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- Explain the BSA Safety Afloat plan.
- Demonstrate during a watercraft activity
that you know the BSA Safety Afloat plan.
- Complete a basic boating safety course
provided by the U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary, U.S. Power Squadrons, US
Sailing, American Red Cross,
or your state's boating law administrator.
- �
- Learn and demonstrate water rescue
techniques, including self rescue, group rescue, boat assisted
rescue, short-line rescue, boat-over-boat rescue, and rescuing a
pinned craft.
- Learn and demonstrate that you know the
rules for avoiding water-caused hypothermia and what to do in
case of hypothermia.
- Make a presentation to your crew, another
crew, a Cub or Boy Scout group, or another youth group on boating
safety.
Do 5, 6, or 7.
- �
- Learn the American Whitewater
Affiliation Safety Code.
- Demonstrate during a watercraft activity
that you know the American Whitewater Affiliation Safety Code.
- Learn about the International Scale of
River Difficulty.
- Learn and be able to describe the six
classifications of rivers.
- On a whitewater river map of your
choice, be able to show why different sections are classified
the way they are.
- Learn and explain the differences in
recreational canoes, touring canoes, downriver canoes,
whitewater playboat canoes, decked canoes, recreational kayaks,
touring kayaks, and whitewater playboat kayaks.
- Learn and use paddling techniques and
maneuvers for:
- Canoe, both single and double
passenger
- Kayak, single or double passenger
- Paddle a slow river a distance of at
least eight miles or run a whitewater river a distance of six
miles with at least one class III rapid.
- �
- Learn and demonstrate the BSA rules for
boardsailing.
- Learn how to boardsail.
- Become certified as a US Sailing Small Boat
Sailor or US Sailing Instructor.
�
Materials
found at the U. S. Scouting Service Project, Inc. Website �1997-2000
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