Waite`s Way: Crews then and now
Transcription
Waite`s Way: Crews then and now
June 24th, 2016 Phil News Issue Three Skyler Ballard/PhilNews Waite’s Way: Crews then and now Ellyn Washburne, the Philmont Musicologist, plays her violin at Hunting Lodge. Alex Cenci/PhilNews Making music and memories Eleanor Hasenbeck Staff Writer A Philmont campfire may not always have a fire- fire bans sometimes bar open flames in the backcountry- but it always has music. As Philmont’s Musicologist in the position’s inaugural year, Ellyn Washburne helps make sure the tunes at campfires across the Ranch never miss a beat. “When you’re out in the woods, you either don’t have your iPod or your iPod dies, and you can’t listen to the music you normally listen to,” she said. “It kind of goes back to the way it used to be before that stuff was invented. You have to make music yourself or listen to other people play it, so live music takes on an even more special role.” Washburne supports camps as they build their performances. They consider a number of important elements: crowd interaction, delivery, focus and message. Camps choose music to create a theme in their campfires. Staff at Ponil’s Cantina Show sing of cowboys, while the Crater Lake boys perform songs about the hardships of logging. At interpretive camps, staff also consider the time period in which their characters would’ve been singing. Pueblano, for example, doesn’t perform anything written after 1930 until their after-show. Continued on page 5 Dave Sharp, top right, and son Ryan Sharp, bottom left, smile for their first crew photo together at Philmont on June 16, 2016. Suzannah Evans Staff Writer Waite Phillips was dedicated to ensuring that the youth of tomorrow would be given exquisite, life changing opportunities. From donating the land for the largest Boy Scout Camp in America to envisioning the Philmont Training Center, Phillips arranged for youth and leaders to work together to improve the world. The Boy Scouts of America offers a way for both age groups to improve alongside one another. One very special way this occurs is with parents and children. Summers are a great time for parents and children to bond. There really isn’t a better way to deepen a family connection than by hiking mountains together. Most Scouts who participate at Philmont are only a few years aways from leaving home. A summer together at Philmont allows for a lifelong memory and something to talk about and reminisce over for years to come. Philmont has seen generations of Scouters since it opened in 1938. Since then, alumni have brought their children and even grandchildren back to backpack these beloved trails together. Wanting their children to grow in the ways that they had, fathers and mothers sign up to advise and accompany their youngsters. One such family is represented by three generations this summer. Jim Sharp is here with his son, Dave, and his grandson, Ryan. The Sharps are with Troop 555 from Columbus, Ohio. Continued on page 3 2 | PhilNews News and Photo Team Marketing Manager Bryan Hayek NPS Manager Cassidy Johnson PhilNews Editor Hannah McCarthy PhilNews Writers Suzannah Evans Eleanor Hasenbeck Photography Manager Tyler Sanders Photographers Drew Castellaw Alex Cenci Skyler Ballard Clay Helfrick Gabriel Scarlett Lex Selig Madelynne Scales Photo Lab Lead Sean McElligott Photo Lab Techs Nathaniel Aron Liam Inbody Lead Marketing Specialist Alexander Bohlen Marketing Media Staff Thomas Officer Lead Videographer Kreable Young Videographer Claire Ficke PhilmontScoutRanch.org Friday, June 24, 2016 Friday, 24 Saturday, 25 Salsa NightBaldy Pavillion 7:30 p.m. PTC Closing Campfire June 24-July 14 Sunday, 26 Monday, 27 Tuesday, 28 Wednesday, 29 Thursday, 30 5 p.m. 7:30 p.m. PhilNews Deadline PTC Opening Campfire Ecology (CTC) Leave No Trace (CTC) Geology (CTC) PTC Western Night 9 a.m.- 5 p.m. Haircuts in SAC ($15) Brat Day! Friday, 1 Saturday, 2 Tie Dye Services Gravel Area 5 p.m. Angel Fire PhilNews Deadline Adventure Astronomy (CTC) Forestry (CTC) Friday, 8 Saturday, 9 Sunday, 3 Sunday, 10 GPS and Navigation (CTC) Monday, 4 Tuesday, 5 Wednesday, 6 Thursday, 7 11 a.m.- 1 p.m. July 4th BBQBaldy Pavillion PTC Western Night 9 a.m.- 5 p.m. Haircuts in SAC ($15) Taos Plaza Live Monday, 11 Tuesday, 12 Wednesday, 13 Thursday, 14 8 p.m. Dodgeball- Baldy Pavillion 9 a.m.- 5 p.m. Haircuts in SAC ($15) Taos Plaza Live 8 p.m. Root beer floatsSSAC Kitchen 5 p.m. Brat Day! PhilNews Deadline Taos Pueblo Pow Taos Pueblo Pow Taos Pueblo Pow Wow Wow Wow Event Descriptions Activities Staff Taos Plaza Live is a summer concert series, located in the Taos Plaza. Throughout the summer, there is a free concert every Thursday night from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Rio Pueblo Open Disc Golf Tournament is a PDGA B-Tier sanctioned tournament at Sipapu Ski and Summer Resort. It is open to pros and amateurs. Round 1: Picuris Pueblo Disc Golf Course | June 25, 2016 This high desert course offers Featured sites Activities Staff Dawson Cemetery What/Why: Dawson was the site of two separate coal mining disasters in 1913 and 1923. Dawson was a coal mining company town founded in 1901 when rancher John Barkley Dawson sold his coal-rich land in northern New Mexico to the Dawson Fuel Company. The Dawson Railway was built connecting the town to Tucumcari, New Mexico. The mines were productive, and by 1905 the town boasted a population of nearly 2,000, later reaching around 9,000. Dawson did not become a ghost town until 1950, when the Phelps Dodge Corporation shut down the mines. At closure, Mine Six was Taos Plaza Live GPS and Navigation Astronomy (CTC) (CTC) Olympic Event spectacular views, creative routes and great shot variety. Round 2: Two Gray Hares Disc Golf Course | June 25, 2016 With its pastoral setting and minimal climbing, Two Gray Hares offers creative pin placements and shot variety that’s easy to navigate. Round 3: Sipapu Disc Golf Course | June 26, 2016 Hailed as one of the most scenic disc golf courses in the country, Sipapu’s alpine course features epic shots, incredible elevation changes, stream crossings and amazing wildflower meadows. Alabama Shakes is playing at Kit Carson Park in Taos on August 6.Tickets: $60 in advance, $65 day the largest producer, and several other mines had been previously closed out because of declining demand. The town of Dawson is now largely gone, with only a few buildings remaining. The only significant remaining landmark in Dawson is the cemetery, which is on the National Register of Historic Places. The cemetery is filled with iron crosses painted white marking the graves of many miners who died in the mines. Dawson Cemetery is open to the public year round for free. Directions to Dawson Cemetery from CHQ 41 mins 22 miles 1. Turn left onto NM-21N - 4.5 miles 2. Turn right onto US-64 E 12.7 miles 3. Turn left onto A 38 (this turn is just before you reach Cold Beer) - 4.6 miles 4. Dawson Cemetery will be on your right P Movie Night SAR and Infirmary (CTC) PTC Western Night of; Doors: 6:30 p.m.; Show: 7:30 p.m. Angel Fire Adventure is on July 3, 2016. Enjoy breathtaking mountain scenery with a run through picturesque Angel Fire, New Mexico. The gentle rolling course is great for the beginning and avid runners, and poses just enough of a challenge for those looking to test their endurance. The elevation might take your breath away, but the views are worth it! Taos Pueblo Pow Wow is a gathering of Indian Nations in a common circle of friendship. Indian Country is made up of many tribal nations, bands, villages, and pueblos, each with their own traditional tribal beliefs and practices. A pow wow is the common fiber which draws Indian people together. It is a time for sharing with old friends and making new friends; a time for singing and dancing. It is a time for trading craft goods and trading songs. For Fiesta de Taos the good people of Taos celebrate the Feast of St. Anne and St. James, as they have for centuries. The annual event, popularly referred to as “The Taos Fiestas,” allows the local population to put aside their labor for two days and bask in the leisure of the holy days. What/Why: Mostly a ghost town now, Elizabethtown began in 1866 with the founding of area gold mines and the Mystic Copper Mine. It was New Mexico’s first incorporated town. Founded by the commander of Fort Union, Captain William H. Moore, and named for his daughter, Elizabeth Catherine Moore, the town grew to over 7,000 residents at its height of prosperity in 1870, and it was designated the first seat of the newly formed Colfax County. In 1872 there were only about 100 residents left as the mines dwindled, and the county seat was moved to Cimarron. The town revived somewhat when the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad passed nearby in the early 1890s, making mining feasible once again. The village was also part of the Colfax County War. A fire took most of the town in 1903, and the town mostly died out by 1917 with the decline in the mines. Serial killer Charles Kennedy lived between Elizabethtown and Taos, luring weary travelers to dine and stay with him at his cabin; he may have killed 14 or more people. Kennedy was killed by a group of angry vigilantes, led by the notorious Clay Allison. Directions to Elizabethtown from CHQ 49 mins 33.8 miles 1. Turn left onto NM-21N - 4.5 miles 2. Turn left onto US-64 W 23.8 miles 3. Turn right onto NM-38 W 4.9 miles 4. Turn left onto Elizabeth Town Overlook - 0.2 miles 5. Turn left onto B 22 - 0.1 miles 6. Turn right onto Comanche Creek Rd. - 0.2 miles Elizabethtown PhilmontScoutRanch.org Philmont Olympics As the nations of the world will be competing for honor and glory this summer, so shall we, the Philmont staff, compete with one another. There will be four events over the course of the summer where single representatives or small teams from each department will vie for ultimate victory. The PSA has agreed to be a neutral arbiter for the event and their judgements will be final. Each athlete must be a Philmont staff member, able to perform in the event if chosen, and prepared to carry his or her department to glory. Teams For the purposes of this event, all Base Camp departments and the PTC will be grouped together, and the Horse Department will compete with the Backcountry h Department. Each team will have s a liaison that will be responsible s for coordinating with Activities. The four teams and their liaisons e are: d • Backcountry and Horse Department-Jimmy Fritze (Backcountry Manager) e • Base Camp and PTCg Savannah Moore (Security) • ConservationNathan d Coney (ADC for t Conservationists) y Will Suggs l • Rangers(Associate Chief Ranger) e If you want to represent your r department in the Olympiad, e contact your team Liaison. Conservation Tetrathlon The second Olympic event will take place on July 8. Prepare yourselves for Conservational Glory. The conservation event will take place at The Rocky Mountain Scout Camp. The four events are as follows: Fuel Canister Sledge One team member must smash as many empty fuel canisters as possible in 30 seconds to contribute to the Ranch’s sustainability efforts. Canisters must be fully flattened and checked through a predetermined slot. UTM Signpost Installation