Green Star Activities will
help you get started in learning the basic outdoor skills.
If you're interested in how to camp and take care of yourself
in the outdoors, try starting with these activities.
GREEN
STAR
CAMPING BADGE
COOKING BADGE
FISHING BADGE
HIKING BADGE
TRAILCRAFT BADGE
WATERCRAFT BADGE
WINTER CUBBING BADGE
CANADIAN CAMPER AWARD
CANADIAN HERITAGE TRAILS AWARD

GREEN
STAR:
To earn the Green Star, choose and do any five of
the A requirements and any three of the B requirements:
A. Requirements
1. Estimate three distances and measuring things by using
your body, such as the length your foot, your pace or the
top of your thumb.
2. Tie and show a practical use for any
five knots such as reef, sheet bend, taut-line, bowline,
fisherman's knot, round turn and two half hitches, clove
hitch.
3. Make a Cub
First Aid/Survival kit.
4. Make or put together a camp gadget for outdoor
use.
5. Know what to do if lost.
6. Recognize or describe the signs for different
types of weather.
7. Lay, light and safely put out a fire in the outdoors.
8. Show how to use a road or
topographical map.
9. Tell or demonstrate how to dress for different
weather conditions to reduce the risk of
hypothermia and reduce your exposure to the sun's ultraviolet
rays.
10. Know and explain some rules for protecting nature
while on an outing.
B. Requirements
1. Take part in three pack hikes.
2. Help prepare and cook a hot meal on a family,
six or pack outing.
3. Tell or show how the sun, moon and North Star
can help you find directions.
4. Make or follow
a trail of not more than 300 meters using clues, trail
signs, a map, compass directions or any combination of these.
5. Draw a simple sketch map of a campsite or your
Cub meeting place using compass
and paces.
6. Without harming nature, put up and take down
an emergency shelter of your own design.

