Winter Camporee
Please check back for updates for our Winter Camporee
Every year the District organizes two Camp-0-Rees, fall and spring. Generally the cost is $15 to $20 per scout and leader. At every Camp-0-Ree there is a competition of varying types to determine the “honor patrol.” There is a travelling trophey that is passed to the winning patrol at the end of each Camp-0-Ree. The other long time favorite is the “Golden Skillet.” This is another travelling trophey; the awardee is the winner of the cooking competition that ussually occurs on Saturday afternoon.
May 21-23, 2024
Is your cub ready to have three fun-filled adventures as they run, explore, and create? We will have crafts, STEM, BBs, archery, and more outdoor adventures planned! New program updates are included for scouts!
May 21st – 23rd / Tuesday – Thursday Day Camp, 8:30a to 3:30pm daily / Late pick up until 5pm
Cost: $125 Early Registration / $150 after March 25th. Late pick-up is $15/day.
Location: Birch Hill Recreation Area
Who can attend? Scouts that will be 5 years of age / entering Kindergarten in the fall (Lion) through 11 years of age and entering 5th grade (Arrow of Light).
Campership Applications are available at Scout office. Adults who volunteer as station leaders or Wolf, Bear, or Webelos den leader for all three days receive $25 off per scout! Discounts will be taken off at the MSC office.
Registrations made after April 24th are not guaranteed a t-shirt, so early sign-up is recommended!
We need washed 24oz spaghetti jars for a project. Please drop them off at the Council office.
We still need Scout BSA and adult volunteers. We need at least 3 adults to volunteer for shooting sports. All shooting sports volunteers need to be range certified by Ranger Rick before Day Camp. We have multiple training times available. Please contact Amanda @ foley.amanda.scouts@gmail.com or Tasmine at tasmine.bennett@scouting.org if you are interested in volunteer positions.
View/download Parent Packet/Individual Cub Registration
View/download Campership – scholarship application form
View/download Health/Medical Records
Click here for online fillable Health/Medical Records (ONLY Part A and Part B need to be filled out!)
Cub Scout Day Camp 2021 – Farming under the Midnight Sun
View/download Day Camp Registration Packet
View/download Campership – scholarship application form
View/download Health/Medical Records
Click here for online fillable Health/Medical Records (ONLY Part A and Part B need to be filled out!)
Day Camp June 2020
Introducing the 2021 Fund the Adventure patch which showcases the Scouting program through the pandemic we started to face during 2020. The challenges were difficult to overcome but with the tenacity and determination of our volunteers and youth we continued to bring quality program and continued support our youth!
The new FOS Coin goes right along with our theme of STEM this year!
A $250 donation will get this limited-edition coin which is also the 2nd coin in our Scout law series with a blow-up picture of our Scouts in action right from our very own Fund the Adventure Patch. It depicts that Scouting continues even during a pandemic.
Do not wait to send in this year’s donation to secure your coin and fill your plaque (Plaques are also available if you have filled your previous plaque or if this is your first year donating)
For more information contact CJ Stewart via email at clinton.stewart@scouting.org
or call the Council office at (907) 452-1976.
You can also just send a filled out FOS Pledge card (see link below) to the Council office or scan the QR code below to donate directly online.
Click here for a FOS Pledge Card
QR code to donate directly online:
“My Friends, No great endeavor is accomplished alone.”
The time is fast approaching us now for our annual Friends of Scouting presentations to each unit. We conduct this unit level campaign through presentations made preferably at a Cub Scout Blue and Gold banquet, Boy Scout Court of Honor, and Venture parent’s night. Presentations are typically 5 to 7 minutes with time to collect pledge cards.
“Friends of Scouting” is a campaign to provide financial support to your local council. In our case, that is Midnight Sun Council. This support is in the form of a pledge or donation from a company, organization or individual to ensure the financial viability of a council. Each council, including Midnight Sun Council, must raise all of its own funds to support its operating budget. Councils receive excellent program support from our National office but no financial support is provided. Scouting continues to grow and thrive within our council for many reasons, not the least of which is funding. The Midnight Sun Council serves not only the Fairbanks North Star Borough but approximately 279,000 square miles (49%) of the State of Alaska. Each year the Friends of Scouting campaign is conducted annually among the parents of Scouts and volunteer leaders. Families are the ones who see firsthand the benefit of Scouting for their child. District and unit volunteers conduct the campaign in order to give all Scout families the opportunity to support the Scouting program. During the months of January through April, each Pack, Troop, Crew and Post should schedule a “Family” Friends of Scouting presentation. This presentation explains to parents how our Council is financed and educates them about our facilities, camps, resources and funding needs.
