

Most of these ideas can also be found on my Holderness Rangers Resource Pages site.
We have used these themes in various ways,
in camps varying from small "long-weekend" camps with only ten
or a dozen girls, to big Division affairs. Most of them were
originally devised for our own unit’s annual summer camp.
Dinosaurs / Jurassic Park - for a weekend camp (at the
time JP was released – there was a lot of merchandise available
to buy, which made things easier for small prizes etc.)
Menu : Dinosaur burgers, brontosaurus stew, pterosaur
fingers etc. etc. The list is endless – you can call anything
anything!
Crafts : Dinosaur footprints (plaster casts), pipe-cleaner
dinosaurs, flying pterosaurs (paper planes to you and I!). See
whose pterosaur will fly furthest.
Patrol names : obvious – any dinosaur they fancy.
Outdoor games : dinosaur hunt : needs some preparation
before you go. Pictures of dinosaurs (drawn, copied, cut-outs
etc.) hidden around field / in woods / around site, and an equal
number of clues to find them. Can be used as an orienteering
exercise.
Camp challenges : patrol emblems / flags; scavenger
hunt – initial letters of DINOSAUR etc.; dress one member of
patrol as dinosaur; invent a new way of cooking T. Rex steaks
(not really!); design-a-dinosaur.
Native Americans (Started off as Cowboys-and-Indians,
but nobody wanted to be cowboys!) Took a lot of research to
prepare so we used it twice – once for a big Division camp and
on a smaller scale for our unit camp!
Names : Sub-camps and Units were given names of main
Indian Nations (e.g. Sioux) and individual patrols chose from
a list of tribes within those nations (a lot of reading beforehand!).
The girls then went on to adopt individual names, some less
authentic than others!
Menu : had been planned in advance, so the cowboys got
in here – Cowboy’s Breakfast, Chuck-wagon Chow, Root Beer etc..
(Remember, here in the UK our perceptions are coloured very
much by Hollywood!) We also ate "Pemmican," "buffalo stew" etc.
Crafts : Bead work; bows and arrows, moccasins (we got
hold of a lot of leather offcuts), model tepees, canoes and
totem poles etc.. Each patrol also made a large totem pole for
outside their tent.
Outdoor activities : pioneering – rope bridges, BIG
tepee (not very successful), backwoods cooking. Every camp-fire
song vaguely related to the theme – Land of the Silver Birch,
We are the Red Men (not PC, I gather, but it doesn’t have the
same pejorative meaning in the UK), Take me back to the Black
Hills, I’m an Indian too, Black Crow’s Spirit. Tracking in the
woods, Wide Game in the dark – organised by someone else and
I never did quite understand it, I’m afraid.
Camp Challenges : invent pictograph language and send
messages to another patrol / unit; costumes for Patrol mascots
or own teddy bear, decorate patrol tent, scavenger hunt etc.
Olympic Games (you’ve guessed, 1996.) Week-long summer
camp. GLORIOUS weather so we spent almost all of our time out
of doors.
Menu : Colour themed to the Olympic rings, believe it
or not – yellow : eggs, cheese (& cheese sauce), mayonnaise,
bananas, custard, cakes; green : salads & green veg.; red :
fruit, jam, cakes; blue : (we cheated – crisp packets and our
bread wrappers are blue) black : cheated again – meat (not really
overcooked), chocolate cake / pudding and coca cola. Everything
was set out by colour, not food group, (which led to some odd
combinations) on plates or napkins of the appropriate colour
(you can get black ones, intended for Halloween.)
Crafts : not many – the weather was lovely and they
didn’t want to! We did take some indoor games with us in case
of poor weather, though, and they made quite a few friendship
bracelets in quiet moments.
Outdoor activities / games : "Olympic" events : two
or three per afternoon, patrols or individuals, depending on
the "sport" – we did synchronised swimming (on dry land – the
winning team sported swimsuits, fixed grins, and clothes-pegs
on their noses), ice dance, cross-country skiing with 2 ski-ers
per set of skis, (OK so they should be Winter Olympics!) , Pony
Club Games – not an Olympic sport! Field events - discus (paper
plate – good if it’s windy!), putting the shot – water-filled
balloon, javelin – drinking straw, plus "ordinary" races and
competitions – running, jumping etc., and team games such as
rounders. Whatever the event, it usually culminated in a water-fight!
International : (My camp licence test camp! It went like
clockwork.)
The Patrols were (their choice) : Hong Kong, USA and
Greece.
Menus : We always do a full English breakfast, and fresh
fruit, cheese and biscuits are always available ad. lib, but
for the other meals, every day had a different country : France
– continental breakfast, French bread, cheese and fruit for
lunch, Coq au vin for our main (evening meal) with garlic bread
and (non-alcoholic) wine.
India – only the evening meal as we were off-site all day :
self-service buffet of various curries, poppadums, nan bread,
rice, chutneys, fresh fruit and (tinned) tropical fruit salad.
China - Chinese leaf salad for lunch, with tinned lychees; Sweet-and
sour chicken with stir-fried veg. and rice, spring rolls (bought),
fortune cookies and China tea.
USA - snack lunch of tuna or cheese salads, potato crisps, popcorn
and coca cola, evening barbecue – burgers, hot dogs, potato
waffles, tomato ketchup, Mississippi Mud Pie etc and more coca
cola.
Italy - “Risotto” – cold rice salad for lunch, Spaghetti bolognese
and camp-fire pizza in the evening, with ice-cream specially
brought in.
England - Fish-and-chips from the chippy for lunch; roast beef,
Yorkshire puds, potatoes and 2 veg, (with gravy) plus sponge
pudding and custard.
