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Wolf
Tracks

The Wolf Cub badge is presented
to boys who have completed 58 of the possible
74 tasks, that comprise the 12 achievements, listed in the Wolf Cub Handbook.
Most Activities are done at home and signed off by parents upon completion of
each task. The book should be brought to each den meeting for the den
leader to record progress on the Den Progress Tracking Chart.
Once a Wolf completes his first three achievements (all 12 listed below), his
den leader presents the Progress Toward Ranks totem to him along with his first
yellow bead. It is worn on the button of the right shirt pocket as a temporary
badge. For every three achievements completed by the scout as a Wolf, he will
receive a gold bead. After he gets his fourth bead, he has completed the
requirements for his Wolf rank
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Wolf Cub Rank Requirements |
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Feats of Skill |
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- Play catch with someone 10 steps away. Play
until you can throw and catch.
- Walk a line back and forth. Do it sideways too.
Then walk the edge of a board six steps each way.
- Do a front roll.
- Do a back roll.
- Do a falling forward roll.
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- See how high you can jump.
- Do the elephant walk, frog leap, and crab walk.
- Using a basic swim stroke, swim 25 feet.
- Tread water for 15 seconds or as long as you
can. Do your best.
- Using a basketball or playground ball, do a -
- Chest pass
- Bounce pass.
- Overhand Pass
- Do a frog stand.
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Run or jog in place for
5 minutes.
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Your Flag |
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- Give the Pledge of Allegiance to the flag of the
United States of America. Tell what it means.
- Lead a flag ceremony in your den. Here are some
ideas:
(Ideas shown in book)
- Tell how to respect and take care of the U.S.
flag. Show three ways to display the flag.
- Learn about the flag of your state or territory
and how to display it.
- Learn how to raise a U.S. flag properly for an
outdoor ceremony
- Participate in an outdoor flag ceremony.
- With the help of another person, fold the U.S.
flag.
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Keep Your Body Healthy |
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- Make a chart and keep track of your health
habits for two weeks.
- Tell four ways to stop the spread of colds.
- Show what to do for a small cut on your
finger.
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Know Your Home and
Community |
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- Make a list of phone numbers you need in case of
an emergency. Put a copy of this list by each phone or in a central place in
your home. Update it often.
(List given in Book.)
- Tell what to do if someone comes to the door and
wants to come in.
- Tell what to do if someone calls on the phone.
- When you and your family leave home, remember to
...
(List given in Book.)
- Talk with your family members. Agree on the
household jobs you will be responsible for. Make a list of your jobs and mark
off when you have finished them. Do this for one month.
- Visit an important place in your community, such
as a historic or government location. Explain why it is important.
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Tools for Fixing and
Building |
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- Point out and name seven tools. Do this at home,
or go to a hardware store with an adult. Tell what each tool does.
- Show how to use pliers.
- Identify a Philips head and a standard screw.
Then use the right tool to drive and then remove one from a board.
- Show how to use a hammer.
- Make a birdhouse, a set of bookends, or
something else useful.
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Start a Collection |
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- Complete the Character Connection for
Positive Attitude.
- Know .
Discuss with your family how a cheerful and positive attitude will help you do
your best at school and in other areas of your life.
- Commit.
Discuss with your family how gathering items for a collection may be difficult.
How does a hopeful and cheerful attitude help you to keep looking for more
items. Why is a positive attitude important?
- Practice.
Practice having a positive attitude while doing the requirements for 'Start a
Collection.'
- Make a collection of anything you like. Start
with 10 things. Put them together in a neat way.
- Show and explain your collection to another
person.
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Your Living World |
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- This achievement is also part of the Cub
Scout World Conservation Award and Cub Scouting's Leave No Trace Award.
- Complete the Character Connection for Respect.
- Know. Discuss
these questions with your family: What things have people done to show a lack of
respect to our world? Why is it important to respect our environment and natural
resources? How can you show respect for your environment?
- Commit.
Discuss with your family how you feel when you see places in your neighborhood
that have lots of litter. Name one thing you can do to help the environment.
- Practice.
Practice being respectful while doing the requirements for 'Your Living World.'
- Land, air and water can get dirty. Discuss
with your family ways this can happen.
- It takes a lot of energy to make glass, cans,
and paper products. You can help save energy by collecting these items for
use again. Find out how recycling is done where you live. Find out
what items you can recycle.
- With an adult, pick up litter in your
neighborhood. Wear gloves to protect your hands against germs and cuts
from sharp objects.
- With an adult, find three stories that tell how
people are protecting our world. Read and discuss them together.
- Besides recycling, there are other ways to save
energy. List three ways you can save energy, and do them.
