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8 November 2006
AUSTIN, TX -
Pegasus Squadron, part
of Group III, Texas Wing, Civil Air Patrol, hosted a Boy Scouts of
America Merit Badge Workshop last October 28, providing the setting for
excellent cooperation and understanding between CAP cadets and BSA
scouts. Thirteen scouts from the Capitol Area Council attended and
earned merit badges in Aviation, Space Exploration, First Aid, Disaster
Relief and Communications. The BSA Council was extremely grateful, since
training for these Eagle Scout-required courses is normally hard to
find. Pegasus Squadron, a Civil Air Patrol unit, is dual-chartered as
BSA Venture Crew 351.
During
the Aviation portion of the workshop, scouts visited the Texas
Military
Forces
Museum on Camp
Mabry as part of their
badge requirements. At the museum they saw an aircraft’s rotary engine
up close, as well as a cutaway view of a jet engine. They truly enjoyed
seeing the cockpits of an F-16 and the L10, imagining themselves pilots
of these aircraft. During the tour, a few museum visitors attached
themselves to the “tour.” Later they told us, “Thank you for the guided
tour. You really made the history come alive!”
The
Space Exploration module gave scouts an opportunity to build model
rockets and create a card about a famous space explorer. Since the tasks
requirements for scouting are similar to those for CAP cadets, the
latter also took advantage of the opportunity to finish Phase II of
CAP’s model rocketry program. CAP cadet officers acted as mentors to the
group, completing their own progression requirements as Aerospace
Education mentors.
The First Aid
portion of the merit badge workshop presented many practical situations
that tested the scouts’ skills. Many CAP cadets needed this training in
order to complete their Ground Team 3 qualification, and scouts needed
it to complete that merit badge. Both got hands-on training in how to
bandage head and eye injuries, broken arms, and litter-carry (making a
litter with logs and a blanket, and carrying the injured person to
safety).
The
Communications badge training came with an aviation twist, as students
watched a video on radio communications in an airplane. They saw
first-hand how critical it is to speak clearly and accurately when
communicating with the airport control tower.
This was an exciting and rewarding event for everyone. Not only did CAP
cadets finish progression requirement, ground team requirements and
requirements for their Venture Crew Bronze awards, but BSA scouts
completed critical requirements for their Eagle Scout award. The day was
a total success and everyone went home with a sense of accomplishment.
The Civil Air
Patrol (CAP) maintains the world’s largest fleet (550) of single-engine,
piston aircraft, as well as the Nation’s most extensive communications
network. Through aerospace education, glider and powered orientation
flights, flight training scholarships, and cadet programs, CAP serves
its nearly 57,000 members, America's youth, and the public at large. CAP
performs 95% of all inland search and rescue in the U.S., as tasked by
the U.S. Air Force. CAP also flies aerial reconnaissance missions for
homeland security, as well as disaster-relief and damage assessment
operations. CAP transports time-sensitive medical material, and flies
counterdrug missions for homeland security. For more information about
Pegasus Composite Squadron on Camp
Mabry in Austin,
TX please
visit http://www.pegasuscap.org.
Article and photos submitted by
1st
Lt Daren Jaeger |