The Cub Scout motto is to do your best. You don’t have to do everything, if you miss a meeting you miss a meeting. If you don’t want to camp then don’t camp. Plenty of kids don’t ever attend a camp out as a Cub Scout. We had kids who would come for the day time activities and leave after the campfire. The kids can make up missed adventures at home if they miss a required one to earn the rank patch at the end of the year. None of them were time consuming, most adventures can be completed in a hour long meeting with up to 10 5-10 year olds running around. They took far less time at home with just one kid and a parent. Most of the parents who stayed for meetings hung out and talked to each other. Some parents brought their laptops and worked. Parents stayed out of the meeting unless the Den Leader asked for help. I don’t know if 3 hours of meetings throughout a month is a ton of time. |
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I would not do either unless they express interest. If you must choose, Boy Scouts for your son.
These experiences will be different with every troop or pack. Here’s how it was for us: Boy Scouts: families were welcome and encouraged to come, siblings welcome. When they were little, it was chaotic and a lot of kids running around. Lots of hands on activities indoors and out. Girl Scouts, 2 different troops: drop off. Parents were not allowed to be there unless you were an official volunteer for a field trip and you had to go through a bunch of paperwork to qualify. Parents were never allowed at meetings. My daughter didn’t like either troop and continued a while because of friends. They were craft based or seemed out dated. A lot of sitting and procedures. It wasn’t fun and the main activity of the year was selling cookies. |