose was to provide a service project each night by cleaning up picnic tables under the big top tent, emptying trash containers into a main container, and sleeping under the big tent to provide overnight security. The nights were very cold for late September with temperatures dipping into the 30's. Friday night it was wind and rain. Strong winds tore apart some tents and blew over a tall scaffold tower. Saturday night was dry with less wind and temperatures dropping into the low 30's producing some frost. The boys worked hard and withstood the cold. They did a great job.
FOOD BOOTH
Our food booth served funnel cakes and lemon shake ups. Friday night we set up our booth and passed our health inspection. We sold quite a few funnel cakes and even a few lemon shake ups, which was surprising considering the cold and rain showers on Friday. Early morning's strong winds made it unsafe to operate a deep fryer. High winds with gusts of 30mph were predicted to continue. Any accident with the deep fryer could cause serious injuries. We shut down the booth and packed the trailer on Saturday. We didn't set up on Sunday. The food booth was a major disappointment.
Monday, September 24, 2012
PLC RETREAT
September 16, 2012
This afternoon meeting event is for the Patrol Leaders Council member to do program/calendar planning for Troop 33. They completed planning for 3 months of program activities. It includes camping, fundraising, hiking, fishing, cooking, first class express, horseback riding, and climbing, plus much more.
ORDER OF THE ARROW FELLOWSHIP
September 14-16, 2012
The Fall Fellowship for Lowaneu Allanque Lodge #41 was held at the Adventure Camp near Rochelle, Illinois. Candidates: Brandon, Dan, and Hunter, all successfully completed their Ordeal at this weekend event and are now Ordeal Arrowmen in the Order of the Arrow. We are very proud of their accomplishment and look forward to their continued participation in the lodge.
AYSO CONCESSIONS
for September 8, 15, 22, 29, 2012
Scouts once again are working to provide concessions at the AYSO soccer fields held at Kiwanis Park in DeKalb. Each Saturday morning hundreds of soccer players with hundreds of parents and grandparends descend upon Kiwanis Park in the cool/cold morning air. We are their to support them with Jonamac Donuts, hot coffee, hot chocolate, snacks, hot dogs, and sausages. Weather varies from warm sunny days to cold windy days and light showers. Our Scouts work to staff and east booth with our Winnebago Trailer and a west booth with our custom built brown concession trailer.
DEKALB KITE FESTIVAL
September 9, 2012
The Kite Festival began years ago when a little boy asked his parents why DeKalb didn't have a kite festival. Now it does. Senior Patrol Leader of Troop 33, Nathan Overmann, is the actual kiteboy. His parents help run the event. This year's amazing sky above the north 40 will had things like a 90-foot octopus kite plus fighting kites, stunt and dancing kites, ladybug, teddy bear, owl, manta ray and cat kites. There was kite-making, candy drop, games, and other activities. Many Scouts enjoyed a beautiful afternoon with a perfect wind for kiting.
JONAMAC OVERNIGHT
September 8-9, 2012
Jonamac's annual Scout overnight attracts Boy Scouts, Cub Packs, and Girl Scouts from around the area. Troop 33 participates in this camp overnight at Jonamac each year. Scout found many fun things to do in the barnyard as well as the corn maze, themed to celebrate the 100th anniversary of DeKalb Genetics. Early Sunday morning Troop 33 cooked a pancake breakfast for about 130 Scouts camping overnight. We enjoyed fun activities, camped overnight, and cooked for a huge crowd of Scouts, making it a fun and productive event.
Cathoree
September 7-9, 2012
The Cathoree is a weekend event sponsored by the Catholic Church and held at Camp Big Timber in Elgin, Illinois. Troop 33 was represented at the event. Friday featured a movie and cracker barrel. Saturday began with Holy Mass and was followed by workshops, adoration, national speakers, games, skits, and more! Closing was held on Sunday with Holy Mass. The Cathoree met and fulfilled the retreat requirement for the Ad Altare Dei and Pope Pius XII religious award programs.
