The Commercial Appeal

Scouts must be fit for activities at Jamboree

- By John Raby Associated Press

GLEN JEAN, W.Va. — This year’s Boy Scouts of America’s national Jamboree is being billed as the most physically demanding in its history: There’s rock climbing, rappelling, white-water rafting and biking. And Scouts will go about the sprawling, hilly landscape the oldfashion­ed way — on foot.

Thousands of Scouts gather for 10 days starting Monday at a new location in West Virginia.

Officials designed the 1,000-plus acre Summit Bechtel Family National Scout Reserve to take advantage of the Mountain State’s natural assets, and they also put into place new physical fitness requiremen­ts that eliminated morbidly obese Scouts from participat­ing.

“Part of the design in building this site was to address the need for physical fitness in our youth, which of course is a long-standing component of Scouting,” said Dan McCarthy, director of the BSA’s Summit Group. “We saw this as an opportunit­y to integrate some new challenges ... so we deliberate­ly spread the site to enable us to encourage Scouts and basically require Scouts to move about the site by foot.”

This year, 30,000 Scouts ages 12 to 20 and their leaders were required to meet a threshold for body mass index and other health factors before being allowed to participat­e. Jamboree applicants with a BMI — a measure of body fat determined through height and weight — of 40 or higher were deemed ineligible. Those who fell between 32 and 39.9 faced providing additional health informatio­n to Jamboree medical staff.

Nationally, about 17 percent of children ages 2 to 19 are considered obese — triple the rate from a generation earlier, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“We required a level of fitness in order to come to the Jamboree that we haven’t required before,” McCarthy said. “And that has motivated an enormous return in terms of both kids and adults getting serious about improving their health.”

Soon, the Scouts will know why. Besides offering a whole lot of fun, dozens of venues will test their physical skills and fitness. At some point during the Jamboree, every participat­ing Scout will be asked to take a 3-mile trek up a mountain.

Their reward: A barbecue waiting at the top.

“We certainly want to get the Scouts outdoors, challenge them and have a healthy lifestyle,” said Gary Hartley, the Summit’s director of community and government­al relations.

 ?? PHOTOS BY DAVID GOLDMAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
PHOTOS BY DAVID GOLDMAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS
 ??  ?? Lamar Kellett didn’t own a gun and opposed the mandatory gun law. But after it was passed, he bought a gun and ammo, fearing that he could be arrested if he didn’t.
Lamar Kellett didn’t own a gun and opposed the mandatory gun law. But after it was passed, he bought a gun and ammo, fearing that he could be arrested if he didn’t.

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