
Cub Scout Pack 369
Welcomes all New Bear Scouts
Once a boy graduates from Wolf
Rank or is starting 2nd grade
he is now considered a Bear Cub Scout.
There are 24 Achievements along the Bear Trail.
- WAYS WE WORSHIP.
- EMBLEMS OF FAITH.
- WHAT MAKES AMERICA SPECIAL?
- TALL TALES.
- SHARING YOUR WORLD WITH
WILDLIFE.
- TAKE CARE OF YOUR PLANET.
- LAW ENFORCEMENT IS A BIG JOB.
- THE PAST IS EXCITING AND
IMPORTANT.
- WHAT'S COOKING?
- FAMILY FUN.
- BE READY.
- FAMILY OUT DOOR ADVENTURES.
- SAVING WELL, SPENDING WELL.
- RIDE RIGHT.
- GAMES,GAMES,GAMES.
- BUILDING MUSCLES.
- INFORMATION,PLEASE.
- JOT DOWN.
- SHAVINGS AND CHIPS.
Achievement #19 is earning the Whittling Chip
CLICK HERE
TO PRINT OUT REQUIREMENTS

- SAWDUST AND NAILS.
- BUILD A MODEL.
- TYING IT ALL UP.
- SPORTS,SPORTS,SPORTS.
- BE A LEADER.