DeKalb Cornfest
August 24,25,26, 2012
This year's 3-day Corn Fest program included Troop 33 as one of the food vendors. We sold a menu of lemon shake-ups, cold pop, funnel cakes, hot dogs, sausage, burgers, and chips. We also recycled aluminum, cleaned up the soundstage area each night after performances, plus sold and delivered ice to other vendors. Friday and Saturday had fair attendance, but Sunday was an all-day light rain, just enough to keep people away. It proved to be a lot of work for a smaller return than previous years.
AYSO Concessions
August 18, 25, 2012
Troop 33 operates concessions at the AYSO soccer program held at Kiwanis Park in DeKalb. The last two Saturdays in August, bright and early, Scouts and leaders brought out hot coffee, pop, donuts, snacks, and hot dogs for the hundreds of people at AYSO. Both Saturdays worked out great.
YMCA Swim Day
August 18, 2012
Troop 33 had special use of the YMCA for a group of Troop 33 Scouts to gather and work on swimming requirements for Second Class and First Class ranks. Some older Scouts were there to work as mentors for the younger Scouts. Some free swim time was avaiable at the end to enjoy the water. It was a geat activity and will be repeated in the future.
Living History Weekend
August 18-19, 2012
During the opening day of AYSO Soccer, Troop 33 brought a little history to Kiwanis Park in DeKalb.
The event offered residents a chance to see what life was like for Native Americans and settlers in the 1830s to 1860s, and how the two groups worked and lived together, said Lori Tolliver, who owns Makwaj Trading in DeKalb and makes traditional Anishinabe crafts.
Heck, also known as “Dirty Kettle,” portrays a French trapper/mountain man that came West for fur trading. He said he enjoys exposing people to the Native American/mountain man culture in which he is well-versed. “It’s called bringing history to life,” he said.
Tolliver worked with Boy Scout Troop 33 to organize the event. “I’ve been wanting to do a living history event here in DeKalb because we don’t have one,” she said. “... To make a community really well-rounded, it needs to know who’s living there. This is an opportunity for [people] to come out and integrate themselves into that.” The event featured Native American games and dancing, a wood carver and the Northern Illinois Outlaws, who dressed in period-appropriate cowboy gear. With a living history event, “the education is the bottom line,” Tolliver said. She hopes to see it grow and become an annual event.
Cliff Golden, scoutmaster for Troop 33, said the weekend gives children an idea of what it was like to be a boy or girl in the 1800s. Some of the Boy Scouts camped at the park Saturday night. “This is what we had before Xbox,” he said of the Game of Grace, which involves a hoop and sticks and teaches coordination and timing.
Heck shares information on the Northern Cheyenne nation of Native Americans. He showed off features of the tepee and explained the meaning behind the instruments and items within it. Most people haven’t been in a tepee, he said, and he loves to see the awe on children’s faces when they step inside. Next to the tepee was a quartermaster tent, which Golden said white settlers who trapped and traded would have used. Under blue skies Sunday, Heck and a few Boy Scouts practiced different beats on a drum, which is brought out for ceremonies or celebrations.
As part of the Anishinabe nation, Tolliver’s 16-year-old son, Brandon, is passionate about his family’s culture. He’s also a member of Troop 33 and believes it’s important to keep the history alive. “We’re not in a reservation lifestyle-setting right now, so a lot of people don’t know about native culture,” he said.
The more often things like the living history event are held, the more people will realize “native people are very much alive,” he said.
Interpretive historian Herb Heck brought two authenic tipi's, a drum circle, mountain man encampment, Northern Illinois Outlaws brought cowboys, George Tolliver, master carver, demonstrated wood working skills, Bad River Anishinabe Nation discussed and demonstrated Native American culture, art, music and dance, feather wrapping, craft blanket, hatchet/knife display, and Native American games. It was a weekend with lots of fun and educational activities.