Install a UTM signpost with your partner, using a digging bar and post hole digger. Each team will be ranked in two categories: time of completion and sturdiness (judged by a shove from a PSA official). Time Sturdiness 1st 500,000pts 500,000pts 2nd 300,000pts 300,000pts 3rd 150,000pts 150,000pts 4th 100,000pts 100,000pts Rock Rolling You and your partner, using rock bars and brute Philmont elbow grease will move a rock from one predestined spot to another. Points will be awarded for time. PhilNews | 3 Friday, June 24, 2016 Continued from page one: Crews then and now Jim first went on Trek in 1960 and returned with David in 1986. Both are eager for Ryan to share in the experience, as they find it to be one of a kind. “It’s incomparable, you know? There’s no place where you can have as fantastic of a backpacking experience with all the program and neat people. It’s the Mecca of Scouting,” said Dave. Jim’s hopes are high for his son and grandson. “[I hope they gain] great comradery and outdoor leadership skills and fun. It’s a great experience!” said Jim. Ryan is excited to participate at Philmont. “The main reason I wanted to do Boy Scouts was because of the High Adventure [opportunities]. Philmont was one of the big things on my list,” said Ryan. Hailing from Spring, Texas is Crew 1333. Among this Crew are two father-daughter pairs. Andy Fike, who came to Philmont for the first time in 1983 is here with his daughter Camryn. “I heard that it was going to be really fun,” said Camryn. Olivia Larson is here with her father, Chris, who is returning after his first trek in 2006. Chris first went on Trek with Olivia’s brother a few years ago. “My brother said that [Philmont] was really pretty, and that it was a great experience,” said Olivia. Representing San Antonio, Texas is Troop 501. Several fathers are experiencing their first Trek with their sons, while Matt Dooley is returning, this time, with his son Evan. Matt hopes that his son takes more away from Philmont than solely a great hiking experience. “Evan is the Crew Leader, so beyond him exercising the Scout skills that he has learned, I’m really looking forward to him developing his leadership skills... and bringing [his group] together as a team over the next ten days,” said Matt. Evan looks forward to growing with his comrades. “[I’m looking forward to] going out here with a really good group of friends and having a great time,” Evan said. Phillips’ vision has already been tangibly seen in the work of the Philmont Scout Ranch and Training Center. As he was a family man himself, Phillips probably would have been full of joy at the sight of children and their parents hiking the hills he once called home. Work Crew Sprint Load a pack with necessary gear for a work crew run (provided) and sprint 300 meters, then alternate with your partner who must sprint back to the start/finish line. The following point system will be used to score the Fuel Canister Sledge, Rock Rolling and Work Crew Sprint. Time 1st 1,000,000pts 2nd 800,000pts 3rd 600,000pts 4th 500,000pts Members of Venture Crew 1333 sit in front of the Tooth of Time for their crew photo on June 16, 2016. Many father-daughter pairs like the Fikes and Larsons (pictured here) will enjoy treks together throughout the summer. Submissions to the PhilNews are welcome anytime! If you would like a chance to contribute to the PhilNews,please send your articles, story ideas,and/or creative writings to the PhilNews Editor at [email protected]. Deadline: Saturdays @ 5p.m. 4 | PhilNews PhilmontScoutRanch.org Friday, June 24, 2016 PSA Volunteer Vacation: New program to debut in September Phil Winegardner Board Member Philmont Staff Association Would you pay to come back and work a week at Philmont? The answer was a definite YES! for 30 PSA members who signed up to participate in the first PSA Volunteer Vacation taking place this coming September 17-24. The event sold out in two hours when registration opened March 1. The PSA Volunteer Vacation was designed as an opportunity to get out to the Philmont backcountry, get dirty, and give back to Philmont in a lasting, meaningful way. This program will be an annual event, and in 2016 we will be building a new spur trail off the Sawmill and Thunder Ridge trail connecting the brand new Whistle Punk trail camp to the top of Cito Peak – where no trail has gone before. Eventually, this trail will go to Cypher’s Mine, providing a route through a seldom used part of Philmont. After one night in Base Camp, the volunteers will be shuttled to Sawmill and then hike to Whistle Punk Trail Camp – home for the next 5 days while they work on the trail construction. At the end of the week, the workers will be rewarded with a little rest and relaxation. They’ll hike to a destination of their choice and spend a night on the trail before being picked up the next day. ConnecttoPast, Back in Base Camp, for the last night, they’ll be treated to a steak dinner and recognition provided by Philmont. The PSA Volunteer Vacation gives new meaning to the familiar IWGBTP slogan. Not only do you “Get Back” to Philmont, but now you can “Give Back” to Philmont. What a great opportunity for PSA members! This year’s Volunteer Vacation may be sold out, but start planning for the 2017 program. Details will be announced in January 2017. PRESENT, The Volunteer Vacation patch can be earned by those who particpate in the week-long service opportunity. andfuturePhilmontstaffwiththe… PHILMONTSTAFFASSOCIATION Lookforwardto: HighCountrymagazine,year-roundevents,PSAwaterbottlesandotheritems, booksaboutPhilmonthistoryandlore,SeasonalStaffScholarships,andmore!!! It’sjust$15.00forayear’smembership! I-CampthisformtothePSAorstopbyourofficenexttotheBeaubienRoomatPTC. SIGNUPNOW!!! www.philstaff.org