Monday 21 May 2018

Air Ambulance Visit | University

10/05/18

This week we had a visit from the Great Western Air Ambulance Charity  (GWAAC). A volunteer speaker, Richard, came to the hall and set up his projector and banner while we played a quick version of The Chair Game to keep the girls occupied. Once they had finished, we sat them on chairs in a row in front of the screen and introduced Richard.


Richard then gave a half an hour talk about what GWAAC do and what area they cover. He explained that they cover 6 counties across the South West of England, with a population of about 2.1 million but that they recieve no government funding (including the National Lottery) even though they need about £3million a year to operate. He talked about the equipment on the helicopter and that they can perform minor surgical procedures on board. He also talked about the amount of space the helicopter needs to land in (20m square, about the size of our meeting hall!) and the fact that they fly to various hospitals in the area, including Bristol's BRI where the helipad is on top of a tall building. He showed a couple of videos of the helicopter landing in different places.

Once he had finished his talk, he handed out a quiz and wordsearch for the girls to do. We let them work on them for a bit with a break for a drink and biscuit in the middle. We had to do a bit of explaining for some of the questions as they were not really worded in a child-friendly way but once we had explained the girls could usually remember the answers from the talk. I did have one girl say that there were only 6 people living in the area that they cover though!

We then told them the answers to the quiz and had time for a few questions. We had some sensible ones like "have you ever been in the helicopter?" ("no, only really sick people get to go in the helicopter"), and "how long have you worked for GWAAC?" ("2 years as a volunteer speaker") but then we got a few more obscure questions like "have you ever had to do an amputation on the helicopter?" ("yes, very rarely") and "can you do organ transplants on the helicopter?" ("no, but we can do blood transfusions").

During the course of the quiz and question/answer session, we had one girl lose 2 of her teeth so we wrapped them up in paper ready to give to her mum at the end! While I've dealt with many lost teeth, I'm not sure I've ever had a girl lose two teeth in one meeting before!

Once the girls had exhausted their questions, Richard handed out a colouring sheet and a GWAAC pencil to each girl (we had to pay for the pencils but did it from unit funds). We then played a game of Splat to fill the remaining time before handing out some adventure books to the girls who made their promise last meeting, and some Science Investigator badges to the girls who had earnt it from last term.

This week was a nice and simple one from a leaders perspective, we got to sit and listen to the talk and only had to organise a few games to fill a bit of time. The girls also seemed to be fairly interested in the talk and actually remembered a lot of it for the quiz. I think it helped that it was something they are unlikely to learn about anywhere else so they found it interesting.

Monday 14 May 2018

Crazy Golf

03/05/18

I was at home this week so I visited my home unit for their meeting. This week was local elections in the UK so we couldn't use our usual hall as it is a polling station. Instead, we headed out to a local indoor crazy golf course.

All the girls arrived and we collected in their forms and ticked them off on a register while Brown Owl checked us in and found out how it all worked. You had to go round in a group of 6 or less so we got the girls to get into groups of 5 or 6. Some of the Young Leaders and the Guide Helper wanted to play so we put them with the groups of 5 and then had a Leader who didn't want to play with each group to keep score. There were two different routes that the girls could take and each group headed off into one or the other. Brown Owl was the only leader who wasn't with a specific group and wandered between them all checking up on everyone and doing toilet runs.

In my group, I had a few girls who I didn't know so I did a quick name check and wrote them all on the score card and then headed in. The girls had some interesting techniques for playing golf, including one girl who was a hockey player and kept pushing the ball along with the club instead of hitting it. There was also a lot of stopping balls with feet and nudging them into position which I mostly ignored as they were quite a young group, although I did occasionally stop them when it got a bit too much and reminded them that in golf you have to hit it and let it roll! There were also a couple of holes where you had to hit the ball hard and straight to get it up a slope and so I let them have a few goes and if they couldn't do it then they could put it at the top and carry on.

