Grylls
puts on his woggle and scouts out a new challenge
New chief scout aims to recruit 6,000 volunteer leaders for
33,000 children
18th May 2009
The adventurer and former SAS reservist Bear
Grylls, most commonly seen on television jumping from helicopters,
plunging over waterfalls, climbing inside dead camels and eating
anything that still wriggles, has been appointed the chief
scout.
In its boldest move for some years, the Scout Association
handed the daredevil presenter a remit to help attract
the 6,000 volunteer adult leaders it urgently needs to
clear the waiting lists of 33,000 children – including
Grylls's own.
"It's the proudest appointment I've ever had," Grylls
said yesterday, explaining that he first learnt survival
techniques as a scout. "Scouting is where it all began.
It gave me a lot of confidence. Sitting round the camp
fire, I would have laughed – as would the leader – if
I had known I would one day become chief scout."
The posting is a good opportunity for Grylls to shake
off a minor furore last year, when incidents in his popular
Channel 4 show, Born Survivor, turned out not to be the
quite the wilderness experiences they were billed as. The
presenter apologised for misleading viewers after it was
revealed that some action scenes had been staged.
An American survival consultant claimed that Grylls had
spent nights in a Hawaiian motel for an episode in which
he claimed to have been stranded on a desert island.
The programme consultant said that a smoke machine was
used to exaggerate the shots filmed at Mount Kilauea volcano
on the island, and that "wild" horses apparently tamed
by Grylls were from a nearby trekking facility. In one
episode, a raft built to escape from a desert island had
already been constructed by the crew to ensure it floated,
the consultant said – and then it had been taken
apart again. Grylls was subsequently rescued by a "passing" fishing
boat after the vessel slowly sank.
The position of Chief Scout was first held by Robert Baden-Powell,
who founded the Scout Movement in 1908. Grylls acknowledged
that there had in the past been a stigma attached to becoming
a Scout leader because of several historical cases of child
molesting, but he said that the Scouts' particularly rigorous
checks worked. "There aren't many organisations that are
as careful as the Scouts," he said. "The Scouts are the
pros at this. It's not the organisation it is for nothing.
It's the biggest, greatest youth movement in the world."
He added: "I hope I can use this post to encourage masses
of adults in the UK to volunteer as leaders. The young
people in this country need them like never before, and
we have more people wanting to join than there are places
available."
Grylls added that he became a "neurotic wreck" as he got
closer to being chosen as the chief scout. "I'll get a
chance to influence a whole generation of youngsters," he
said.
The outgoing chief scout, former Blue Peter presenter
Peter Duncan who has held the post since 2004, said he
would not mind being outshone by his successor: "As a working
actor, Bear Grylls is the most brilliant piece of recasting
I have ever been involved in. I wish him great success."
Safa Cheema, 14, an Explorer Scout from Bristol, said: "He's
really inspirational and I think he's going to be a great
chief. I am looking forward to doing loads of adventurous
activities in the future – it's going to be amazing
fun."
Scouting for boys: A shorts history
*Scouting began in 1907. At an experimental camp on Brownsea
Island, Dorset, Robert Baden-Powell and a small party of
boys put into practice his ideas for training young people
in responsible citizenship.
*There are 482,442 scouts in the UK. About 33,000 children
and young adults are on the waiting list to join, because
of a lack of adult leaders. They need one leader for every
five scouts.
*Record numbers of girls are joining. Female membership
was up by 11 per cent last year, with over 50,000 girls
now part of the movement.
*There are over 28 million scouts in 216 countries.
Two-thirds of them live in developing countries.
Scouting and Guiding in Lyneham
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more about Scouting or Guiding in Lyneham, please visit our
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Photographs with thanks to 1st Lyneham Scouts |