Name: _______________________________________________ Position/Dept.: ______________________________________________ MailingAddress: _______________________________________ City,State,ZIP: ______________________________________________ Birthday:_______________________________________________ Email: ______________________________________________________ Signature:______________________________________________ MARKHEREFORPAYROLLDEDUCTION(throughJuly31):_____ PhilmontScoutRanch.org PhilNews | 5 Friday, June 24, 2016 Continued from page one: Making music and memories “Music is the voice of the culture of a time period,” said Austin McCord, a Program Counselor at Pueblano. “There’s so much emotion expressed through these songs. For example, workers who were having awful days would sing songs like ‘Shanty Man’s Life’ [a work song about logging in the lonesome woods] to express how awful their work was but how proud they were to be doing it.” Washburne travels to camps throughout the summer, twice to each staff camp, to give performers feedback and improve their performance. She’s also working to document campfires digitally and physically. She uploads audio recordings of each performance she attends to the internet. She’s only missed one since she began uploading them in 2014-- Pueblano, last summer. Washburne is also building files of music specific to each backcountry camp. In the past, camps have been able to pull from a handful of songs they find in their program boxes, but campfires were largely put together from scratch during a few weeks at the beginning of each summer. “Philmont is a really interesting place for music, because there’s so many people involved in it who normally wouldn’t consider themselves musicians, or even listen to the type of music that’s played at Philmont outside of Philmont,” Washburne said. “In the backcountry camps even if you don’t play music, you’re usually still involved in the campfire, whether singing or banging a tambourine or telling a story.” For Washburne, the position is a labor of love. Music brought her to Philmont. Her father was inspired to play guitar after being on staff at Philmont in the 1980s. He suggested she work at the Ranch and play in the campfires. She’s done it ever since she started in 2010. She’s been singing since she can remember. By her early teens, she was already able to play piano and violin. Today, she’s added guitar, mandolin and a bit of of bass and banjo to her repertoire. Washburne has an undergraduate degree in music, and she’s currently pursuing a graduate degree in musicology at the University of Kentucky. Washburne says she has been a part of many simple moments that build a Scout’s experience. Once, while working at Beaubien, the staff invited a participant to play the bass. The next evening on her days off, Washburne saw the same camper at Crater Lake. At her suggestion, he played the bass there too. After the summer ended, she received a message from the Pueblano staff members listen as Ian Shown plays the National Anthem on the saxophone before the start of Loggerball on Wednesday, June 15, 2016 at Pueblano. Skyler Ballard/PhilNews Ellyn Washburne sits in the audience and takes notes during the Clarks Fork campfire performance. She notes things that stand out to her during the performance: things that she liked, improvements and constructive criticisms. Alex Cenci/PhilNews Scout’s father, thanking her for giving the boy a chance to play. It had shaped the camper’s trek. “There’s been several times like that, where something that really took very little effort for me and didn’t seem to be a big deal, turned out to be a big deal,” she said. “I like moments like that.” For Washburne, music is a crucial part of Philmont. “When people play music together it’s a human activity that you’re all participating in, so it’s kind of a bonding experience a lot of times,” she said. “At the same time there’s already a community here at Philmont, so the community creates the music, but also the music helps create the community.” To listen to Washburne’s campfire recordings, visit philmontfieldrecordings. bandcamp.com. Alex Brady plays the washboard during the Clarks Fork campfire performance. Alex Cenci/PhilNews David Brown, left, Carter Smith, middle, and Conor Walsh, right, laugh together during their performance on Tuesday, June 14, 2016 at the Ponil Cantina show. Skyler Ballard/PhilNews 6 | PhilNews Chaplain’s Corner: A Philmont crew Elder Paul Anderson LDS Chaplain Drew Castellaw/PhilNews Pastor Peter Vaught Protestant Chaplain The opportunity to be a part of Philmont Scout Ranch came 56 years after I heard of this wonderful place. My first exposure to the idea came in 1960. At 12 years old, I was a newly minted Tenderfoot Scout. Our Scoutmaster painted a beautiful scene describing Philmont as he told of loading up the burros with gear and setting out for each day’s hike. Since that day I have been dreaming of coming to the Philmont Ranch. Why did it take me 56 years? An excellent question for which I have no answer. I mentioned it to the Charter Representatives for my churches as I served local congregations for 37 years. But the idea never went anywhere. After my retirement from the obligation of serving a congregation, I finally had the free time to make my dream a reality. Last winter I mentioned my dream to a member of my local council. Sometime later, I received an email from him indicating that Philmont was accepting applications for their Chaplaincy