Kem tahunan 2010 telah diadakan pada 7-8 Mei 2010,dibawah ini ialah gambar aktiviti yang dijalankan.
Thursday, June 10, 2010
Simpulan
BUKU SILA




Keagunaan:Ikatan buku sila digunakan untuk mengikat kain pembalut luka,menyambung tali yang sama besar saiznya dan untuk mematikan ikatan barang-barang.Kedua-dua punca atau hujung tali tersebut senang dibuka semula.

BUNGA KETI
Kegunaan:Simpulan ini digunakan bagi menyambung hujung tali yang tidak sama besar,misalnya tali perahu dengan tali kapal.

SIMPUL MANUK
Kegunaan:Simpulan ini digunakan untuk mingikat tali pada tiang atau balak.Ia juga digunakan untuk memula dan mematikan sesuatu ikatan.

SIMPUL PULIH
Kegunaan:Simpulan ini digunakan untuk memendekkan tali tanpa memotong tali tersebut.Ia juga digunakan untuk menguatkan bahagian yang tidak kukuh.

LILIT BALAK
Sunday, May 10, 2009
Wednesday, July 30, 2008
Prisip Undang-undang Kepaduan
Prisip Undang-undang Kepaduan
1.Boleh Dipercayai
2.Sentiasa Taat Dan Setia
3.Berguna Dan Yang Suka Menolong Orang Lain
4.Sentiasa Bersopan Santun
5.Bersahabat Dengan Semua Orang Dan Bersahabat Dengan Pengakap
6.Berbuat Baik Kepada Haiwan Dan Menjaga Benda-benda Yang Hidup
7.Sentiasa Menurut Perintah
8.Bersemagat Dan Bergembira Walaupun Dalam Kesulitan
9.Sentiasa Berjimat Cermat
10.Suci Dalam Fikiran,Perkataan Dan Perbuatan
1.Boleh Dipercayai
2.Sentiasa Taat Dan Setia
3.Berguna Dan Yang Suka Menolong Orang Lain
4.Sentiasa Bersopan Santun
5.Bersahabat Dengan Semua Orang Dan Bersahabat Dengan Pengakap
6.Berbuat Baik Kepada Haiwan Dan Menjaga Benda-benda Yang Hidup
7.Sentiasa Menurut Perintah
8.Bersemagat Dan Bergembira Walaupun Dalam Kesulitan
9.Sentiasa Berjimat Cermat
10.Suci Dalam Fikiran,Perkataan Dan Perbuatan
Cogan Kata Pengakap
Cogan Kata Pengakap
-Pengakap Kanak-kanak
Cogan Kata:Buat Sehabis Baik
-Pengakap Muda
Cogan Kata:Selalu Bersedia
-Pengakap Remaja
Cogan Kata:Pandang Luas
-Pengakap Kelana
Cogan Kata:Berkhidmat
-Pengakap Kanak-kanak
Cogan Kata:Buat Sehabis Baik
-Pengakap Muda
Cogan Kata:Selalu Bersedia
-Pengakap Remaja
Cogan Kata:Pandang Luas
-Pengakap Kelana
Cogan Kata:Berkhidmat
Persetiaan Kepanduan
Persetiaan Kepanduan
Bahawa dengan sesungguhnya,saya berjanji dan bersetia yang saya dengan sedaya upaya:
1.Menuaikan Kewajipan Saya Kepada Tuhan,Raja Dan Negara Saya Malaysia;
2.Menolong orang Setiap Masa;Dan
3.Mematuhi Undang-undang Kepanduan.
Bahawa dengan sesungguhnya,saya berjanji dan bersetia yang saya dengan sedaya upaya:
1.Menuaikan Kewajipan Saya Kepada Tuhan,Raja Dan Negara Saya Malaysia;
2.Menolong orang Setiap Masa;Dan
3.Mematuhi Undang-undang Kepanduan.
Wednesday, July 16, 2008
VIP
Presiden Agong Kehormat Persekutuan Pengakap Malaysia
Dato’ Seri Haji Abdullah bin Haji Ahmad Badawi
Ketua Pengakap Negara

