rope

Whipping and Splicing

 This evening, Scouts learnt how to whip and splice a piece of rope as part of their work towards the Pioneers badge. Scouts learnt how to tie a West Country whipping, a Common whipping and some, a Sailmakers whipping.

Scouts were also shown how to do an Eye Splice. Scouts worked collaboratively to Eye Splice a piece of rope. See below:

Colin Burrough shows Scouts how to do an eye splice

Ben applies his knowledge of a Common whipping on his piece of rope...

Ben working on a Common Whipping

As you can see, Ben has made a very tidy job of it!

Ben's Common whipping

Jack shows great concentration in preparing his West Country whipping.

Jack shows great concentration in preparing his West Country whipping

Scouts enjoyed making whippings so much that some have taken lengths of rope home to tidy up each end.

 

Jonathan Furness

Knot Another Challenge: Build your own Sedan Chair!

 The Scouts have been learning how to tie six basic knots.

  1. Reef knot
  2. Bowline
  3. Clove Hitch
  4. Sheet Bend
  5. Round Turn and Two Half Hitches
  6. Timber Hitch

and how to tie two lashings,

  1. Square lashing
  2. Sheer lashing

To help reinforce some of this work, what better than to build a Sedan Chair and hold a competition. We know that when kids have to tie their own safety knots, it tends to focus the mind a little more. We thought the same might be true if they had to tie their own lashings and then be carried on the chair at speed!

I think the pictures say it all. (NB. Click on each image to get a larger picture)

 

Building Sedan Chairs at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop   Building Sedan Chairs at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop 
 Building Sedan Chairs at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop   Building Sedan Chairs at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop 
 Building Sedan Chairs at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop   Building Sedan Chairs at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop 
 Building Sedan Chairs at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop   Building Sedan Chairs at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop 
 Building Sedan Chairs at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop   Building Sedan Chairs at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop 
 Building Sedan Chairs at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop   Building Sedan Chairs at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop 
 Building Sedan Chairs at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop   Building Sedan Chairs at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop 
 Building Sedan Chairs at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop   Building Sedan Chairs at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop 


 

Little kids CAN lift big kids! Scouts learn how to use levers and pulleys

Scouts at Orion Troop had a fun packed evening discovering that little kids CAN lift big kids. They learnt how to use levers and pulleys to gain mechanical advantage. However, you never get something for nothing so in order to lift something heavy, you still have to do the same amount of work, but it requires less effort each time you move it. With pulleys, you have to pull the rope through the pulleys much further than the distance of the object being lifted. Similar is true with levers. A lever at the lifting end is moved much further than the object being lifted.

These photographs will give you some idea of what we did.

(Click on each photograph for a larger image)

Levers and pulleys at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop    Levers and pulleys at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop
 Levers and pulleys at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop    Levers and pulleys at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop
Levers and pulleys at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop     Levers and pulleys at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop
 Levers and pulleys at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop    Levers and pulleys at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop
Levers and pulleys at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop     Levers and pulleys at 3rd Billericay Scouts, Orion Troop

 

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