Since Scouting began in 1910, its variety of programs have helped children succeed and has provided a lifetime of memories to each child. The mission of the Midnight Sun Council Endowment Fund is to solicit and receive contributions and dispense funds to assist and support ongoing programs, development needs and operational expenses of the Midnight Sun Council, BSA. The long-range goals for the Endowment is to provide not only a reliable source of the distributable income, but to have the assets positioned and managed to provide for anticipated yearly increases in the needs of the Council.
Midnight Sun Council Heritage Society:
The Heritage Society is the collective group of individuals who have contributed to the Midnight Sun Council’s Endowment Fund. The Fund provides a reliable source of funding to support Scouting programs now and into the future. Membership in the Heritage Society starts with a donation of $250 to the endowment fund. Additional giving levels within the society:
* Heritage Society Member: $250 minimum
* Sourdough Member – A deferred gift commitment to the Midnight Sun Council Endowment
James E West Fellowship: $1,000 or more in cash or market securities to the Midnight Sun Council Endowment Fund. Additional giving levels with this fellowship:
* Grand Teton Member – $2,500 minimum
* Pikes Peak Member – $5,000 minimum
* Mt. Whitney Member – $10,000 minimum
* Mt. McKinley Member – $15,000 minimum
1910 Society: $25,000 or more, outright or in a pledge payable within 5 years to the Midnight Sun Council Endowment. Additional giving levels within this fellowship:
* Ernest Thompson Seton Member – $25,000 minimum
* Daniel Carter Beard Member – $100,000 minimum
* Theodore Roosevelt Member – $500,000 minimum
* Waite Phillips Member – $1,000,000 minimum
The Founders Circle: $100,000 or more in the form of a deferred gift commitment to the Midnight Sun Council Endowment. Additional giving levels with this fellowship:
* Bronze Member – $100,000 minimum
* Silver Member – $250,000 minimum
* Gold Member – $500,000 minimum
* Platinum Member – $1,000,000 minimum
Endowment Emphasis
James E. West Fellowship Award Enrollment
James E. West Fellowship Recognition
Donor Recognitions
Major Gifts Recognition
Winthrop Rockefeller Award
You and 4 friends team up and come out August 3rd, 2024 at the Fairbanks Trap Club. You will shoot round robin style and compete for first place against other teams. Various door prizes and raffles will be conducted throughout the event. Make sure to get your tickets before they are sold out! (see article in this newsletter for more info) Event/Ammunition/Food sponsorships are available.
The event committee is looking for more help! If interested please contact CJ (info below).
Shooting Team fee of $500 includes lunch, pigeons, and shells. Team Captains can also sign up by contacting CJ at 🡪 Clinton.Stewart@Scouting.Org or calling (907) 452-1976.
click here to view/download 2024 Shooting Clays Team sign up flier
click here to view/download 2024 Sponsor Request Letter
click here to view/download 2024 Sponsorship flier
12th Annual Sporting Clay Tournament
11th Annual Sporting Clay Tournament
POPCORN SEASON IS HERE!!
Hello Everyone,
Below you will find the presentation and handouts in their digital form so you can print what you need for your Unit level kickoff. Also, please let me know when you do your kickoff, so that I can update the commission in the system.
Thanks, Good Luck with your sales!
Here some helpful links for you to view/download:
For further Information please contact CJ at Clinton.Stewart@Scouting.Org or by calling the Council Service Center at (907) 452-1976
Here is what you need to know.
Scout families must turn in their 2019 scholarship forms by April 30, 2020.
Scouts enrolled in the scholarship by April 30, 2020, can continue to submit scholarship forms and their account will be credited 4% of their sales for the popcorn fundraiser in 2020, 2021 and 2022. Sales after December 31, 2022, will not be eligible for credits to a Scout’s scholarship account.
There will be no new Scout enrollments into the scholarship program after April 30, 2020.
Trails End will continue to pay out existing scholarship funds to eligible recipients under the current scholarship program.
Scholarship changes were decided by Trails End, not your local council.