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Court of Honor - Zachary Aase Eagle Scout
August 13, 2012
Our troop held a Court of Honor, which honored many Scouts with a number of advancement awards. The highlight was an Eagle presentation to Eagle Scout Zachary Aase. Zach earned 38 merit badges before completing Eagle. He completed two major Eagle projects; roofing the parsonage garage for First Lutheran Church, and painting and refurbishing an area for Feed 'em Soup, a community project to feed needy people. Over the years, besides attending summer camp, Zachary traveled to relief efforts for Hurricane Katrina, Hurricane Ike, and helped work in restoring an abandoned high school in Kentucky into a disaster relief center.
Boone County Fair
August 12, 2012
Troop 33 provided support for the Northern Illinois Outlaws as they competed in cowboy mounted shooting at the Boone Country Fairgrounds. Our Scouts providee the essential service of setting balloons between firing times. Scouts were provided with lunch and earned money for their Scouts accounts. It was a long day with a lot of running, but everyone enjoyed the experience.
Michigan Dunes Adventure
August 9-11, 2012
A great summer adventure took place in Michigan. We enjoyed camping along Lake Michigan, climbing sand dunes to see fantastic views, swimming at various beaches at various, pizza parties, and generally exploring the area. We found adventure on the giant sand dunes not only by foot, but also by Jeep. The off-road Jeep dune adventure was the most thrilling part of the trip. For the last adventure of the trip we enjoyed a kayaking trip on the Crystal River.
Lincoln Highway Buy Way
August 9-11, 2012
Troop 33 provided service hours to benefit the DeKalb Area Women's Center with their annual Lincoln Highway Buy Way, the longest yard sale that extends across 5 states. Scouts helped in the morning and afternoon to help move items to set up and take down their yard sale. The DeKalb Area Women's Center is located at 1021 State Street in DeKalb. A parking lot 1/2 block south of their building was the location of their yard sale. Scouts helped move things between these two points. They also helped with the grounds by pulling weeds.
Pathways to Eagle
August 3-5, 2012
This weekend event combines advancement, hard work, fun, and fellowship. About 1,000 Scouts and leaders gather together in Bolingbrook, Illinois to share a weekend. It began on Friday night with ice skating in an indoor arena. Afterwards an evening cracker barrell and then off to sleep in our tents. On Saturday boys attended merit badge classes. They had four class sessions scheduled, two in the morning and two in the afternoon. Everything was going fine until a severe thunderstorm entered the area just as session three was concluding. A forced evacuation into a building brought 1,000 Scouts and leaders into a long wait. High winds and rain pounced the area. As the storm passed we were released back outside. An evening was scheduled for a water park adventure, but that was cancelled due to the storm. We took down camp early to return to DeKalb. Enroute we stopped at Bass Pro Outlet to enjoy visiting their store.
National Cowboy Day
July 29, 2012
This event celebrates a national holiday known as National Cowboy Day. At a property near Malta, Illinois known as Amber Sun Acres where the Northern Illinois Outlaws had a competition in a relatively new sport known as Cowboy Mounted Shooting. Riders in period dress ride horses through a course shooting baloon targets as they ride by. It's the closest thing to watching the cowboys of old western movies, except it's live entertainment. In addition to watching the Cowboy mounted shooting competion, we also did some Native American dancing with our troop's own Anishinabe warrior, Brandon. It was a great way to spend an afternoon.
Bacon Palooza
July 28, 20012
This is a first year effort for a new annual event in downtown DeKalb. Troop 33 operated a food booth for Bacon Palooza, a special food event featuring bacon products. Our booth was very popular and included in a newspaper article and television report. It was successful for a first time event and we look forward to participating next year.
Kish Fest Parade
July 27, 2012
Scouts from Troop 33 had a float in the Kish Fest Parade, which involved a trailer with two canoes with Scouts pretending to paddle them down the parade route. It won the Mayor's Award for best local float from an organization. Everyone had fun and enjoyed participating in the parade.