Yang Berhormat Datuk Shafie bin Salleh
Ketua Pesuruhjaya Pengakap Negara

KOL. Prof Dato’ DR. Haji Kamarudin bin Haji Kachar

Dato’ Seri Haji Abdullah bin Haji Ahmad Badawi
Ketua Pengakap Negara

Yang Berhormat Datuk Shafie bin Salleh
Ketua Pesuruhjaya Pengakap Negara

KOL. Prof Dato’ DR. Haji Kamarudin bin Haji Kachar
Official Song
Lagu Rasmi Persekutuan Pengakap Malaysia
Kami Pengakap Malaysia
Kami Pengakap Malaysia
Harapan nusa dan bangsa
Berikrar setia
Pada pertiwi tercinta
Melatih generasi muda
Menjadi insan yang berguna
Persetiaan pengakap
Teras dipegang bersama
Menolong orang setia masa
Menabur bakti di mana sahaja
Demi Tuhan, Raja dan negara
Berbudi, bersaudara
Taat, menurut perintah
Kami bangga junjung cita-cita
Pengakap Malaysia

Kami bangga junjung cita-cita
Pengakap, Pengakap Malaysia
Baden-Powell’s Last Message

Towards the end of his life, although still in comparatively good health, he prepared a farewell message to his Scouts for publication after his death. It read:”Dear Scouts - if you have ever seen the play ‘Peter Pan’ you will remember how the pirate chief was always making his dying speech because he was afraid that possible, when the time came for him to die, he might not have time to get it off his chest. It is much the same with me, and so, although I am not at this moment dying, I shall be doing so one of these days and I want to send you a parting word of goodbye.
Remember, it is the last time you will ever hear from me, so think it over. I have had a most happy life and I want each one of you to have a happy life too.
I believe that God put us in this jolly world to be happy and enjoy life. Happiness does not come from being rich, nor merely being successful in your career, nor by self-indulgence. One step towards happiness is to make yourself healthy and strong while you are a boy, so that you can be useful and so you can enjoy life when you are a man.
Nature study will show you how full of beautiful and wonderful things God has made the world for you to enjoy. Be contented with what you have got and make the best of it. Look on the bright side of things instead of the gloomy one.
But the real way to get happiness is by giving out happiness to other people. Try and leave this world a little better than you found it and when your turn comes to die, you can die happy in feeling that at any rate you have not wasted your time but have done your best. ‘Be Prepared’ i this way, to live happy and to die happy - stick to your Scout Promise always - even after you have ceased to be a boy - and God help you to do it.
Your friend,
Remember, it is the last time you will ever hear from me, so think it over. I have had a most happy life and I want each one of you to have a happy life too.
I believe that God put us in this jolly world to be happy and enjoy life. Happiness does not come from being rich, nor merely being successful in your career, nor by self-indulgence. One step towards happiness is to make yourself healthy and strong while you are a boy, so that you can be useful and so you can enjoy life when you are a man.
Nature study will show you how full of beautiful and wonderful things God has made the world for you to enjoy. Be contented with what you have got and make the best of it. Look on the bright side of things instead of the gloomy one.
But the real way to get happiness is by giving out happiness to other people. Try and leave this world a little better than you found it and when your turn comes to die, you can die happy in feeling that at any rate you have not wasted your time but have done your best. ‘Be Prepared’ i this way, to live happy and to die happy - stick to your Scout Promise always - even after you have ceased to be a boy - and God help you to do it.
Your friend,
Chief Scout of the World

Scouting was not B.-P.’s only interest, for excelled at pig-sticking and fishing, and favoured polo and big game hunting. He was also a very good black & white and watercolour artist and took an interest in cinephotography and sculpture. In 1907, he exhibited a bust of John Smith, the colonial pioneer, at the Royal Academy.
B.-P. wrote no less than 32 books, the earning from which helped to pay for his Scouting travels. As with all his successors, he received no salary as Chief Scout. He received honorary degrees from Edinburgh, Toronto, Montreal, Oxford, Liverpool and Cambridge Universities. He also received Freedoms of the cities of London, Guildford,
Newcastle-on-Tyne, Bangor, Cardiff, Hawick, Kingston-on- Thames, Poole, Blandford, Canterbury and Pontefract, and of other cities in various parts of the world. In addition, 28 Foreign Orders and decorations and 19 Foreign Scout Awards were bestowed upon him. Every minute of B.-P.’s life was ’sixty seconds worth of distance run’. Each new adventure was the subject for a book. Every happy incident or thought, every fine landscape might be the subject for a sketch.
In 1938, suffering from ill-health, B.-P. returned to Africa, which had meant so much in his life, to live in semi-retirement in Nyeri, Kenya. Even here he found it difficult to curb his energies - he still produced many books and sketches.
On January 8, 1941, Baden-Powell died. He was 83 years of age. He is buried in a simple grave at Nyeri within sight of Mount Kenya. On his headstone are the words, ‘Robert Baden-Powell, Chief Scout of the World’ surmounted by the Boy Scout and Girl Guide Badges. His memory remains for all time in the hearts of millions of men and women, boys and girls.
It is up to those who are, or have been, Scouts or Guides to see that the two Movements he so firmly established continue for all time as living memorials to their Founder.
The Beginnings of the Movement B.-P