ministry, and here I am. PhilmontScoutRanch.org Friday, June 24, 2016 My ministry has been marked by service to the local church with detours into the hospital chaplaincy: Notably general hospital, psychiatric and substance abuse wards. I have also served on national and local camp staffs in the Chaplaincy role. One important aspect of the Philmont Chaplaincy program is the sense of community we Chaplains feel. We are comfortable in our personal faith. We also want to facilitate the faith of each staff member and Scout as they discover and follow their own path to faith. It is a joy to live and serve with my colleagues. I am proud to call them my brothers. I live in Tucson, Arizona with my wife Carrie Beth. My service to the local church is split between support for the church I attend on Sundays and my work with pastors and churches south of the border once a month. Carrie Beth, and I look forward to the joy of being here in this beautiful place with all of you as we drink in the physical grandeur of this corner of paradise. In 2015 a crew arrived at Philmont full of excitement and eager to hit the trail and experience the magic of hiking the trails in God’s country. As part of their pre-hike preparations they attended an evening Chapel Service. They listened to the experiences of returning crews and were encouraged by the Chaplain to work together, look out for each other and look for those special moments when God could touch each of them. Eleven days later they came back to Chapel Service. This time they were asked to share their experiences. First the thorns, which were the mud the rain and the cold, the usual struggles. Then they were asked to share their roses. Four of them spoke up and shared the same experience. It was being together on top of Mount Phillips and the entire crew having their own Mountain Top Experience. Alex Cenci/PhilNews Henri Chaix Catholic Chaplain As the Seminarian from the Archdiocese of Bordeaux (in the Southwest of France), I have After the service, one of the advisors came forward to say thanks and then he said that the boys didn’t tell the whole story. “Would you like to hear the rest of the story?” Of course the answer was yes! Having left the service, they got together to make some goals for their trek. One of the boys, we’ll call him Michael, had a slight physical handicap and it was a little harder for him to hike, so the crew made a pact that they would look out for each other, help each other and what ever they did they would do it together as a crew. Climbing Mount Phillips is one of the more challenging side hikes and was to test their pact. They began the hike, full of excitement and determination. After a while Michael started to get a little tired and one of the boys asked if he could carry Michael’s sleeping bag. Later another boy asked if he could carry his tent. Another boy asked if he could carry his crew gear and finally, a boy asked if he could carry his pack. Hiking without being weighed down with a pack and gear, Michael did well for a while, but reached a point where he had no more energy. In spite of all the encouragement and help from his crew, he could go no further. They were near the top, and two of the advisors looked at each other and one said to the other, “Will you carry my pack?” He gave his pack to the other advisor, and then went over to Michael, put him on his shoulders and carried him to the top of the mountain. On Top of Mount Phillips, that crew knew the meaning of the Pure Love of Christ. They had worked together and felt the JOY of helping someone accomplish something he could not do by himself. They had found the love and joy of working together to do a hard thing. They truly had a Mountain Top Experience. I pray that each of us who comes to Philmont can have our own Mountain Top Experience, by working together and loving each other. May God bless us in everything we do! the chance, thanks to Padre, to discover Philmont and to spend one month with all of you! I arrived two weeks ago and unfortunately will have to leave in two weeks, because of the end date of my student visa. Nevertheless, this short time here is a real gift for me, and I especially appreciate all the moments shared with you, whether it is at meals, on trails for a hike, at the Catholic services, or somewhere else in Base Camp. After graduating from high school, I took two years in university, studying mechanical engineering. Having the idea of priesthood in my mind for a long time, I decided to discern this important question by taking one year of propédeutique, which is a specific year in France in which we take time to pray and to listen the Lord concerning a religious or priestly vocation. I decided after this year to enter the seminary, and was sent by my bishop to Brussels, Belgium to study in a Jesuit university. After two years of philosophy, and one year and a half of theology, my rector of seminary sent me to Washington D.C. to study in the Catholic University of America for my last spring semester. Having been a Boy Scout in France in the Scouts Unitaires de France movement, I am so happy to discover the Boy Scouts of America through Philmont! It is also great to discover this beautiful part of America. I thank all of you for your wonderful welcome, friendship and kindness! It is a deep enjoyment to meet you! Thanks to Philmont, thanks to you, and thanks be to God! PhilmontScoutRanch.org PhilNews | 7 Friday, June 24, 2016 The Ranger Mile: Exploring the Valle Vidal Caleb Burns Associate Chief Ranger The height of the season is quickly approaching and the backcountry is filling up fast, so it might