Northern Lights

17 Mar 10:30
Duty six : Blue

Start Time Activity Requirements Instructions Scouter
The Northern Lights are also known as the Aurora Borealis
17 Mar 10:30 5 Activities : Opening Register, beans, flag, totem and skin
Grand Howl
Flag Break
Register
Inspection - belts and shoes
Akela
Similar to a rainbow, the Northern lights can be many different colours from pink to green to yellow. Sometimes multiple colours and sometimes only one
17 Mar 10:35 10 Game : Rainbows in Bubbles

Have the Cubs try and pop bubbles without using their hands.  They can use their heads, elbows, legs, feet, knees, etc. 

Blow bubbles and then try and catch them. 

See how long the Cubs can keep their bubbles in the air by having them blow underneath them to keep them from popping.
Akela
The Aurora Borealis happens in the North pole (and for about 4,000 kilometers around the pole). Which way is North?
17 Mar 10:45 10 Activities : Finding North

stick

stones

Which way is north? Whether you're lost in the woods or you're trying to install a sundial in your yard, you're bound to want to find true north from time to time, and chances are when the time comes you won't have a compass. What's more, even if you do have a compass, it will point to magnetic north, which changes with your location in the world.

TheShadow-Tip Method

 1    Place a stick upright in the ground so thatyou can see its shadow. Alternatively, you can use the shadow of a fixedobject. Nearly any object will work, but the taller the object is, the easierit will be to see the movement of its shadow, and the narrower the tip of theobject is, the more accurate the reading will be. Make sure the shadow is caston a level, brush-free spot.

 2     Mark the tip of the shadow with a smallobject, such as a pebble, or a distinct scratch in the ground. Try to make themark as small as possible so as to pinpoint the shadow's tip, but make sure youcan identify the mark later.

 3    Wait 10-15 minutes. The shadow tip willmove mostly from west to east in a curved line.

 4    Mark the new position of the shadow's tipwith another small object or scratch. It will likely move only a shortdistance.

5    Draw a straight line in the ground betweenthe two marks. This is an approximate east-west line.

6    Stand with the first mark (west) on yourleft, and the other (east) on your right. You are now facing mostly toward truenorth, regardless of where you are in the world. The illustration shows that the sun and marker at Points 1 is what is happening for Step 2. At Points 2, itshows what is happening for Step 4. This method is based on the fact that thesun moves across the sky from East to West.


Image titled Find True North Without a Compass Step 6


Watch Method: Southern Hemisphere

 1    Use an analogue watch as above, and point the twelve o'clock mark (the number 12) of the watch toward the sun. If your watch is set to daylight saving time, point the one o'clock mark toward the sun.

2    Bisect the angle between the twelve o'clock mark (or one o'clock mark if using daylight saving time) and the hour hand to find the north-south line. If you're unsure which way is north, remember that the sun rises in the east and sets in the west no matter where you are. In the southern hemisphere, however, the sun is due north at midday.

Image titled Find True North Without a Compass Step 25


Akela
Can you use a compass to find your way around? Let's try using the compasses to follow some directions and see what we get
17 Mar 10:55 25 Activities : Compass Drawing

string

nails/sosatie sticks 

compasses for each Six 

Using the attached instructions, Cubs are to use the string and nails to "draw" the picture.  They follow the instructions, putting a nail in the ground at each point and tying the string on.  Using the compass, they change direction and then move the number of steps indicated.

The pictures in the attached template are a Sailboat, a Horse and a Train

 

Akela
Do you want to know more about the Northern Lights? What makes them and what people believe about them?
17 Mar 11:20 15 Yarn : Myths and Legends about the Northern Lights See attached Akela
Let's take a juice and biscuit break
17 Mar 11:35 5 Activities : Juice and biscuits Juice and biscuit break
Akela
We are going to paint our own Aurora Borealis - we can use magnets seeing as the magnetic field around Earth is part of the reason that we see these lights
17 Mar 11:40 30 Crafts : Magnet Painting

  • Magnet
  • Various metal items like ball bearings, springs & screws
  • Various non-metal items like marbles
  • Paper
  • Plastic tray or box
  • Tempera paint
  • Cups or palette to dip the metal pieces in
  • Spoons to get the painted covered pieces into the tray

To begin painting, pour your paint into something deep enough to drop your metal pieces into.   An egg carton works well too.  Then cut your paper to fit your tray and place a piece inside. Now it’s time to paint!  Dip a metal piece in paint and drop it into the tray.  Then take the magnet and move it around under the plastic tray as this keeps the metal pieces rolling smoothly.

One of the best parts of this project is that kids can learn a little science while painting.  You can use all metal pieces or you can throw in some things that the magnet can’t move like glass marbles.  Even the all the metal pieces moved differently.  Some were too heavy and some like the metal bead chain stopped moving when they got covered in paint.  Our favorite were the springs because they rolled around and left cool stripes.