‘Scouting for Boys’ has since been translated into many different languages and dialects.
Without fuss, without ceremony and completely spontaneously, boys began to form Scout Troops all over the country. In September 1908, B.-P. had set up an office to deal with the large number of enquiries which were pouring in concerning the Movement.
There is no need to describe the way in which Scouting spread throughout the British Commonwealth and to other countries until it was established in practically all parts of the free world. Even those countries where Scouting as we know it is not allowed to exist readily, admit that they used its methods for their own youth training.
As Inspector-General of Cavalry, B.-P. considered that he had reached the pinnacle of his career. The baton of Field Marshal was within his grasp but he retired from the Army in 1910 at the age of 53, on the advice of His Majesty King Edward VII, who suggested that he would do more valuable service for his country within the Boy Scout Movement (now Scout Movement) than anyone could hope to do as a soldier!
So all his enthusiasm and energy was now directed to the development of Scouting and its sister Movement, Guiding. He travelled to all parts of the world, wherever he was most needed, to encourage their growth and give them the inspiration that he alone could give.
In 1912, he married Olave Soames who was his constant help and companion in all this work and by whom he had three children (Peter, Heather and Betty). Olave, Lady Baden-Powell, until she died in 1977, was known throughout the world as World Chief Guide.
THE FOUNDER OF SCOUTING