Crafts : China – fans, kites, lanterns; Italy -pasta
pictures, models of : gondola (paper boat, must float) L/T.
of Pisa; USA - Friendship bracelets ("Indian beadwork"); UK
- corn dollies; India - henna hand/foot painting , floating
sand pictures (rangoli), Diwali lamps; Japan - origami dolls
& birds, "bonsai"; Canada - flower weaving; Nigeria - tie –
dye; All - peg dolls.
Games & outdoor activities : We cheated and recycled
the Olympic Games, this time with the "countries" vying for
medals rather than as individuals.
We also played team games representing other countries : Baseball
(USA) – it still ended up suspiciously like rounders - Cricket
(Australia), Touch Rugby (Wales), Crazy Golf (Scotland).
Old-Fashioned Camp : Full week, lousy weather – it stopped
raining once!
Menu : all the old favourites. Full fry-up for breakfast
every day – sausages, bacon, eggs, beans, tomatoes, eggy bread
or fried bread; DIY sandwiches and fruit for lunch; evening
meals – Corned Beef Chuck In (large Billy with water and Oxo
cube(s), add chopped up corned beef then chuck in whatever vegetables
you have! Cook until vegetables are tender, thicken gravy if
necessary just before serving – easy and delicious.) Camp Pizza
– always burnt, always delicious. If they make their own then
they can’t complain that they don’t like the toppings – provide
a good selection e.g. cheese, tomatoes, tuna, sweetcorn, peppers
(green are cheapest but red or yellow seem to cook quicker)
onions, pepperoni or salami, corned beef is OK. My QM Carol
makes a mean Spag. Bol.
Patrol names : we stuck to the traditional UK Guide patrol
names; at the time our unit patrols were robins, chaffinches,
swallows and nightingales so for camp they chose flowers – thistles,
bluebells, snowdrops and scarlet pimpernels (unfortunately abbreviated
to scarlet pimps!)
Games : indoor games from our wet-weather list saved
us! Also lots of crafts – they always like making friendship
bracelets (it keeps them quiet for hours), tie-dye tee-shirts,
decorated candles, quizzes, puzzles, card and board games. Outdoor
activities : Backwoods cooking; tracking (each other or animal
tracks; nature walks; night-time “Ghost walk” (be careful if
the girls are young / nervous / away from home for the first
time!); pioneering – rope bridges, ladders, A-frame swings,
shelters - depends on the equipment available. Kite flying –
some bought, most home-made (bin bags and split canes). Even
mundane stuff like “wooding” can be made into a game – we are
lucky and use a site where we are allowed to go wooding.
Dig For Victory : (theme for last year’s camp)
Patrol names : Patrol tents are "Air-Raid shelters,"
Patrol names Gas Masks, Stirrup Pumps, Incendiary Bombs and
Barrage Balloons.
Menu : ("Rations" – everyone to have a "Ration Book."
ration the sugar – it will do them good!) The usual stuff but
heavily disguised with wartime names : Churchill Chilli, Hitler
Hash, Doodlebug Delight, plus real wartime delicacies such as
Spam and Dried Eggs. Haybox cooking. No bananas or oranges –
they were not available until after the war. If it is the right
time of year, go brambling (blackberrying) and cook them to
eat. BE CAREFUL. IF YOU ARE UNSURE OF IDENTIFYING HEDGEROW FRUITS,
DON’T PICK THEM). Blancmange.
Crafts and Games : make own ID cards, evacuees’ name
labels and "gas masks." "Make Do And Mend" : using only the
clothes they have brought with them and anything they can borrow
or scrounge, make themselves a “new” outfit; "Waste Not, Want
Not" : make a useful item out of rubbish / discarded stuff;
matchbox furniture (a craft taken from a wartime children’s
book – you will need to collect empty matchboxes for some time
before camp) - doll’s house style furniture can be made by glueing
matchboxes together covering with newspaper and painting them.
"Even The Walls Have Ears" – tell them that spies are listening
to their every word. If you overhear anything said within their
tents and can identify the speaker, she must pay a forfeit.
This might even teach them to keep their voices down at night!
"Be Like Dad And Keep Mum" - you would recognise this as Charades
or Give Us A Clue – patrols have to mime, or otherwise convey
without speaking, words or phrases, song / film titles etc..
Traditional games with minimal equipment : hopscotch if you
have a hard surface or means to mark out the squares, skipping,
ball games, hide-and-seek, tag in its 1000s of variations, any
singing ring games you can remember.
Night Game : (and a way of getting them back to their
tents quietly!) It needs to be dark for this one. Set the scene
: they have been to the local "Hop" with the GIs and have to
sneak back in without irate fathers finding out. In pairs, and
with a torch to flick on and off to avoid tripping, they have
to get back to their tents without getting caught. Guiders spotting
a light shout "Mind that light!" and it must be put out immediately.
They will stumble and giggle as they try to move quietly, but
take my advice and don’t catch them unless they actually walk
into you!
The girls are now Rangers, so we don't theme our camps the same
way as we did when they were Guides, but in September we took
part in (and helped organise) a large-scale District day camp,
at which the theme was Mediaeval England. The girls all made
tabards in their units, and at the event we did a George-and-the
Dragon wide game (the sort with half-a-dozen stations at which
the groups of girls made themselves swords, shields and helmets,
made a model dragon out of scavenged materials, followed a treasure
trail to find the dragon's gold, built a bridge over a (dry)
ditch to reach the dragon's lair and finally put out the dragon's
fire (candles) with water pistols! Great fun for all concerned.
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