Akela
We are penguins in the frozen artic circle trying to get back to the rest of the raft (a group of penguins)
17 Mar 12:10 10 Game : Do the Penguin similar to 3 legged race, but on an individual level. the cubs tie their knees together limiting leg movement, in relay race style, the cubs have to complete a course and return for the next cub to start. Akela
Next week, we have normal Cubs in the morning but we will also be holding a Earth Hour campfire on Saturday evening
17 Mar 12:20 10 Activities : Closing Totem, Skin
Badges, certificates
Announcements
Badge handouts
Grand Howl
Flag Down
Prayer
Dismiss
Akela

Programme prepared on 09 May 01:24

Compass Drawing




Category Activities
Advancement Compass and Mapping
Time to allocate (mins) 30
Outcome Practice using your compass, learn the cardinal points of the compass
Resources

string

nails/sosatie sticks 

compasses for each Six 

Instructions

Using the attached instructions, Cubs are to use the string and nails to "draw" the picture.  They follow the instructions, putting a nail in the ground at each point and tying the string on.  Using the compass, they change direction and then move the number of steps indicated.

The pictures in the attached template are a Sailboat, a Horse and a Train

 


Entry written by Sharon Venn of 1st Randburg

Documents

Instructions compass_instructions.docx

Myths and Legends about the Northern Lights




Category Yarn
Time to allocate (mins) 10
Story

The northern lights have, and in some ways always will be, surrounded by myth and legend. Even the modern day solar scientists openly admit that there is so much that is still not understood – continuing to fuel appetite for stories passed from generation to generation.

 

Although the first written account of the aurora is thought to date back to 2,600BC in China, it is a cave painting from southern France from 30,000BC which is believed to be the earliest surviving record of the phenomenon.

 

The northern lights were given their scientific name in the 17th century, the aurora borealis. There is, however, some dispute as to who should be credited for this with some claiming it was Galileo Galilei in 1616 and others believing it to be a French mathematician, Gassend, in 1649.

 

The aurora borealis remains a source of wonder for those who see it, and is explored to this day by scientists striving for a better understanding of the phenomenon. However, many myths about the magical lights remain, woven deeply into the cultures that held them, and serve to provide a fascinating insight into our past.

 

The Sámi people traditionally lived in a vast Arctic area of northern Sweden, Finland, Norway and Russia. With an unparalleled proximity to the northern lights a number of legends to explain the phenomenon were passed through generations.

 

Believing that the lights were souls of the departed, Sámi believed in behaving solemnly and respectfully whenever the lights were in the sky. Bad fortune awaited anyone who showed them disrespect so many people chose to keep their families indoors when the lights were on display.

 

It was also believed that if you whistle a tune under the lights, it would summon the spirits closer and closer, until you were whisked away.

 

The Scandinavian name for the aurora translates as ‘herring flash’ as it was believed that the dancing whirls of green light were a reflection of huge schools of herring in the sea.

 

Whenever the lights were visible, fishermen were expected to be blessed with good catches of fish.

 

According to Swedish legend, a winter with frequent displays of the northern lights served to predict a good yield of crops the following year.

 

In Norwegian folklore, the northern lights were thought to be the spirits of old maids dancing in the sky and waving at those below them.

 

According to one popular Finnish myth, magical arctic foxes sweeping their tails across the snow and spraying it into the sky is the real reason for the spectacular light show. In fact, the Finnish name for the northern lights even translates as ‘fox fires’.

 

Norse mythology connected the aurora borealis with war. It was believed that the lights appeared when sunlight reflected on the shiny shields of the Valkyries who were racing across the sky on the way to their resting place, Valhalla.

 

Old Icelandic folklore believed that the northern lights would ease the pain of childbirth. It was not all good news for mothers though – it was also thought that pregnant women looking at the lights would give birth to cross-eyed children.

 

In Greek mythology, Aurora (or Eos as she was known in Greek mythology) was the sister of Helios (The Sun) and Selene (The Moon). Eos was believed to wake before anything or anyone else.

 

The northern lights were believed to be caused by Aurora riding her mighty chariot across the sky to announce the arrival of Helios, opening the gates of heaven to bring in each new day. Boreas, the mythical Greek north wind god, was believed to cause the northern lights dance.

 

In China, the lights were believed to be the fiery breath of dragons fighting in the sky.

 

In Scotland, it was believed that the lights were clans at war and that blood spilled in violent battle was the true cause of the red lights common in the area.

 

The Fox Indians of Wisconsin saw the northern lights as a bad omen believing that they were the ghosts of slain enemies. The Makah Indians believed the lights were caused by dwarfs lighting bright colourful fires.

 

The Alonquin Indians, however, believed that after their god, Nanahbozho, created the earth he travelled to the far north where he builds great fires, the light from which reflects southward to remind people of his everlasting love.

 

The Eskimos of Labrador in North Eastern Canada believed the northern lights to be torches lit by the dead who were playing soccer in the heavens with a walrus skull. The Eskimo word for the northern lights is aksarnirq which literally translates as ‘ball player.’

 

In North West Canada, the Eskimos of the lower Yukon River believed the lights were the beautiful dances of animal spirits.

 

In Estonian mythology, the northern lights are said to occur when a celestial war or wedding is taking places. The lights are the reflections of the sleighs and horses drawing the parties. Another Estonian legend connects the aurora to whales playing in the sky.


Entry written by Sharon Venn of 1st Randburg

Documents

Video of Northern Lights Night_of_the_Northern_Lights.mp4
Na aurora