Step 1: Activity Calendar
What Sounds Better: “Meetings” or “Adventures”?
Cub Scouting is Fun, Family, and Friends.
- Cub Scout Ranks and Handbooks are full of “Adventures”.
- Your Den and Pack should be full of Adventures too.
- Families want to be Active and have Fun with Other Families.
If it’s Fun for Kids, Fun for Families, and Safe — it’s Cub Scouting!
Learn more about the steps on these web pages:
- Recruiting Resources (Home)
- Step 1: Activity Calendar
- Step 2: Program Promotion
- Step 3: Recruiting Leaders
- Step 4: School Presence
- Step 5: Sign-Up Events
For a printable version of the 6 steps, and a timeline explanation for implementing them, view this document:
Downloadable Resource: Activity Calendar Template
A Possible Activity Calendar
If You Build it, They Will Come. If you build a calendar of fun activities, Scouts and families will come. Great program plans are built around going places and doing things, like this month-by-month outline of an ideal program year – pick the activities you like:
May
- Starting in the Spring, close out the School Year and start the Summer with a “graduation” picnic party, maybe a cookout or field day with games, as Scouts “graduate” to a new Handbook for the coming year and you welcome new families and friends to your Dens and Pack.
- Have fun events like Rain Gutter Regattas, Bike Rides, Kite Flying, Fishing, Rocket Launches, Game Days, STEM activities, and more.
- After school gets out Dens and Packs and/or individual families can attend Cub Scout Summer/Overnight Camp.
June
- Many Day and Twilight Camps are available for Dens, Packs and families – while it’s more fun to do with your Den, a Scout can attend on their own.
- This is a great time to join Scouting, so bring a friend.
- Also: everyone into the pool! Picnics! Cookouts! More fun events!
July
- See June ideas, plus Dens might participate in 4th of July festivities.
August
- Back to School, and “Back to the Pack” with some final summer fun like swimming, boating, biking and more. And S’mores.
September
- The start of a Cub Scout program year is often a time to apply the Six Cub Scout essentials for hiking – and your Den or Family Hike might be a walk around a local park or recreation center or be a longer and more adventurous hike.
October
- If you’ve started outdoor activities with hiking, you can take it up a step with the program found at Cub Scout Family Camping Weekends.
November
- A great time for Veteran’s Day events or service projects to help your school or church or community – for fun, maybe Den or Pack bike riding, maybe even District events like range and target activities or rocket launching.
December
- The holidays are busy, and a time for celebration, and many Dens and Packs try to schedule events that share the season and connect with family traditions.
- Maybe also a service project to help those in need at the holidays.
January
- Many Packs pick a winter weekend for a “big trip” like overnights at places. Often this is the start of Pinewood Derby season and car building.
February
- Many Pinewood Derby races are run, plus Dens and Packs can celebrate the birthday of Scouting, perhaps with a service project like Scouting for Food, perhaps with a Blue & Gold Banquet.
- (Note: if you plan to recognize Rank and other awards at your Blue & Gold Banquet, you can make it easier for all to have that event later in the school year – you can still celebrate Scouting then – your Arrow of Light Scouts can be recognized early so that they cross over to Scouts BSA Troops.)
March
- Warmer weather will bring your Den and Pack families outside for more hiking, kiting, biking, games and Scouting out new places you haven’t been before. Getting outside and doing things is a great way for new families to join you.
April
- More options for Spring Family Camping. Maybe fishing, rockets, and more.
May
- And the year wraps around to another graduation to another rank and another spring and summer of Cub Scouting. Invite old and new families to fun events!
Those are just one set of ideas – substitute your ideas in what you’d like to do – change up the order of events as you like for fun with your Den and Pack Families.
Pack Planning Tips
Meet to Make a Calendar of Activities. Use your resources, starting with your current registered leaders.
- Invite all parents to participate. Many have ideas of places to go or things to do that you’ve never thought of before.
- This can increase in involvement, possibly getting new leaders.
- Meeting Methods. Don’t put off planning because you can’t get everyone to meet at the same time. Get as many involved as possible – but don’t put off planning.
- Meet in person, but maybe do a “follow up” over Zoom for those who missed it.
- Email sharing of surveys and documents is helpful too.
- When you meet in person, make it fun and festive. Casual spring and summer events like cookouts or picnics are a great time for brainstorming with more parent participation.
- Pack Parents will enjoy the process more if there is social time.
- Which would parents rather attend: a “Pizza Party” or a “Planning Meeting”?
- No need for uniforms – Cubmasters and Den Leaders dressed like parents make it more inviting for other parents to share ideas and help.
- Meet in person, but maybe do a “follow up” over Zoom for those who missed it.
- Activity Planning – What do Parents Want to Do?
- The Pack knew that most dads and moms didn’t want to be “leaders”, but lots of dads and moms like to do things, or they used to do things that they want to take up again.
- They found that some dads liked tailgating BBQ, some liked fishing, others bowling or golf – some moms liked running, some liked skiing, others biking or swimming.
- When the Pack found out what dads and moms liked to do, they built a fun activity program:
- The “tailgating BBQ” dads were asked to lead an Iron Chef contest between families at campouts,
- The “fishing” dads were the leaders of fishing trips,
- The “bowling” dads led bowling outings,
- The “golfing” dads did mini-golf and driving range and then 9 and 18 holes.
- When you engage the “Tailgaters”, “Fishermen”, “Bowlers”, “Golfers”, “Skiers”, “Swimmers”, “Bikers” and more, the Pack got a core group of adults to organize those events, once those parents succeed at those, they were more inclined to participate in other leadership roles.
- Plan More. Put activities on the calendar even if you don’t know exactly who will lead each activity yet.
- If you fail to plan, you plan to fail.
- If families really like the activity, they will have an incentive to step up and make it happen.
Keep the Outing in Scouting!
Get Out and Cub Scout! The Cub Scout program is outdoor, active, and hands-on. Den “meetings” should be “Adventures”, so make them adventurous.
- Outdoors is Better!
- That’s what kids want – that’s what Cub Scouting can give them and their families.
- Den Adventures Outside. Almost every Rank Adventure is more fun and memorable if done outside, whether on weekdays or weekends at events like campouts or day hikes ending with an evening campfire or field trips.
- Cub Scouting is not Cub Schooling – den meetings in a classroom or around a table might be too much like school and might not be fun.
- To have more fun and get more family participation, Dens and Packs might do more weekend activities (you can invite new families to join you!).
- Pack “Meetings” or Pack “Activities”? Did you know you don’t need monthly pack meetings? Scouting’s Pack Meeting Resources page says: “Packs meet several times during the year – there is no required number. Some packs meet monthly, others less often.”
- Most Packs do get together monthly to do fun activities, like camping or Pinewood Derby or hiking or fishing or biking or bowling or field trips or what your families like to do.
- A Pack activity like a field trip or hike will have plenty of opportunities to build character and promote the values of Scouting. (You can have Opening and Closing Ceremonies, Leader Minutes, Recognitions and more anywhere, not just in a “meeting”)
- Families have more fun if you go to fun places and do fun things.
- Most Packs do get together monthly to do fun activities, like camping or Pinewood Derby or hiking or fishing or biking or bowling or field trips or what your families like to do.
- And if you do have a “classic” Pack gathering in a room, here’s a thought: don’t call it a Pack “Meeting” – aim higher.
- Call it a “Pack Party”, and aim for fun, not work or agendas.
- Plus some inspiration. Like the Oath and Law.