be time to set your sights beyond Philmont’s boundaries. Seek respite from the crowds by heading off property and into the Valle Vidal (Valley of Life). Within this 100,000 acre section of the Carson National Forest, one can find abundant wildlife, grand vistas, a couple ghost towns, and meadows full of Rocky Mountain Iris and Golden Banner. Drive five miles east of Cimarron on Highway 64 and turn onto Forest Road 1950. This unpaved road is well maintained, but the drive is long and it can be hard on vehicles, so keep your Bryan Hayek, Philmont Marketing Manager, stands atop Little Costilla. speed under 25 miles per hour and don’t go if you don’t have a spare tire. Once you have boots on the ground, don’t underestimate it. There are few trails in the Valle Vidal, so brush up on your navigation skills and bring plenty of water and Micropur. Most folks hold off on a trip to the Valle, or Vall, as it has become known in the parlance of our times, until after the first of July. This is because the area past Clayton Corral is closed to all human uses so as not to disturb elk calving. This closure means that Little Costilla is off limits until July 1. Little Costilla is a great hike, but the only reason to hike up a mountain is for a view of the bottom. Instead, stay at the bottom for a view that is up close and personal. A hike along the Middle Ponil Creek is well worth the trip and can be done in a long day or as an overnight. The Middle Ponil is flowing strong, so the creek is flanked by vibrant flora and the air is cool and refreshing. You can start your hike off at Shuree Ponds and follow the creek all the way back to Ponil, where you can catch a ride back to Base. If sunshine and meadows are more your thing, then you should consider turning off on the road to Iris Park. Climb the hill and head cross-country to the well at Iris Park. From there, follow the stream bed over to Beatty Lakes and marvel at the sea of grass before you. Ride the meadow down into the canyon leading back to the Philmont fence line where you will be greeted by the friendly staff at Dan Beard. From here, the hike down Bonita Canyon and into Ponil is a perfect way to cap off your journey. Enjoy your hike! 8 | PhilNews Samuel Largent uses a fitting guide to help find the pack best suited for Kenneth Storm before he goes on trek. Fitting a pack properly is essential to the comfort and performance of the crew member. Lex Selig/PhilNews Packing in the fun Eleanor Hasenbeck Staff Writer Outfitting Services is finding better ways to equip hikers hitting the trail. With the canister fuel recycling initiative and new packs available for participants to rent, the department is helping Scouts and staff save money. When a crew comes off the mountain, they can donate leftover white gas and canister fuel at Outfitting Services. White gas is emptied into larger drums, then refilled into smaller containers, where it is ready for staff to take on their own treks. Canister fuel containers are weighed, and staff calculate how full the canister is. The canisters are marked with a percentage, then placed in a yellow roll-top cabinet nearby Outfitting Services where it is free for crews and staff members to take. Crews and staff members can also give empty canister fuel containers to staff camps, which then place it in recycling. Conservation staff then sorts and recycles gas canisters, thus keeping hazardous materials out of New Mexico’s landfills. Another exciting advancement for Outfitting Services this year was the purchase of 114 new Osprey packs available for participants to rent. These packs are created with pack rental programs, like Philmont, in mind. They’re easier to size, making it a quick pull on a velcro tab to fit PhilmontScoutRanch.org Friday, June 24, 2016 a pack to a person. They come in 70+5, 80+5 and 90+10 liter packs. All old packs are also getting a pick me up. This year, Outfitting Services is washing rental packs as they come off the trail. This keeps older backpacks looking like new, and perhaps more importantly, smelling like new. With more packs being rented than ever before, fresh backpacks are good news. For Scouts, the pack rental program can make Philmont more affordable. “They don’t have to spend $200 on a brand new pack when they’re just going to outgrow them,” said Sam Schoevaars, Manager of Outfitting Services. “If they can put all the wear and tear on our packs, it saves them money.” Schoevaars said this allows participants to allocate funds to other things they’ll need on the trail, like better boots or a good rain jacket. 32 oz. of white gas is weighed out to be sold to a crew before they head out on trek. White gas is handled and stored very carefully at Philmont because it is highly flammable. Lex Selig/ PhilNews The bricks for the Campaign for Philmont are ready to be set into the new SSSAC porch by volunteers on June 17,2016. Madelynne Scales/PhilNews Tek Kreidler, left, and Will Dugger, right, remove old bricks Friday, June 17, 2016 from the porch at the SSSAC. Madelynne Scales/PhilNews A firm foundation in service Suzannah Evans Staff Writer The blank pavers outside the Silver Sage Staff Activity Center are being replaced with pavers bearing the names of generous donors. These donors are all members of the Philmont Staff Association. “The bricks we are laying are for our capital campaign for Philmont,” said Dollie O’Neill, Executive Director of the PSA. Activities staff members, PSA staff members, Rangers on work days, and various other staff volunteers are removing over 900 bricks and replacing those that are Dollie O’Neil, Executive Director of the