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Cooking and Eating |
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- Study the Food Guide Pyramid. Name some
foods from each of the food groups shown in the pyramid.
- Plan the meals you and your family should have
for one day. List things your family should have from the food groups shown in
the Food Group Pyramid. At each meal, you should have foods from at least
three food groups.
- Help fix at least one meal for your family. Help
set the table, cook the food, and wash the dishes.
- Fix your own breakfast. Wash and put away the
dishes.
- With an adult, help to plan, prepare, and cook
an outdoor meal.
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Be Safe at Home and on the
Street |
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- Complete the Character Connection for
Responsibility.
- Know. Discuss
these questions with your family: How does being responsible help us be safe?
Within the past week, how did you show responsibility?
- Commit.
Discuss these questions with your family: What happens when people are not
responsible? What things can make you forget to be responsible? What things will
help you be more responsible?
- Practice.
Practice being responsible while doing the requirements for 'Be Safe at Home and
on the Street.'
- WITH AN ADULT, check your home for hazards and
know how to make your home safe.
- WITH AN ADULT, check your home for danger from
fire.
- Practice good rules of street and road safety.
- Know the rules of bike safety.
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Family Fun |
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- Complete the Character Connection for
Cooperation.
- Know. Discuss
these questions with your family: What is 'cooperation'? Why do people need to
cooperate when they are doing things together? Name some ways that you can be
helpful and cooperate with others.
- Commit.
Discuss with your family what makes it hard to cooperate. How do listening,
sharing, and persuading help us cooperate?
- Practice.
Practice being cooperative while doing the requirements for 'Family Fun.'
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- Make a game like one of these. Play it
with your family.
(Eagle Golf, Beanbag Archery.)
- Plan a walk. Go to a park or a wooded area, or
visit a zoo or museum with your family.
- Read a book or Boys' Life magazine with
your family. Take turns reading aloud.
- Decide with Akela. what you will watch on
television or listen to on the radio.
- Attend a concert, a play, or other live program
with your family.
- Have a family Board Game night at home with
members of your family.
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Duty to God |
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- Complete the Character Connection for Faith
- Know. What is
'faith'? With your family, discuss some people who have shown their faith - who
have shown an inner strength based on their trust in a higher power or cause.
Discuss the good qualities of these people.
- Commit.
Discuss these questions with your family: What problems did these faithful
people overcome to follow or practice their beliefs? What challenges might you
face in doing your duty to God? Who can help you with these challenges?
- Practice.
Practice your faith while doing the requirements for 'Duty to God.'
- Talk with your family about what they believe is
their duty to God.
- Give two ideas on how you can practice or
demonstrate your religious beliefs. Choose one and do it.
- Find out how you can help your church,
synagogue, mosque, temple, or religious fellowship.
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Making Choices |
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- Complete the Character Connection for
Courage.
- Know. Discuss
with your family what 'courage' is. Review the requirements and discuss how you
might need courage in each one to do what is right.
- Commit. Give
some examples of when it is hard to do the right thing. Discuss with your
family times that it might take courage to be honest and kind. Tell about a time
in your life when you needed to be brave and courageous to do the right thing.
- Practice.
Practice learning about courage while doing the requirements for 'Making
Choices.' With family members, act out the choices you would make for some of
the requirements.
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- There is an older boy who hangs around Jason's
school. He tries to give drugs to the children. What would you do if you were
Jason?
- Lee is home alone. The phone rings. When Lee
answers, a stranger asks if Lee's mother is home. She is not. Lee is alone. What
would you do if you were Lee?
- Justin is new to your school. He has
braces on his legs and walks with a limp. Some of the kids at school tease
him. They want you to tease him, too. What would you do?
- Juan is on a walk with his little sister. A car
stops and a man asks them to come over to the car. What would you do if you were
Juan?
- Matthew's grandmother gives him money to buy an
ice-cream cone. On the way to the store, a bigger boy asks for money and
threatens to hit Matthew if he does not give him some money. If you were Matthew
what would you do?
- Chris and his little brother are home alone in
the afternoon. A woman knocks on the door and says she wants to read the meter.
She is not wearing a uniform. What would you do if you were Chris?
- Sam is home alone. He looks out the window and
sees a man trying to break into a neighbor's back door. What would you do if you
were Sam?
- Mr. Palmer is blind. He has a guide dog.
One day as he is crossing the street, some kids whistle and call to the dog.
They want you and your friends to call the dog, too. What would you do?
- Some kids who go to Bob's school want him to
steal candy and gum from a store, which they can share later. Bob knows this is
wrong, but he wants to be popular with these kids. What would you do if you were
Bob?