Tyler Ryan - Welcome Home Parade
July 24, 2012
Tyler Ryan, 21, returned home to DeKalb after a tour in Afghanistan, where he’d been serving since Dec. 21. He spent two weeks in DeKalb and Leland before heading back to his home base in Alaska, then back for another tour in Afghanistan. He's part of the 25th Infantry Division, 4th Brigade Combat Team "Spartan", 3rd Battalion, 509th Parachute Infantry Regiment "3 Geronimo".
Tyler Ryan joined Boy Scout Troop 33 in 2001. He remained in the troop until moving to Leland. Some of his adventures included summer camp at Camp Lowden, spelunking at Mammoth Cave, and touring the General Patton Museum at Fort Knox, Kentucky. His father, Mike Ryan, was an Eagle Scout in Troop 33.
When Tyler arrived in DeKalb, Troop 33 Scouts posed in a large welcome message photo for him. Tyler visited our Scouts at Camp Lowden during Wednesday night activities.
A truck with some Troop 33 Scouts took part in his welcome home parade while other Scouts watched and waved flags from along the route. The parade came west through downtown DeKalb traveling to Annie Glidden Rd the turned around to come east back through downtown to conclude at Sullivan's Tavern.
NASCAR RACING - STP 300
July 22, 2012
A group of Scouts and adults attended the STP 300 NASCAR race at Chicagoland Speedway. It was a great day with easy parking and choice seating. The long and exciting race was won by Elliott Sadler driving #2. champion of the STP 300 and winner of the $100,000 prize. It was a great race the boys enjoyed watching.
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
Camp Lowden
July 15-21, 2012
Troop 33 sent 38 Scouts to Camp Lowden for a fun filled week. They enjoy programs with Archery, Great Campfire Programs, Camping, Canoeing, Cooking, Games, Hiking, Nature Study, Riflery, Swimming, Horseback Riding, COPE Course, and many ofther exciting things at Camp Lowden in Oregon, Illinois. It's a week that will be remembered as a highlight of the summer
East Race Rafting
July 14, 2012
An exciting fun-filled event included rafting on the East Race of the St Joseph River in South Bend, Indiana. The park district operates the program. An 18-year-old person must be in each raft. No flip flops allowed. You must have tennis shoes, water shoes, or sandals. Everyone got plenty wet while rafting. Lifeguards and rescue kayaks were stationed along the half mile man-made whitewater run for safety. It was a great activity for whitewater fun and rafting
Equipment Day
June 30, 2012
Troop 33 has a lot of equipment stored in a lot of places. It's often necessary to organize and inventory our gear. We prepared for a very busy schedule of our upcoming summer activities. We prepared to add to our fleet of trailers to better store and transport equipment. It was an investment of some time on that afternoon of equipment maintenance
Western Adventure
June 15-24, 2012
Boy Scouts from DeKalb’s Troop 33 traveled west to experience an exciting summer adventure. Beginning at the Badlands, they explored a landscape almost like the moon’s surface. Ellsworth Air Force Base provided a tour of historic aircraft and a missile training site. Looking into the granite faces of Washington, Jefferson, Roosevelt and Lincoln was a monumental experience at Mount Rushmore.
At Yellowstone, America’s first national park and the world’s most active geothermal site, Scouts saw hundreds of geysers, hot springs and mud pots. They saw an amazing waterfall at Yellowstone Canyon. “Yellowstone was my favorite part of the trip. I loved seeing all the hot springs and Old Faithful,” Scout Ryan McNett said. “Spending a few nights at the Tetons was great; we were so high up that snow covered the mountains.” Camping in the Tetons found them fishing at an alpine lake and hiking higher than 10,000 feet.