Trails End will be notifying Scouts who sold $2,500+ in 2019, as well as active Scouts enrolled in the scholarship program.
click here to view/download 2024 Distinguished Citizen Banquet invite postcard
click here to view/download 2024 Distinguished Citizen Banquet response card
click here to view/download 2024 Distinguished Citizen Banquet Sponsor response card (fillable)
Past Recipients:
Earl A. Cook, 1983 | Harry “Red” Porter, 2000 | Bert & Becky Bell, 2015 |
V. Paul Gavora, 1984 | William G. Stroecker, 2001 | C.B. Bettisworth, 2016 |
Leo Schlotfedlt, 1985 | Betty L. Everts, 2002 | Karen Perdue, 2016 |
Grace Berg Schaible, 1986 | Skip Cook, 2003 | Mike & Peggy Ferguson, 2017 |
Earl Hoover Beistline, 1987 | Mary E. Binkley, 2004 | Jo and Steve Heckman, 2018 |
Joseph Emil Usibelli, 1988 | Glen Hackney, 2005 | Bernie Karl & Connie Parks-Karl, 2019 |
Jeffrey J. Cook, 1989 | Richard & Anna Frank, 2006 | Glenner Anderson & Jerry Evans, 2021 |
Jo Ryman Scott, 1990 | Dennis & Mary Wise, 2007 | Steve Ginnis, 2022 |
Arthur Stephen Buswell, 1991 | Chuck & Carolyne Wallace,
2008 |
Carol & Jack Wilbur, 2023 |
William Ransom Wood, 1992 | Jim Lund, 2009 | |
Richard A. Wien, 1993 | Michael K. Powers, 2010 | |
Frank X. Chapados, 1994 | Dermot Cole, 2011 | |
Francis W. McGuigan, S.J.,
1995 |
Terrance Cole, 2011 | |
Mary Jane Fate, 1996 | Nancy Hanson, 2012 | |
V. Paul Gavora, 1997 | Robert B. Groseclose, 2013 | |
Michael T. Cook, 1998 | Barbara L. Schuhmann, 2013 | |
Paul & Jane Massey, 1999 | Mike & Peggy Pollen, 2014 |
These are some of the training awards that Leaders can earn. There is a pdf version available to print for Pack and Troop meetings. There is more information available on awards for both Cub Scout and Boy Scout Leaders at www.scouting.org.
1. Angel Rocks – The 3.5-mile loop starts along the north fork of the Chena River, and can take 2-3 hours to complete. Angel Rocks Handout
2. Wickersham Dome – This 7-mile, out-and-back hike starts out approx. near 28-mile Elliot Hwy (where it splits with the Steese Hwy). The climb might be steep, but the view of the Alaska wilderness is great!
3. Moose Creek Bluff – There is a parking area just off the 1st exit (on the left) off the Richardson Hwy, just past the Chena Flood Control bridge. This hike is considered to be an easy 2-hour hike.
4. Birch Hill Recreation Area – This is a favorite with well-groomed, extensive and challenging trails. The trail system is available exclusively to skiers in the winter, and to mountain bikers, runners, hikers and berry pickers in the summer. Birch Hill Trail Maps
5. Creamer’s Field – This is a unique trail system that allows hikers to see both wild and plant life that would be impossible without it. There are benches and rest stops, and at least two towers to view a majority of Creamer’s Field along the 2-mile trail. Creamer’s Field Map and Info
6. Steese Ponds – These are man-made gravel pits along the Steese Hwy that are stocked annually with grayling and rainbow trout by the Alaska Dept. of Fish & Game.
7. Murphy Dome – Murphy Dome is popular with ATV riders and hikers. It lies about 20-miles outside of Fairbanks, off of Sheep Creek Road.
8. Triple Lakes Trail – This trail is 9.5-miles long, about a 5-hour trip one way. The trail starts off steeply at mile 231 of the Parks Hwy, before evening out. There is an excellent view of the Nenana River and Alaska Range as you hike along three scenic lakes!
9. Lost Lake Campground to Moose Pond – This hike begins at Lost Lake campground and follows along the right side of Lost Lake. Go along the spruce bog about 1.3-miles until you reach Moose Pond. Watch for moose, beavers, and more!
10. Ester Dome – From the top of the domes, take the side trails to the south, and look for blueberries and cranberries.
11. Granite Tors – This trail ranges from moderate to strenuous along the 15-mile loop.
12. Horse Shoe Lake Trail – This is a popular 3-mile (round trip) hike starting at 0.9 mile in Denali Park. The total travel time is around 1 to 1-1/2 hours.
13. Ballaine Lake – This lake is just off of University Ave. on the left (from College Rd.). The Alaska Dept. of Fish & Game stocks this lake with grayling, rainbow trout, and Alaska blackfish.
State of Alaska, Dept. of Fish & Game – Southcentral Fishing Regulations
State of Alaska, Dept. of Fish & Game – Licensing & Permit Information