- Paul and his little sister are playing outdoors.
A very friendly, elderly woman stops and watches the children for a while. Paul
doesn't know the woman. She starts to talk to them and offers to take Paul's
little sister on a walk around the block. What would you do?
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Wolf Cub Rank Electives |
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After
completing the Achievements required for the Wolf Cub Rank, the Wolf Cub can
work on Arrow Points. Arrow Points are given to Wolf and Bear Scouts after they
have completed the requirements for their rank. The gold arrow point is awarded
for the first 10 electives the Scout completes from their rank book. A silver
arrow point is awarded for each group of 10 subsequent electives the Scout
completes. |
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Electives can also be parts of
the achievement section for the rank badge that the Scout did not count towards
earning the rank badge. Each part of the achievement counts as one elective
towards an arrow point. If the Scout completed 61 of the 74 achievements and did
not count the additional three towards completing the rank badge, they can count
as 3 electives towards an arrow point.
These awards are worn on the
official uniform directly below the left hand pocket, centered underneath the
rank badge the Scout has just completed. The gold arrow point should be centered
with pairs of silver arrow points centered underneath the gold arrow point (see
picture to right). |
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- IT'S A SECRET
- Use a secret code.
- Write to a friend in invisible 'ink'
- 'Write' your name using American Sign Language.
People who are deaf use this language.
- Use 12 American Indian signs to tell a story.
- BE AN ACTOR
- Help to plan and put on a skit with costumes.
- Make some scenery for a skit.
- Make sound effects for a skit.
- Be the announcer for a skit.
- Make a paper sack mask for a skit.
- MAKE IT YOURSELF
- Make something useful for your home or school.
Start with a recipe card holder.
- Use the ruler on this page (125) to see how far
you can stretch your hand.
- Make and use a bench fork.
- Make a door stop.
- Or make something else.
- PLAY A GAME
- Play Pie-tin Washer Toss.
- Play Marble Sharpshooter.
- Play Ring Toss.
- Play Beanbag Toss.
- Play a game of marbles.
- Play a wide-area or large group game with your
den or pack.
- SPARE TIME FUN
- Explain safety rules for kite flying.
- Make and fly a paper bag kite.
- Make and fly a two-stick kite.
- Make and fly a three-stick kite.
- Make and use a reel for kite string.
- Make a model boat with a rubber-band propeller.
- Make or put together a model boat
- Make or put together a model airplane
- Make or put together a model train.
- Make a model car.
- BOOKS, BOOKS, BOOKS
- Visit a bookstore or go to a public library with
an adult. Find out how to get your own library card. Name four kinds of books
that interest you (for example, history, science fiction, how-to-books).
- Choose a book on a subject you like and read it.
With an adult, discuss what you read and what you think about it.
- Books are important. Show that you know how to
take care of them. Open a new book the right way. Make a paper or plastic cover
for it or another book.
- FOOT POWER
- Learn to walk on a pair of stilts.
- Make a pair of 'puddle jumpers' and walk with
them.
- Make a pair of 'foot racers' and use them with a
friend.
- MACHINE POWER
- Name 10 kinds of trucks, construction machinery,
or farm machinery and tell what each is used for.
- Help an adult do a job using a wheel and axle.
- Show how to use a pulley.
- Make and use a windlass.
- LET'S HAVE A PARTY
- Help with a home or den party.
- Make a gift or toy like those in handbook and
give it to someone.
- AMERICAN INDIAN LORE
- Read a book or tell a story about American
Indians, past or present.
- Make a musical instrument American Indians used.
- Make traditional American Indian clothing.
- Make a traditional item or instrument that
American Indians used to make their lives easier.
- Make a model of a traditional American Indian
house.
- Learn 12 American Indian word pictures and write
a story with them.
- SING-ALONG
- Learn and sing the first and last verses of
'America.'
- Learn and sing the first verse of our national
anthem.
- Learn the words and sing three Cub Scout songs.
- Learn the words and sing the first verse of
three other songs, hymns, or prayers. Write the verse of one of the songs you
learned in the space on page 166.
- Learn and sing a song that would be sung as a
grace before meals. Write the words in the space on page 166.
- Sing a song with your den at a pack meeting.
- BE AN ARTIST
- Make a freehand sketch of a person place, or
thing.
- Tell a story in three steps by drawing three
cartoons.
- Mix yellow and blue paints, mix yellow and red,
and mix red and blue. Tell what color you get from each mixture.
- Help draw, paint, or color some scenery for a
skit, play, or puppet show.
- Make a stencil pattern.
- Make a poster for a Cub Scout project or a pack
meeting.