PSA, sets out the new bricks Friday, June 17, 2016 on the porch of the SSSAC. Madelynne Scales/PhilNews blank with 314 new ones. Trip Corder, Activities Manager, was overseeing the event. “The idea is [that] anybody who has time and wants to help, can,” said Corder of the volunteering staff members. Corder expressed his excitement for staff members to have a special connection to the porch. “It’s easy to see the bricks and have no idea how they got there,” said Corder. These 314 new bricks carry the name of the donor(s) and “C4P” which stands for “Campaign for Philmont.” Those whose names appear f s t f p w y e P i R on the bricks donated $350 ort more to the Philmont Capitaly Campaign. This campaign lastedy from 2011-2013. The proceedsr went to Philmont improvements,i from the new Philmont Trainingw Center bathrooms to Backcountryf furniture. The PSA has been around for 40 years, and over the last several years, they have raised $2.5 million for Philmont improvements. The PSA is now involved in a new campaign. “The Philmont Staff Association is raising money for the Building Home Seton Museum & PSA New Office Building,” said O’Neill. Will Dugger, Ranger, removes a brick Friday, June 17, 2016 from the porch at the SSSAC. Madelynne Scales/PhilNews PhilmontScoutRanch.org Philmont and Beyond: Upcoming career events Eric Martinez Associate Director of Program Thank you for your hard work so far in the summer! It is exciting to see the summer taking shape and to hear all the positive feedback from the crews. As the summer progresses and you start looking at what comes next, I wanted to let you know of a few special career events to aid in your “what’s after Philmont?” search. Firstly, as mentioned earlier in the season, we are conducting Recruiting & Resume Workshops this summer to help you recruit your friends to work out here next year and to help you write a great resume to assist in your job search in the off season. These events will be held in the Baldy Pavilion from 6:00 p.m.-7:00 p.m. on July e PhilNews | 9 Friday, June 24, 2016 20, July 22, July 27, July 30, and August 3. The second special event is the Professional Scouting Reception where you can meet and hear from Scout Executives and BSA professionals about careers in the BSA. This is a great time to network with councils from around the country and learn more about the Scouting profession. This event will be held at the Villa Philmonte Pool on July 21 from 7:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m. If you are interested, send me an I-Camp and I will add you to the list. The third event will be a presentation by representatives from the United States Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, and other government agencies to give you tips and tricks for getting employment within the federal government. The date is to be announced but we are looking at holding the event sometime during the last two weeks of July. More updates will follow. The last career event is the Winter Job Fair. Ski and snowboard resorts from New Mexico and Colorado will be present in the Silver Sage Staff Activities Center on August 2 from 10:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. and on August 3 from 9:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. This will be a great opportunity to network with resorts if you are interested in working in the ski and hospitality industry this winter. Thank you again for all the great work you are doing this summer and let’s keep delivering wilderness and learning adventures that last a lifetime! Thoughtfulness Mark Anderson Director of Program “We are thoughtful in all we do.” What does the “thoughtfulness” mean? word • Occupied with or given to thought; contemplative; meditative; reflective: • Characterized manifesting thought: by or careful • Careful, mindful; heedful, or • Showing consideration for others. Attentive. Thoughtfulness implies a concern for comfort and the good of others. It implies providing little attentions, offering services, or in some way looking out for the comfort or welfare of others. It implies sparing others annoyance or discomfort and being careful not to hurt their feelings. “We are thoughtful in all we do.” Thoughtfulness is character. But thoughtfulness is even more encompassing than character. It is part of the fabric that resides deep within each of us – thoughtfulness applies literally to every internal and external activity. Thoughtfulness is key to customer service and those chance encounters with our participants and visitors that can happen each day. Thoughtfulness is key to employee interactions and support. Thoughtfulness is key to understanding the brand. Thoughtfulness is key to how you feel about your work and how you go about your work. “We are thoughtful in all we do.” By thinking about this we can realize the need to develop the invaluable habit of considering that no action of ours is without consequences for others and anticipating what those consequences could be. I ask you to adopt the concept “We are thoughtful in all we do” on a personal basis. I would also encourage you to adopt it as one of the important values of your team here at Philmont. The quality of our time here at Philmont Scout Ranch this summer requires that we act upon our ability to relate and connect with those around us. Theodore Roosevelt said, “The most important single ingredient in the formula of success is knowing how to get along with people.” Through our action, by being thoughtful in all we do, we can enhance each person’s experience. Summer Chapel services every night 7 p.m. Held at Camping Headquarters, the following services are offered: Jewish, Catholic, Protestant, and Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. 