Sunday, September 2, 2012

Timberline: The Gold Beads


Timberline: The Gold Beads
(Timberline part 29)

Every year for well over 30 years now Dumont Hill and his wife have made the beads for Timberline. He has had help through the years from other men and women like Fred Erickson and his wife and several others. When it was first started they made a set of beads and put all of the beads onto the leather woggle along with the T and L used to distinguish them for Timberline.  When I came into the program around 1990 (this had been going on in the Utah National Parks Council since around 1973 or so) they still made a set of beads for every participant and members of the staffs. We were getting to the point by then in the council of holding over 20 courses per summer with an average participant attendance of 48 and staff sizes of around 15. One year in course directors conference, and I believe that year was 1993, we had a serious discussion about the beads and whether or not to continue them since it was getting a rather daunting task to complete each year for the 4 people who at that time were making all of them. They were also suggesting that staff members only use one set and not be given any additional ones each year. It became a very serious discussion since the Beads and T Shirt were the two distinguishing items that marked who had been to Timberline. The beads especially were a tradition started with Woodbadge  by Baden Powell when he gave the Wood Badge beads to the very first participants at Gilwell Field in England.  So the discussion was clear on the point that we would not stop the beads. Then there became the point of how many sets should a staff member have. I had been serving, by that time, as a staff member for several years with Hobble Creek and Palmyra districts for their Varsity Basic Training. We always just added an orange bead to our training staff fobs to designate how many years we had been on staff.  So I suggested that we just add a bead to the staff beads each year below the T or L and that way the staff would be given one set the first year that they served and then just add the bead each year after that. That way we would just have a bag of beads that we could give to the scoutmaster and then in the Sunday night staff meeting prior to the course he could hand them out to each member of his staff. It would require a little longer piece of leather but would be far less expensive and time consuming. I am not sure just how much money it saved since it was determined by the group to use gold beads which are like gold in the bead industry and cost a great deal more than regular beads of any other color. (That is due to the fact that they are plated with a gold colored material and all other beads are just molded with the color in the plastic.) In the years since we started that the gold beads have also become a very quick way to identify how much tenure staff members had in Timberline. Doug Binks and Bruce Palmer are around 20  or more by now I think. We also decided at that meeting to let the staff members put the beads together during their staff preparations on the mountain. The leather woggle, beads, T and L were all put into small zip lock bags and then assembled by the staff. There was one minor problem that we had to overcome but that was pretty easy when all was decided at the end of the discussion. The beads had to be put in a certain order on the leather strap and that was very critical from what I could tell. I didn’t know until then that they had originally been placed in a certain order to signify the 12 points of the scout law.  At one point in the history of Timberline the beads were broken off of the strap if a scout didn’t complete part of the items during the course that were required. It was pretty harsh and later (before I came on board) stopped because of the negative effects. I was personally quite glad to see that it was no longer in use. I have now traveled the council for 13 years taking pictures of men and women who are receiving the Silver Beaver awards from the councill and have seen a lot of sets of TL Beads on men with anywhere from 1 to 15 gold beads. I know instantly what it has done for them and what they have done for many young men in the council. Those with more than 7 beads are usually good friend from the past when I had worked with them on Timberline.

Timberline: Course Directing


Timberline: Course Directing
(Timberline part 28)
Toward the end of my tenure with Timberline the council had decided to separate the positions of Scoutmaster and Course Director. The Scoutmaster was directly in charge of the staff and participants while the Course Director was responsible for all of the reports and finances. I enjoyed both responsibilities but was glad to see them separated. My last two of sixteen years on staff was as a course director with the Delta courses. I traveled to Holden for staff meetings and had a separate campsite while on the mountain. I gained several new friends from that area during those years and found camp to be pretty fun since I was also responsible for making sure the camp was ready for the next courses following us the next week. This gave me a chance to hike through the entire camp cleaning up and preparing the sites. I always carried my camera with me and saw many photo opportunities. One day I had gone deep into the trees away from the regular campsite and while sitting there, working on a report, was visited by a small falcon. I saw it fly through just above my head and quickly grabbed my camera to follow it and photograph it. I caught two or three quick pictures then returned to my chair. A few minutes later it flew onto a branch just a few feet in front of me in the lower part of the tree. I again took several photographs and was interested by how it was interested in me. It was watching me probably more than I had been watching it. I later discovered why as I visited the same spot several more times in the week and discovered it’s nest only three or four trees away from where I had been sitting. I even saw it at another time when I had returned to the camp to show it to Marie and as we walked over to that area again spotted the falcon. I really enjoyed my time combing the camp for trash and chances to photograph the animals.

