My station taught the boys how to find the hardness of a rock, which is one of the advancement requirements. I had them each do the hardness tests on a chunk of obsidian (hardness 6) and a chunk of granite (hardness 7). It was hands-on and they did really well.
| Breaking geodes at Cub Scout Day Camp |
Pam and Esther had gone on many expeditions collecting rock samples. Pam also purchased a supply of some of the harder to find minerals. For example, there were quarter-sized pieces of petrified wood, gypsum, graphite, basalt, granite, quartz and obsidian. The Olsen kitchen was a small sweat shop breaking larger rocks into 180 pieces of each of these.
During my sessions there were only two injuries. One slightly smashed finger from a misdirected hammer blow which caused a 10-minute crying fit. The other was a cut finger from a flying chip (which is why we had the boys wrapping the geode and wearing goggles).
In my opinion Pam did a superlative job of organizing and executing a character building week for 180 well behaved Cub Scouts. The periodic morning rain and afternoon sun did not dampen the enthusiasm.
3 comments:
Sounds like fun!
Bless you for bringing all those geodes home and Pam for all that initiative! What a fun event!
And it got Gideon outside
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