10| PhilNews Friday, June 24, 2016 PhilmontScoutRanch.org Games drawn by Cassidy Johnson PhilmontScoutRanch.org PhilNews | 11 Friday, June 24, 2016 Learning from the best Suzannah Evans Staff Writer Scouts may expect to spend most of their time at Philmont hiking and climbing the Rocky Mountains, however, they will descend these hills with so much more. From learning how to lead their crews, to practicing safe bear procedures, Scouts leave the Ranch more mature and knowledgeable than when they came. With this newfound knowledge and maturity, they are able to positively impact their communities back home. One way in which Scouts may find themselves enriched is by partaking in the Visiting Foresters’ program. Scouts will learn how to care for the forests around them and will gain respect and admiration for the trees and wildlife through which they are walking. Additionally, they will learn how to prevent forest fires and how to check the health and age of trees. Scouts will especially enjoy finding the age of a live tree by using an increment borer. Between Hunting Lodge and Clarks Fork lies the 40 acre Demonstration Forest. Every summer, visiting Foresters come and educate Scouts and participants on how to better preserve and protect the forests around them. The Demonstration Forest was started by the American Tree Farm Organization. Each pair of Foresters stays for a week at a time. During this period, they stay at the nearby Hunting Lodge. This past week, two Foresters from Missouri enlightened Scouts on Forestry Management. Greg Hoss and Rick Thom are retired from their positions in the Missouri Department of Conservation, but they decided to return to Philmont for their fifth and fourth year, respectively, as volunteers. In the late 1960’s Thom was a Staff Member at Philmont while Hoss was a Camper. Visiting Foresters, such as Hoss and Thom, spend anywhere from 10 to 30 minutes educating Scouts partaking in any of the 21 out of 35 treks that offer the Demonstration Forest on the itinerary. “We let the Scouts know that they control the time,” said Thom. Some Crews are able to spend more or less time at the Foresters’ station depending on how much time they have. Crews might choose to walk through the Forest and learn different forest management techniques from the educational boards that are displayed throughout. Hoss spent 40 years fighting forest fires. His aim is to help Scouts learn how to care for the forests they visit and how to Visiting forester Richard Thom shows a group of Philmont staff members how to determine the age of a tree by counting the rings on a sample taken with an increment border on Tuesday, June 14, at the Demonstration Forest. Thom says that the spacing between the rings can show if the tree had a hard growing season or an easy one. Alex Cenci/PhilNews prevent forest fires. Hoss stated that it was probable that the forests of today look very different than they did when the miners first arrived. “This is not how this forest naturally would have looked when the miners showed up,” said Hoss Over the years, because of human disturbance, trees have grown closer together, causing fires to gain quicker traction. “The fires used to be a real mosaic, now they are pretty devastating,” said Hoss. Hoss talked about how, despite the fact that it might take years, forests do recover. Additionally, over the years, new conservation methods and theories have been utilized. He said that there are certain management techniques that were once thought of as bad, but are now seen as beneficial. “We’ve let the forests go for so long, thinking that cutting and burning was bad, and now we are finding out that we should have cut and burned [some more of the forest.]” Hoss explained that prescribed burning and cutting can help preserve the forest so that future generations can enjoy it as we do today. Visiting Forester Greg Hoss, back, talks about identifying the age of a tree using an increment borer on a trunk on Tuesday, June 14, 2016 at Demonstration Forest. Drew Castellaw/PhilNews This tree trunk slice demonstrates how to identify the life events of a tree on Tuesday, June 14, 2016 at Demonstration Forest. Drew Castellaw/PhilNews 12| PhilNews Friday, June 24, 2016 PhilmontScoutRanch.org Below: Jaclyn Christianson, PTC Pony Wrangler, assists 10-year-old PTC participant, Andrew, with his helmet before his pony ride. Andrew and the other kids in his group will also have another chance to interact with the animals at PTC later in the week. Clay Helfrick/PhilNews Below: Clarks Fork Camp Director Justin Kernes speaks to the camp participants during the camp’s campfire on Tuesday, June 16, 2014. Drew Castellaw/PhilNews Beaubien Wrangler Andrew Banken sits on the porch of the Wrangler’s cabin overlooking the Beaubien meadow. Skyler Ballard/PhilNews A member of Troop 101 from Ohio bats off the “tee” during a game of Loggerball at Pueblano on Wednesday, June 15, 2016. Skyler Ballard/ PhilNews Caleb Peurifoy relaxes in the grass at the PTC Thursday, June 16, 2016 prior to embarking on a day hike with his fellow Deputies. The Deputies are a group of 8-10 year old boys who participate in Cub Scout-level activities through the Philmont Training Center. Madelynne Scales/PhilNews Participants from Springfield, Missouri sit inside the living room of Hunting Lodge where every night the staff have a relaxed evening program of music and trail stories around the fireplace. Clay Helfrick/ PhilNews
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