For the first few holes, we were following a group around who weren't associated with us. We would usually finish our hole just before they finished theirs and the girls would all watch them play their last few shots. They were quite good humoured about the girls 'encouragement', although you could tell that they really had wanted a nice evening out with some drinks and not a hoard of small girls following them round! At one point, we caught up with them at a hole where you hit it up a slope and through one of 4 holes which was then a tunnel to another section. I assumed that this tunnel was to some sort of basket for the next hole and so once they had moved on, we started playing on that hole. What I didn't realise was that the tunnel came out in the second half of the hole, which they were still playing and our balls kept flying out at them! Once we realised, we stopped and let them finish before carrying on with our game. A hole or two later they then decided to go back to the bar for a break and let us get ahead of them. We then didn't see them until we were playing the last hole and they were on the one next to us. When our girls had finished, they were going over and giving them 'tips' on how to do the hole! I eventually managed to pull the girls away and leave the poor people in peace.

Once we had finished, the girls had bought some money and they could get an ice cream or a drink while we waited for everyone else to finish and parents to arrive. One girl didn't have any money and wasn't going to have anything but then another girl offered to buy her an ice cream which we thought was very kind of her.

Overall, I think our girls really enjoyed themselves, even if they weren't very good at the actual golf part - in my group, the par for the route we did was 40 and we had scores ranging from 67 to 111! If you have one of these in the area, I would definitely recommend going, although I have to say that ours is more like mini golf than crazy golf, as there are none of the stereotypical going through tunnels and under bridges that I associate with crazy golf.

Monday 7 May 2018

More Mathemagician Badge | University

26/04/18

This week we continued with the Mathemagician badge which we started two weeks ago. This week we played Airplanes from Clause 3.

We started the meeting with a game of Wink Murder while the leaders sorted out what we were going to do. It ended up being quite a noisy game, our girls like 'dying' in style!

Once they had finished that, we got some tables out and the girls sat round them, in their sixes. We told them that they would be making paper airplanes and that the best decorated one would win a prize. We gave them a piece of paper and a pencil, as well as $85 of the Brownie Bucks from the activity pack and told them they could start planning what they wanted it to look like while we made up a price list. We looked through the cupboard and pulled out various odds and ends which we wanted to use up and wrote out a price list which we gave to each six.


We then invited the girls up, one six at a time, to do their first big shop. A couple of girls got confused and thought that the piece of paper was for them to make into the plane, not to write on, so they had to go back and do some quick recalculations on what they could afford. Other girls were very meticulous and came up with a list of which colour pencils they wanted! The Leaders ran the shop and made sure the girls were doing any Maths required, such as "if you want 2 stickers, how much is that?" and "you've given me $10 and it cost $6, how much change do you need?". Some of the younger girls were especially proud of the fact that they had done it correctly! We also had one of our older girls who was just buying pipe cleaners for the hell of it, so we decided that prices were going up as stock was low. She came over asking for 3 more and we told her they were now $6 each. She ran off, came back with $20, and when asked how much change she needed said "none". We asked her if she was sure and she thought about it and then said yes. We then saw her talking to the Guide helper and then came back asking for her $2 back! We pointed out that you can't leave a shop and then come back and ask for your change so she want off with a face like thunder!

Time ran away with us a little bit tonight and we suddenly realised that we hadn't done a dry run of the promises we were doing tonight so we stopped the girls and got them in a circle to practice. This unit does quite a complex ceremony, involving the new girl and her sixer skipping round the circle, singing and the unit replying. They then also spin round in front of the mirror as the unit says "twist me and turn me and show me the elf, I looked in the water and there saw" and the new girl replies "myself". As the new girls have never seen this happen, we always have to do a quick practice beforehand.

Once we had done that, I organised the judging of the airplanes. I got each six to show me their plane and tell me a bit about it and then I lined them up and got them to throw them down the hall. We then had a winner for distance and a winner for best decorated. The girls were a bit put out that there weren't actually prizes though!

We had a few minutes spare so we played a quick game of Splat. I had to pull out my cross face at one point because one of our older girls refused to sit down when she was out because she hadn't been paying attention.

Finally, it was time for the promise ceremony. We enrolled 4 new girls, which surprisingly went quicker than expected. We handed out the Mathemagician badges to all the girls and then let them all go home.

This meeting was very good from a leaders point of view, we spent most of the meeting standing and chatting whilst handing out various crafty supplies. The girls also seemed to enjoy the chance to be able to roll play going shopping and choosing what to buy and being able to handle the money. I'm not sure many of the parents let them do that. In hindsight though, our prices were a bit low. We assumed that the girls would want to make more than one plane in their six, so we had set the prices low enough that they would be able to afford a few pieces of paper but they ended up making one per six and so none of them ran out of money at any point.