Timberline: A Ferrot and other small animals


Timberline: A Ferrot and other small animals
(Timberline part 27)
I had been able to see deer every year I was at that camp. Usually they were small does and once in a while a buck. The most fun though came to me by watching a ferrot chasing after chipmunks. There were a lot of chipmunks running around on the ground and through the trees by my camp. Two years in a row I was pleased to see a beautiful ferrot also frequent my camp. It was there to catch dinner and that was when I learned they loved chipmunk delight. I was fascinated as I saw it chase a chipmunk way up into the tree next to my tent. They were both moving very fast but when the chipmunk jumped to the ground from 15 feet in the air from the end of the branch they were on and then scrambled to safety on the ground leaving the ferrot way up in the tree unable or unwilling to make the same jump. I realized then that dinner using chipmunk as the course was probably not a real frequent event. I was able to photograph the ferrot a umber of times as it made it’s way around the branches of the tree looking for more chipmunks.

Timberline: A Skunk


Timberline: A Skunk
(Timberline part 26)
Boys and food and wildlife all seem to attract. Each year we try to help the young men realize that the worst thing they can do at camp is throw food that they don’t want to eat out into the trees. Every year however there always the boys who are smarter than the staff and will do whatever they want despite the outcome. I found that they had indeed invited the local scavengers to camp as I was sitting in my campsite just off the hill from the staff area. I was typing some reports for the camp at my table when I realized I had been visited quite closely. A small skunk ran under my table from behind where I couldn’t see him coming and out the front side where I could. I was glad I had been very still and had not caused the little fellow to be alarmed as I might have ended up smelling a lot like “Flower” in the movie “Bambi”. I grabbed my camera and did get a few pictures of him as he departed my area of the camp and headed toward the food up on the hill.

Timberline: A new campsite


Timberline: A new campsite
(Timberline part 25)
The next few years we started holding our Timberline courses at a new area that had been donated to the scouts near Mt Pleasant. I had loved this place for several years after we had first tried to decide if it was a good place to hold our course.  We had hiked in to see it since we couldn’t drive the van and trucks in any further than below the hill due to muddy roads. As we went through the area I spotted to elk of pretty good size in one area and thought it would make a great site for the staff to put up their camp. I admit the fact that we saw the elk was one reason I liked it so well. We didn’t use it that year and for a few years after since the road into it was a bit of a challenge if it got wet at all. Finally the council cut a new road into it from the front and getting in and out was not as much of a challenge. One year before the road was completed we did hold camp there and as I went to visit it to take in some supplies I had to drive up the road next to power lines that crossed over the mountain near the camp. The gates were all locked except for the one leading over to the power lines so I drove up past them until they intersected the road leading to camp. A couple years later as I was there during the week as the Course Director for a district from Delta I got to see some more of the wildlife that had endeared that camp to me so many years earlier. I had taken a walking tour of the camp before the rest of the staff had gotten up and of course had my camera with me. As I was walking down a road about a half mile from the camp I spotted a large four point buck looking through the trees at me. I raised my camera and was able to get one click before it turned to run and two other large bucks that had also been there by it. I didn’t even know they were there until I counted them as they ran from me through the trees. When I got the film back after camp I looked closely at the image and could see the antlers from one of the other bucks also in the picture. Through the several years that I attended camps in that site I not only saw elk and deer, but also skunks, chipmunks, squirrels, hawks and a ferrot. It has since been converted into a full sized scout camp for the council with another area being dedicated for Timberline courses below the camp. I am sure that not nearly as much of the wildlife can be seen now.