- BIRDS
- Make a list of all the birds you saw in a week
and tell where you saw them (field, forest, marsh, yard, or park).
- Put out nesting material (short pieces of yarn
and string) for birds and tell which birds might use it.
- Read a book about birds.
- Point out 10 different kinds of birds (5 may be
from pictures).
- Feed wild birds and tell which birds you fed.
- Put out a birdhouse and tell which birds use it.
- PETS
- Take care of a pet.
- Know what to do when you meet a strange dog.
- Read a book about a pet and tell about it at a
den meeting.
- Tell what is meant by rabid. Name some animals
that can have rabies. Tell what you should do if you see a dog or wild animal
that is behaving strangely. Tell what you should do if you find a dead animal.
- GROW SOMETHING
- Plant and raise a box garden.
- Plant and raise a flower bed.
- Grow a plant indoors.
- Plant and raise vegetables.
- Visit a botanical garden or other agricultural
exhibition in your area.
- FAMILY ALERT
- Talk with your family about what you will do in
an emergency.
- In case of a bad storm or flood, know where you
can get safe food and water in your home. Tell how to purify water. Show one
way. Know where and how to shut off water, electricity, gas, or oil.
- Make a list of your first aid supplies, or make
a first aid kit. Know where the first aid things are kept.
- TIE IT RIGHT
- Learn to tie an overhand knot and a square knot.
- Tie your shoelaces with a square bow knot.
- Wrap and tie a package so that it is neat and
tight.
- Tie a stack of newspapers the right way.
- Tie two cords together with an overhand knot.
- Learn to tie a necktie.
- Wrap the end of a rope with tape to keep it from
unwinding.
- OUTDOOR ADVENTURE
- Help plan and hold a picnic with your family or
den.
- With an adult, help plan and run a family or den
outing.
- Help plan and lay out a treasure hunt something
like the example map shown in book.
- Help plan and lay out an obstacle race
- Use this idea or make up your own. (Example list
in book)
- Help plan and lay out an adventure trail.
- Take part in two summertime pack events with
your den.
- Point out poisonous plants. Tell what to do if
you accidentally touch one of them.
- FISHING
- Identify five different kinds of fish.
- Rig a pole with the right kind of line and hook.
Attach a bobber and sinker, if you need them. Then go fishing.
- Fish with members of your family or an adult.
Bait your hook and do your best to catch a fish.
- Know the rules of safe fishing.
- Tell about some of the fishing laws where you
live.
- Show how to use a rod and reel.
- SPORTS
- Play a game of tennis, table tennis, or
badminton.
- Know boating safety rules.
- Earn the Cub Scouting shooting sports
Archery
belt loop.
- Understand the safety and courtesy code for
skiing. Show walking and the kick turn. Do climbing with a side stop or
herringbone. Show the snowplow or stem turn, and how to get up from a fall.
- Know the safety rules for ice skating. Skate,
without falling, as far as you can walk in 50 steps. Come to a stop. Turn from
forward to backward.
- In roller skating, know the safety rules. From a
standing start, skate forward as far as you can walk in 50 steps. Come to a stop
within 10 walking steps. Skate around a corner one way without coasting. Then do
the same coming back. Turn from forward to backward.
- Go bowling.
- Show how to make a sprint start in track. See
how far you can run in 10 seconds.
- Do a standing long jump. Jump as far as you can.
- Play a game of flag football.
- Show how to dribble and kick a soccer ball. Take
part in a game.
- Play a game of baseball or softball.
- Show how to shoot, pass, and dribble a
basketball. Take part in a game.
- Earn the Cub Scouting shooting sports
BB-gun shooting belt loop.
- With your den, participate in four outdoor
physical fitness-related activities.
- COMPUTERS
- Visit a business where computers are used. Find
out what the computers do
- Explain what a computer program does. Use a
program to write a report for school, to write a letter, or for something else.
- Tell what a computer mouse is. Describe how a
CD-ROM is used.
- SAY IT RIGHT
- Say 'hello' in a language other than English.
(Examples given in book.)
- Count to ten in a language other than English.
- Tell a short story to your den, your den leader,
or an adult.
- Tell how to get to a nearby fire station or
police station from your home, your den meeting place, and school. Use
directions and street names.
- Invite a boy to join Cub Scouting or help a new
Cub Scout through the Bobcat trail.
- LET'S GO CAMPING
- Participate with your pack on an overnight
campout.
- Explain the basics of how to take care of
yourself in the outdoors.
- Tell what to do if you get lost.
- Explain the buddy system.
- Attend day camp in your area.
- Attend resident camp in your area.
- Participate with your den at a campfire in front
of your pack.
- With your den or pack or family, participate in
a worship service outdoors.
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