Throughout the world as that of a man who, in his name Baden-Powell is known and respected 83 years, devoted himself to the service of his country and his fellow men in two separate and complete lives, one as a soldier fighting for his country, and the other as a worker for peace through the brotherhood of the Scout Movement.
Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell was born at 6 Stanhope Street (now 11 Stanhope Terrace), Paddington, London on February 22, 1857. He was the sixth son and the eighth of ten children of the Reverend Baden-Powell, a Professor at Oxford University. The names Robert Stephenson were those of his Godfather, the son of George Stephenson, the railway pioneer.
His father died when B.-P. was only three years old and the family were left none too well off. B.-P. was given his first lessons by his mother and later attended Rose Hill School, Tunbridge Wells, where he gained a scholarship for admittance to Charterhouse School. Charterhouse School was in London when B.-P. first attended but whilst he was there it moved to Godalming, Surrey, a factor which had great influence in his later life. He was always eager to learn new skills. He played the piano and fiddle. He acted - and acted the clown too at times. He practised bricklaying, and it was whilst a scholar at Charter house that he began to exploit his interest in the arts of Scouting and woodcraft.
Unofficially, in the woods around the school, B.-P. would stalk his Masters as well as catch and cook rabbits, being careful not to let the tell-tale smoke give his position away. His holidays were not wasted either. With his brothers he was always in search of adventure. One holiday they made a yachting expedition around the south coast of England. On another, they traced the Thames to its source by canoe. In all this, Baden-Powell was learning the arts and crafts which were to prove so useful to him professionally. B.-P. was certainly not a ’swot’ at school, as his end of term reports revealed. One records: ‘Mathematics - has to all intents given up the study’, and another:
‘French - could do well but has become very lazy, often sleeps in school’. Nevertheless, he gained second place for cavalry in open examination for the Army and was commissioned straight into the 13th Hussars, bypassing the officer training establishments, and subsequently became their Honorary Colonel for 30 years. His Army career was outstanding from the start. With the 13th Hussars he served in India, Afghanistan and South Africa and was mentioned in dispatches for his work in Zululand. There followed three years service in Malta as Assistant Military Secretary and then he went to Ashanti, Africa, to lead the campaign against Prempeh. Success led to his being promoted to command the 5th Dragoon Guards in 1897, at the age of 40. It was to the 5th Dragoon Guards that B.-P. gave his first training in Scouting and awarded soldiers reaching certain standards a badge based on the north point of the compass. Today’s Scout Membership badge is very similar.
In 1899 came Mafeking, the most notable episode in his outstanding military career, by which he became a Major-General at the age of only 43. B.-P. became famous and the hero of every boy, although he always minimised his own part and the value of his inspiring leadership. By using boys for responsible jobs during the siege, he learned the good response youth give to a challenge. During the 217 day siege, B.-P.’s book Aids to Scouting was published and reached a far wider readership than the military one for which it was intended. Following Mafeking, B.-P. was given the task of organising the South African Constabulary and it was not until 1903 that he returned to England as Inspector General of Cavalry and found that his book, Aids to Scouting’was being used by youth leaders and teachers all over the country. He spoke at meetings and rallies and whilst at a Boys’ Brigade gathering he was asked by its Founder, Sir William Smith, to work out a scheme for giving greater variety in the training of boys in good citizenship.
Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell was born at 6 Stanhope Street (now 11 Stanhope Terrace), Paddington, London on February 22, 1857. He was the sixth son and the eighth of ten children of the Reverend Baden-Powell, a Professor at Oxford University. The names Robert Stephenson were those of his Godfather, the son of George Stephenson, the railway pioneer.
His father died when B.-P. was only three years old and the family were left none too well off. B.-P. was given his first lessons by his mother and later attended Rose Hill School, Tunbridge Wells, where he gained a scholarship for admittance to Charterhouse School. Charterhouse School was in London when B.-P. first attended but whilst he was there it moved to Godalming, Surrey, a factor which had great influence in his later life. He was always eager to learn new skills. He played the piano and fiddle. He acted - and acted the clown too at times. He practised bricklaying, and it was whilst a scholar at Charter house that he began to exploit his interest in the arts of Scouting and woodcraft.
Unofficially, in the woods around the school, B.-P. would stalk his Masters as well as catch and cook rabbits, being careful not to let the tell-tale smoke give his position away. His holidays were not wasted either. With his brothers he was always in search of adventure. One holiday they made a yachting expedition around the south coast of England. On another, they traced the Thames to its source by canoe. In all this, Baden-Powell was learning the arts and crafts which were to prove so useful to him professionally. B.-P. was certainly not a ’swot’ at school, as his end of term reports revealed. One records: ‘Mathematics - has to all intents given up the study’, and another:
‘French - could do well but has become very lazy, often sleeps in school’. Nevertheless, he gained second place for cavalry in open examination for the Army and was commissioned straight into the 13th Hussars, bypassing the officer training establishments, and subsequently became their Honorary Colonel for 30 years. His Army career was outstanding from the start. With the 13th Hussars he served in India, Afghanistan and South Africa and was mentioned in dispatches for his work in Zululand. There followed three years service in Malta as Assistant Military Secretary and then he went to Ashanti, Africa, to lead the campaign against Prempeh. Success led to his being promoted to command the 5th Dragoon Guards in 1897, at the age of 40. It was to the 5th Dragoon Guards that B.-P. gave his first training in Scouting and awarded soldiers reaching certain standards a badge based on the north point of the compass. Today’s Scout Membership badge is very similar.
In 1899 came Mafeking, the most notable episode in his outstanding military career, by which he became a Major-General at the age of only 43. B.-P. became famous and the hero of every boy, although he always minimised his own part and the value of his inspiring leadership. By using boys for responsible jobs during the siege, he learned the good response youth give to a challenge. During the 217 day siege, B.-P.’s book Aids to Scouting was published and reached a far wider readership than the military one for which it was intended. Following Mafeking, B.-P. was given the task of organising the South African Constabulary and it was not until 1903 that he returned to England as Inspector General of Cavalry and found that his book, Aids to Scouting’was being used by youth leaders and teachers all over the country. He spoke at meetings and rallies and whilst at a Boys’ Brigade gathering he was asked by its Founder, Sir William Smith, to work out a scheme for giving greater variety in the training of boys in good citizenship.
Thursday, July 10, 2008
THE KING SCOUT AWARD [PENGAKAP RAJA] (Equivalent to the Eagle Scout Award)
THE KING SCOUT AWARD [PENGAKAP RAJA] (Equivalent to the Eagle Scout Award)The ultimate training Award for Boy Scouts is the King’s Scout Award. It requires extremely high standards of self-discipline, leadership and achievement in activity, interests and community service.
SENIOR SCOUTProgressive Badges
Proficiency Badges
Proficiency Badges : (Number indicates the amount of badges that must be taken)
a. Kegemaran Badges x 2 (Kegemaran means Interest)
b. Pengetahuan Badges x 3 (Pengetahuan means Knowledge)

Berkhemah Memasak Pelihat Perhutanan

Akademik Perintis Pendayung Perhubungan

Astronomi Pengembara
a. Kegemaran Badges x 2 (Kegemaran means Interest)
b. Pengetahuan Badges x 3 (Pengetahuan means Knowledge)




Berkhemah Memasak Pelihat Perhutanan




Akademik Perintis Pendayung Perhubungan


Astronomi Pengembara
c. Perkhidmatan Badges x 3 (Perkhidmatan means Service)
Pertolongan Pemadam Penyelamat Juru Bahasa
Setiausaha Komuniti Kuatermaster Pengawal
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)