Rover Scouts (Scouting Ireland)

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Rover Scouts
Rover Scouts (Scouting Ireland).svg
Owner Scouting Ireland
Age range18-26
HeadquartersNational Office
LocationLarch Hill, Dublin 16
CountryRepublic of Ireland and Northern Ireland
Affiliation World Scout Movement
Previous
Venture Scouts
Website
http://www.scouts.ie/rover_scouts/what_we_do-41.html
WikiProject Scouting fleur-de-lis dark.svg  Scouting portal

Rover Scouts in Scouting Ireland are aged between 18 and 26 years of age. It is a new section and is being set up in many universities around the country. The main activity done in the Rover Section is the Explorer Belt but there are a number of other activities that Rover Scouts are involved in, such as International Service Projects.

Contents

Explorer Belt

The Explorer Belt was traditionally linked to the Venture Scout Section, but since the introduction of ONE Programme the Explorer Belt is now done by Rover Scouts. Rover Scouts, in teams of two, walk a distance of at least 200 km in 10 days completing tasks along the way. [1] [2] These tasks include maintaining a log of the journey, consisting of a daily route, menu, budget and account of the day's activities. [2] Each team must also complete a number of challenges, both Prescribed and Personal which encourage the participants to engage with the local populace and to learn about the local culture. [1] Each team must find its own way back to a base camp where the expedition leaders are waiting for them. Teams are dropped off in an unknown location with just a map, the location of base camp and a small amount of money on which to survive. The aim of the event is to test skills of communication, physical endurance and teamwork. Complete immersion in a foreign culture necessitates an ability to adapt to the norms of a different society with different customs and values, usually also a different language.

The Explorer Belt award is shared by other scout and guide associations. [3] [4] [5]

Related Research Articles

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The Explorer Belt is an award available to Rover Scouts in Irish Scouting. Over the last 43 years, over 2,000 Venture and Rover Scouts have gone on Explorer Belt Expeditions. Ireland's Explorer Belt is recognised as being one of the most challenging yet ultimately rewarding activities in Scouting. The Explorer Belt was traditionally linked to the Venture Scout Section but since the introduction of ONE Programme, and the standardisation of age ranges the Explorer Belt is now a Rover Scout event and participants must be over the age of 18. A similar award is available in other Scout associations around the world.

References

  1. 1 2 "rover scouts - explorer belt". Scouting Ireland . Retrieved 5 April 2015.
  2. 1 2 "Finding My Community in Scouts | Outsider.ie". 24 April 2022.
  3. "Around the districts: Boherbue, Cill na Martra, Clondrohid, Western Duhallow". Irish Independent . 13 September 2019.
  4. Becton, Gavan (26 July 2019). "Meath women taking on Guiding's ultimate challenge". Meath Chronicle.
  5. "Sliema Rover Scouts on Explorer Belt Mission in Czechia". Times of Malta. 26 August 2022.