THE BEAR ACHIEVEMENTS
GOD (do ONE of the following)
- WAYS WE WORSHIP -
Practice your religion as you are taught in your home, church, synagogue,
mosque, or other religious community.
- EMBLEMS OF FAITH - Earn
the religious emblem of your faith.
COUNTRY (do THREE of the following)
- WHAT MAKES AMERICA SPECIAL? (Do requirement "a" AND 3 of the rest - (4 total)
- Write or tell what makes America special to
you.
- With the help of your family or den leader,
find out about two Americans. Tell the things they did or are doing to
improve our way of life.
- Find out something about the old homes near the
place where you live. Go and see two of them.
- Find out where places of historical interest in
or near your town are located. Go and visit one of them with your family
or den.
- Choose a state; it can be your favorite one or
your home state. Name the state bird, tree, and flower. Describe its
flag. Give the date it was admitted to the union.
- Be a member of the color guard in a flag
ceremony for your den or pack.
- Display the U.S. flag in your home or fly it on
three national holidays.
- TALL TALES - Do ALL 3
requirements.
- Tell in your own words what folklore is. List
some folklore stories, folksongs, or historical legends from your own
state or part of the country. (See handbook for ideas.)
- Name at least five stories about American
folklore. Point out on a United States map where they happened. (See
handbook for ideas.)
- Read two folklore stories and tell your
favorite one to your den.
- SHARING YOUR WORLD WITH WILDLIFE - Do 4 of the following.
- Choose a bird or animal that you like and find
out how it lives. Make a poster showing what you have learned.
- Build or make a bird feeder or bird house.
- Explain what a wildlife conservation officer
does.
- Visit one of the following: Zoo, Nature center,
Wildlife refuge, Game preserve.
- Name one animal that has become extinct in the
last 100 years. Tell why animals become extinct. Name one animal that is
on the Endangered Species List. (Revised for 1998)
- TAKE CARE OF YOUR PLANET
- Do 3 of the following.
- Save 5 pounds of glass or aluminum, or 1 month
of newspapers. Turn them in at a recycling center or use your community's
recycling service.
- Plant a tree in your yard, or on the grounds of
the group that operates your Cub Scout pack, or in a park or other public
place. Be sure to get permission first.
- Call city or county officials or your trash
hauling company and find out what happens to your trash after it is
hauled away.
- Do a water usage survey in your home. Note the
ways water is used. Look for any dripping faucets.
- Discuss with an adult in your family the ways
your family uses energy.
- Find out more about your family's use of
electricity.
- LAW ENFORCEMENT IS A BIG JOB - Do 4 of the following.
- Make a set of your own fingerprints.
- Make a plaster cast of a shoeprint.
- Check the doors and windows of your home.
- Visit your local sheriff's office or police
station.
- Be sure you know where to get help in your
neighborhood.
- Be sure fire and police numbers are listed by
the phone at your home.
- Know what you can do to help law enforcement.
FAMILY
- THE PAST IS EXCITING AND IMPORTANT - Do 3 of the following.
- Visit your library or newspaper office. Ask to
see back issues of newspapers or an almanac.
- Find someone who was a Cub Scout a long time
ago. Talk with him about what Cub Scouting was like then.
- Start or add-to an existing pack scrapbook.
- Trace your family back through your
grandparents or great grandparents; or, talk to a grandparent about what
it was like when they were younger.
- Find out some history about your community.
- Write in a journal for 2 weeks.
- WHAT'S COOKING? - Do 4
of the following.
- With an adult, bake cookies.
- With an adult, make snacks for the next den
meeting
- Prepare one part of your breakfast, one part of
your lunch, and one part of your supper.
- Make a list of the 'junk' foods you eat.
Discuss "junk" food with your parent or teacher.
- Make some trail food for a hike. (New for 1998)
- Make a dessert for your family.
- FAMILY FUN - Do BOTH of
these requirements.
- Go on a trip with members of your family. (See
handbook for ideas.)
- Have a "family-make-and-do" night.
- BE READY! - Do the first
4; the last one is recommended, but not required.
- Tell what to do in case of accident in the
home. A family member needs help. Someone's clothes catch on fire. (See
handbook)
- Tell what to do in case of a water accident.
(See handbook)
- Tell what to do in case of a school bus
accident. (See handbook)
- Tell what to do in case of a car accident. (See
handbook)
- Have a health checkup by a physician
(optional).
- FAMILY OUTDOOR ADVENTURE
- Do 3 of the following.
- Go camping with your family.
- Go on a hike with your family.
- Have a picnic with your family.
- Attend an outdoor event with your family.
- Plan your outdoor family day.
- SAVING WELL, SPENDING WELL
- Do 4 of the following.
- Go grocery shopping with a parent or other
adult member of your family. Compare prices of different brands of the
same item. Check the prices at different stores. Read the ads in your
newspaper.
- Set up a savings account.
- Keep a record of how you spend money for 2
weeks.
- Pretend you are shopping for a car for your
family.
- Discuss family finances with a parent or
guardian.
- Play a board game with your family that
involves the use of make-believe money.
- With an adult, figure out how much it costs for
each person in your home to eat one meal.
SELF (do FOUR of the following)
- RIDE RIGHT - Do
requirement a and THREE more. (Total of 4)
- Know the rules for bike safety. If your town
requires a bicycle license, be sure to get one. (See handbook for rules.)
- Learn to ride a bike, if you haven't by now.
Show that you can follow a winding course for 60 feet doing sharp left
and right turns, a U-turn, and an emergency stop.
- Keep your bike in good shape. Identify the
parts of a bike that should be checked often.
- Change a tire on a bicycle.
- Protect your bike from theft. Use a bicycle
lock.
- Ride a bike for 1 mile without rest, and be
sure to obey all traffic rules.
- Plan and take a family bike hike.
- GAMES, GAMES, GAMES! -
Do 2 of the following.
- Set up the equipment and play any two of these
outdoor games with your family or friends.
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Backyard
Golf
Badminton
Croquet
Sidewalk Shuffleboard
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Kickball
Softball
Tetherball
Horseshoes
Volleyball
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- Play two organized games with your
den.
- Select a game your den has never played.
Explain the rules. Tell them how it is played, then play it with them.
- BUILDING MUSCLES - Do
ALL of the following.
- Do physical fitness stretching exercises. Then
do sit-ups, push-ups, the standing long jump, and softball throw.
- With a friend, compete in at least six
different two-person contests. (See handbook for examples.)
- Compete with your den or pack in the crab
relay, gorilla relay, 30-yard dash, and kangaroo relay.
- INFORMATION, PLEASE - Do
requirement a and THREE more of the following.
- With an adult in your family, select a TV show.
Watch it together.
- Play a game of charades at your Den meeting or
with your family at home.
- Visit a newspaper office, or TV or radio
station and talk to a news reporter.
- Use a computer to get information. Write, spell
check, and print out a report on what you learned. (Revised for 1998)
- Write a letter to a company that makes
something you use. Use E-mail or the US Postal Service. (Revised for 1998)
- Talk with one of your parents or another family
member about how getting and giving facts fits into his or her job.
- JOT IT DOWN - Do 5 of
the following.
- Make a list of the things you want to do today.
Check them off when you have done them.
- Write two letters to relatives or friends.
- Keep a daily record of your activities for 2
weeks.
- Write an invitation to someone.
- Write a story about something you have done
with your family.
- Write a thank-you note.
- Write about the activities of your den.
- SHAVINGS AND CHIPS - Do
ALL of the following.
- Know the safety rules for handling a knife.
- Show that you know how to take care of and use
a pocketknife.
- Make a carving with a pocketknife. Work with
your parent or den leader in doing this.
- Earn the "Whittling Chip"
card.
- SAWDUST AND NAILS - Do
ALL of the following.
- Show how to use and take care of four of these
tools. (See handbook.)
- Build your own tool box.
- Use at least two tools listed in requirement 'a'
to fix something.
- BUILD A MODEL - Do 3 of
the following.
- Build a model from a kit.
- Build a display for one of your models.
- Pretend you are planning to change the
furniture layout in one of the rooms in your home.
- Make a model of a mountain, a meadow, a canyon,
or river.
- Go see a model of a shopping center or new
building that is on display somewhere.
- Make a model of anything - a rocket, boat, car,
or plane.
- TYING IT ALL UP - Do 5
of the following.
- Whip the ends of a rope.
- Tie a square know, bowline, sheet bend, two
half hitches, and a slip knot. Tell how each knot is used.
- Learn how to keep a rope from tangling.
- Coil a rope. Throw it, hitting a 2-foot square
marker 20 feet away.
- Learn a magic rope trick.
- Make your own rope. (Se handbook for ideas!)
- SPORTS, SPORTS, SPORTS -
Do ALL of the following.
- Learn the rules and how to play three team
sports.
- Learn the rules and how to play two sports in
which only one person is on each side.
- Take part in one team and one individual sport.
- Watch a sport on TV with a parent or some other
member of your family.
- Attend a high school, college, or professional
sporting event with your family or your den.
- BE A LEADER - Do 3 of
the following.
- Help a boy join the Cub Scouts, or help a new
Cub Scout through the Bobcat trail.
- Serve as a denner or assistant denner.
- Plan and conduct a den activity with the
approval of your den leader.
- Tell two people they have done a good job.
- Leadership means choosing a way even when your
choice is not liked by all.

When
a boy has completed twelve of these twenty-four achievements through all four
parts of the Bear trail, he has earned the right to wear the Bear badge.
After
earning his Bear badge, a boy can begin working on his Bear electives to earn his gold and
silver Arrow Points.