They watched a team of hang gliders launch off a high mountain ridge; thermal air spiraling upward lifted the gliders 1,000 feet above their launch site. They saw moose, bears, deer, elk, herds of buffalo, plus many other species of native wildlife. “One morning I woke up and heard a bunch of buffalo walking past our tents. I wasn’t expecting that,” Scout Aidan Witthoff said. “It was pretty exciting.” At Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado, snow-covered mountains set the stage for their next challenging outdoor adventure. Backpacking means carrying everything you need on your back as you hike into the wilderness. Group gear is divided among each Scout.
They began hiking through forest, but as the trail climbed higher, rocky peaks appeared in the distance and they encountered some areas with drifts of snow, remnants from winter storms. Still higher the trail became steep and thin air made breathing harder. Snacks and rest breaks provided time to enjoy the amazing scenery. “The backpacking was hard, but I got through it,” Ryan said. “It was so much fun.” Visiting the Strategic Air and Space Museum on their final day, they learned about military aircraft, nuclear missiles and space vehicles.
The trip was about the boys learning new things, visiting new places, discovering natural wonders, sharing loyalty, teamwork, responsibility and overcoming new challenges.
Flag Day Ceremony
June 14, 2012
We participated in a Flag Day ceremony at Oak Crest Retirement Center. Scouts ceremoniously folded an American Flag during a program.
Oak Crest is filled with veterans. Though elderly in years now, there were once young soldiers fighting for the freedom we enjoy today. It is an honor to be involved in a ceremony to honor what they fought so bravely for so many years ago.
June 14, 2012
We participated in a Flag Day ceremony at Oak Crest Retirement Center. Scouts ceremoniously folded an American Flag during a program.
Oak Crest is filled with veterans. Though elderly in years now, there were once young soldiers fighting for the freedom we enjoy today. It is an honor to be involved in a ceremony to honor what they fought so bravely for so many years ago.
Gebhard Woods Dulcimer Festival
June 8-10, 2012
Thousands of people visited Gebhard Woods State Park in Morris, Illinois for the Gebhard Woods Dulcimer Festival. The festival featured folk music and dulcimers. Troop 33 provided the food concession for the festival. Scouts earned money for their Scout Accounts while working. We also attended a car show Saturday night in Morris. It was a free campout, we earned money, worked hard, and had fun.
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
SHABBONA CANOE TRIP
JUNE 3, 2012
We canoed on Lake Shabbona in the section away from the main body, in its backwaters, paddling up Indian Creek. There was plenty of quiet water away from the wind, lily pads, waterfowl, and wildlife. In low water areas we did plenty of dragging, but we traveled all the way back on the creek to the bridge on the entry road of the park. It was a great day for paddling.
Monday, September 3, 2012
FLAGS SERVICE PROJECTS
May 28, 2012.
On Memorial Day we installed flags at 6:00 a.m. in downtown at DeKalb Square. We will installed 50 flags, one for each state at the park. We also installed 5 flags at Memorial Park at the corner of 1st & Lincoln to represent the 5 branches of service. Afterwards we traveled to Fairview Cemetery where we installed an imposing "Avenue of Flags" at the entrance of the cemetery to honor the veterans who rest there. We returned at 5:00 p.m. at Fairview Cemetery for the job of retiring and folding all the giant flags. After our cemetery project was complete, we then traveled to DeKalb Square and Memorial Park to retire the 55 flags in those locations
EQUIPMENT DAY
MAY 27, 2012
Troop 33 has a lot of equipment stored in a lot of places. It's often necessary to organize and inventory our gear. Our very busy schedule of upcoming summer activities requires us to prepare our fleet of trailers to better store and transport equipment. We had some hard working people invest time on an afternoon of equipment maintenance.
BACKPACK TRAINING
MAY 26-27, 2012
This weekend training helped prepare for the high adventure trip going west to Wyoming and Colorado in June. Scouts did some hiking with full pack and learned some of the basic skills needed for a successful backpacking trip. Scouts learned to pack light, but pack smart; and to be prepared for mountain sized adventure.
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