Why Scouting?

Scouting helps youth develop academic skills, self-confidence, ethics, leadership skills, and citizenship skills that influence their adult lives.

The Scouting America provides youth with programs and activities that allow them to

  • Try new things.
  • Provide service to others.
  • Build self-confidence.
  • Reinforce ethical standards.

While various activities and youth groups teach basic skills and promote teamwork, Scouting goes beyond that and encourages youth to achieve a deeper appreciation for service to others in their community.

Scouting provides youth with a sense that they are important as individuals. It is communicated to them that those in the Scouting family care about what happens to them, regardless of whether a game is won or lost.

Finally, and perhaps most importantly, Scouting promotes activities that lead to personal responsibility and high self-esteem. As a result, when hard decisions have to be made, peer pressure can be resisted and the right choices can be made.

Since 1910, Scouting has helped mold the future leaders of this country by combining educational activities and lifelong values with fun. The Scouting America believes and, through more than a century of experience, understands that helping youth puts us on a path toward a more conscientious, responsible, and productive society.

Scouting, with programs for young men and women, helps meet these six essential needs of the young people growing up in our society:

  • Mentoring
  • Lifelong Learning
  • Faith Traditions
  • Serving Others
  • Healthy Living
  • Building Character

The following are some of the programs that help youth learn the skills listed above.

Merit Badge Program

Merit Badges are an essential part of the Scouting journey and can spark lifelong interests. For example, Steven Spielberg kicked off his filmmaking career in the Scouting America. As an 11-year-old scout, according to the Daily Beast, he used his father’s 8 mm movie camera to film a nine-minute Western called “The Last Gunfight.” It earned him a merit badge for photography. Overall, there are more than 130 merit badges.

Leadership

Leadership is a vital part of the Scouting program. Youth in positions of leadership run the troop. They take care of the many tasks necessary for troop and patrol meetings and activities to run smoothly. By accepting the responsibilities of troop leadership, Scouts are preparing themselves to be leaders throughout their lives. Since the Troop’s inception in 1929, more than 80 Troop 209 Scouts have earned the Eagle Scout rank, the highest rank in Scouting, with more than 20 since 2020.

Camping

Camping contributes to good health and helps campers develop self-reliance, resourcefulness, along with many more benefits. Since 2020, Troop 209 has participated in numerous camping trips, including campouts in New Hampshire’s White Mountains, on Martha’s Vineyard and on Mt. Desert Island. Troop 209 participated in MassJam (a once-every-five-year jamboree for Scouts from Troops in Massachusetts and the surrounding New England states that is attended by several thousand Scouts) in 2023. Members of the Troop participate each year in summer camp at Treasure Valley Scout Reservation in Rutland, Massachusetts.

Hiking/Backpacking

Troop 209 routinely participates in hiking events, both locally and in venues such as White Mountain National Forest in New Hampshire and Acadia National Park in Maine. The Troop periodically participates in weeklong backpacking treks at the Philmont Scout Ranch in New Mexico, Scouting America’s premier High Adventure base.

Water Sports

Troop 209’s Scouts have participated in numerous canoeing, kayaking white water rafting and paddle boarding events while on camping trips. In 2024, a group of Scouts from Troop 209 did a one-week expedition to Sea Base, a Scouting America High Adventure base located in the Florida Keys, where they participated in sailing, snorkeling and kayaking.

Winter Sports

Troop 209 participates in a ski weekend at Bretton Woods, New Hampshire each year, where Scouts have the opportunity to earn the Snow Sports Merit Badge. Troop 209 also participates annually in snow tubing at a local area, often in conjunction with a local Cub Scout Pack.