BADGE ACTIVITIES
CAMPING
BADGE
1.
Do one of the following:
a) Complete 4 days
of family camping (they don't need to be all together)
b) Take part in two
Cub camps
2. Make a list of some safety and hygiene rules for
camping and discuss these with your leader.
3. Make a list of personal camping gear needed for
sleeping, eating, clothing and first aid at an overnight
camp. Discuss this list with your leader.
4. Describe what to do if lost.
5. In any season, do any 5 of the following:
a) Put up and take
down a simple shelter or tent
b) Cook a simple
meal over an open fire or portable stove
c) Show how to use
a compass
d) Help in doing
two different camp chores or duties
e) Show how to properly
dispose of camp garbage or waste while camping
f) Show how to
purify drinking water at camp
g) Using appropriate
knots,
erect a pole or line on which hang your gear
h) Show how to keep
food safe from insects and animals
i) Show how to safely
handle a pocket knife or camp saw
6. Be aware of and explain no-trace camping.
COOKING
BADGE
With the help of an adult, describe some safety rules
for
cooking on a stove, microwave, or around an open fire.
Then, do any five of the following:
1. Make some hot oatmeal.
2. Cook a hotdog or hamburger.
3. Use a tinfoil cup or orange half and bake, a muffin
in it.
4. Wrap a potato in tinfoil and bake it in a fire.
5. Boil water and cook some pasta of your choice.
6. Make pancakes or French toast.
7. Make biscuit or
bannock dough and cook it on a stick or in a cup.
8. Cook a baked apple, banana, or a tinfoil dessert
of your choice.
9. Make a campfire treat, such as SMOR's or popcorn.
10.
Cook a meal of your choice while at camp.
11. Make a shish-ka-bob of meat and vegetables and
cook over a fire.
12. Cook an egg.
FISHING
BADGE
1.
Describe some safety rules for being in or around water;
and know how to prevent and treat injuries caused by fish
hooks and fish knives.
2. Show how to put together and toe an angling outfit,
a handline outfit, or an ice fishing outfit.
3. Name and identify some major sport fish in your
area.
4. Describe the most
suitable way to catch one sport fish of your choice.
5. Discuss the rules and regulations for fishing
in your area, how to unhook and release a fish with-out
harming it, and the benefits of using barbless hooks.
6. Do either (a) or (b):
a) Without help (except
for the actual landing), catch three separate species of
local fish. Name them correctly and describe what family
they belong to and their place in fishing (game fish, minnow,
coarse, etc.)
b) Discuss water
pollution in your area - how it can affect fishing and what
can be done to reduce or eliminate pollution
HIKING
BADGE
1.
Know how to take care of your feet for everyday walking,
through washing, toenail clipping, wearing clean, dry socks
and having proper fitting shoes.
2. Know how to treat a blister on the foot, insect
bites, hypothermia, overheating and discuss the importance
of getting adequate rest while hiking.
3.
Discuss some
safety rules for hiking, such as:
a) staying with the
group and using a buddy system
b) keeping to designated
trails
c) keeping the group
together
d) having enough
drinking water and food
e) carrying a first
aid kit, whistle and spare clothes
4. Describe what to do if lost.
5. Know some rules for protecting nature when hiking.
6. Go on four hikes of one to two hours long, some
of which could be in a conservation area or park, around
your camp, around your community, or at night.
7. Prepare a nutritional trail mix to eat and share.
TRAILCRAFT
BADGE
1. In preparing for a trip, know how to do the following:
a) Tell an adult
where you are going and include arrival time, route and
any phone numbers
b) Wear clothes and
shoes suitable for where you will be and the weather
c) Make a "footprint"
by placing a sheet of tinfoil on a towel and then stepping
on it with your shoes on. Mark the foil with your name and
leave with an adult so searchers can identify your footprint
if needed
d) Understand and
use the buddy system when on trips
e) List some rules
for preventing getting lost, such as staying on trails and
with your group
2. Discuss and demonstrate how to do the following
if lost:
a) Stay calm and
slow down to save energy and body heat
b) Keep your head and body
warm and dry to avoid
hypothermia
c) Find a friendly
place near a clearing and stay put to help searchers find
you
d) Make a survival
shelter or bed to keep off the cold ground and stay dry
e) Avoid eating strange
berries and drinking unpurified water
f) Put out something
bright for people to see
g) Make a pattern
of three signals
h) Look big to airplanes
by lying down in a clearing and wearing bright clothing
or a coloured garbage bag
i) How to be careful
around bodies of water
j) Yell back at any
scary night noises
3.
Make a survival/first
aid kit that includes among the items a high energy snack,
several brightly coloured garbage bags, reflector or hand mirror
and a whistle.
WATERCRAFT
BADGE (Updated
November 1999)
1. Describe six different types of watercraft.
2. Correctly name and point out six different parts
of a watercraft.
3. Explain and show the correct way to choose and
wear a lifejacket or
Personal Flotation Device (PFD).
4. Demonstrate how to safely enter, change places
in and exit a boat, showing how to move calmly and keep
your weight low and centered. Know how to behave in a boat.
5. Describe the signs of dangerous weather
and water conditions for boating, and what to do when you
see them.
6. Demonstrate the following:
a) Identify three
examples of good throwing assists.
b) Be able to throw
a throwing assist (without a line) to a person at least
two meters away.
7. Demonstrate the following:
a) While wearing
your PFD, curl up in a ball to form the
Heat Escape Lessening Position (HELP) to stay warm in
the water.
b) With a small group
who are all wearing PFDs, huddle together to make the HUDDLE
position to keep you and others warm in the water.
8. Know the importance of staying with your boat
if you fall out or tip over.
9. With a buddy or adult, launch a boat and row,
paddle or sail in a straight line for 50 meters; turn and
come back.
WINTER
CUBBING BADGE
1.
Describe how to prevent and treat:
a)
Frost-bite
b) Skin on cold
metal
c) Snow blindness
d) Breaking through
ice
e)
Hypothermia
2. Show that you are properly dressed for a winter
outing or describe how to dress for winter weather. Know
the importance of staying dry.
3. Recognize and identify in winter conditions three
common birds and three common trees or shrubs.
4. Point out the North Star and three night sky features,
such as stars, constellations, and planets.
5. Take part in two of the following:
a) a winter camp
b) a winter hike
c) two winter outdoor
meetings
d) lighting a fire
and cooking a simple meal under winter conditions
e) a hike on snowshoes
or skis
f) an
ice fishing trip

AWARDS
CANADIAN CAMPER
AWARD
1. Earn the Green Star.
2. Earn the
First Aider Badge.
3. Earn the
Camping Badge.
4. Participate in at least three Cub camps.
5. With a buddy and help from your leader, choose
a campsite and complete the following:
a) Set up a shelter
of your own design or a tent. Weather permitting, spend
a whole night sleeping in your shelter
b) Where permitted,
build a fire and boil a cup of water
c) Scout the area
and discover what you can about the terrain, kinds of plants
and habits of local wildlife
d) Locate the direction
of North and
predict possible changes in weather
6. Help show other Cubs how to do a camping skill
of your choice.
7. Where possible, visit a Scout troop camp and learn
about their camping program.
CANADIAN HERITAGE
TRAILS AWARD
1.
Earn the Green Star.
2. Earn the Hiking or
Watercraft Badge.
3. Locate a trail or waterway and learn about its
heritage importance.
4. Travel
on this route, and list some of the significant natural
or heritage features along the way.
5. While traveling on this route, participate in
a project that helps restore, clean or preserve the section
you are on.