Our luck held for another year and we had a dry, not too cold evening with only light winds. With the predicted increase, yet again, in the number of teams we re-used a set of routes from a number of years ago, and a brand new six mile route with a total of 28 teams.
To help manage the increased number we drummed up support from the scout troops and explorer units so we could run incident bases on both routes including two food bases and deployed more than 50 staff on the night and our thanks to all these volunteers (well nearly all volunteers, a few were volunteered!)
We always advertise that the bases may educate, entertain and test the young people and this year we had country code questions (need to be more difficult next time), the problem of getting the fox, a chicken and bag of grain across a river (2 lengths of rope, some carpet tiles and a good dose of imagination), vegetable identification (didn’t they do well!), Black Bart’s Treasure, dry skiing with up to four on a pair of skis, and a “bomb” base. We also laid on a surprise base towards the end of each route titled silent zone – it appears some Scouts and a few leaders don’t seem to understand it applied to all in a team!
We always award points for timeliness between bases and points for teamwork and success at the tasks set as most of the young people seem to enjoy the competitive element, with four “classes” this year: Scout 6 mile route accompanied by an adult, Scout 6 mile route unaccompanied, Scout 10 mile unaccompanied route and an Explorer 10 mile unaccompanied route.
We know where next year’s routes will be based but are obviously saying nothing for many months to come although the diary has already been consulted.
Fiona Burrows and Alan Hubber