Scouting America

Feedback

Feedback

Please provide feedback on your experience of this adventure or activity
Report Quality Assurance
If there are errors or issues with this adventure/ activity, please go to the Report Quality Assurance Page.
Adventure/Activity Feedback Form
This feedback helps identify things den leaders like and opportunities for improvement.
Leaf Rubbing
Print This Page

Leaf Rubbing

Arrow of Light – 5th Grade
Into the Woods AOL
Elective
Requirement 2
Leaf Rubbing
Arrow of Light – 5th Grade
Into the Woods AOL
Elective
Requirement 2
Leaf Rubbing

Snapshot of Activity

Cub Scouts make a rubbing of the leaf or needles from their chosen tree.

Indoor
2
2
2
If you want to know more about The Adventure Activity Key click here.

Before the meeting:

  1. Remind Cub Scouts to bring the leaf or needles they collected in requirement 1 and their tree inventory.
  2. Gather supplies.
  3. Set up meeting space with a flat space to do the rubbing.

During the meeting:

  1. Gather Cub Scouts and explain the difference between deciduous or evergreen trees.
    • Coniferous trees have seeds that grow in cones, which is where the word “coniferous” comes from. When a cone’s scales open, the seeds fall out, and new trees can take root grow in cones, which is where the word “coniferous” comes from. When a cone’s scales open, the seeds fall out, and new trees can take root. Most coniferous trees are evergreen, meaning they don’t lose their needles in the fall.
    • Deciduous trees have wide, flat leaves that are good at capturing sunlight. They are called deciduous because most of them lose their leaves each year. Deciduous trees do not produce cones. Instead, their seeds are contained in nutshells or fruit. Oaks, maples, poplars, beeches, sycamores, and ashes are examples of deciduous trees.
  2. Have Cub Scouts place their leaf or needles on a flat, smooth surface, preferably vein-side up. Cover the leaf or needles with a blank piece of paper.
  3. Firmly hold the paper in place and rub the pencil back and forth across the paper covering the leaf or needles. The margin of the leaf and its veins or the needles should show on the paper as the Cub Scouts rub gently with the pencil. Make sure they rub over the entire leaf or needle cluster.
  4. Give Cub Scouts time to make detailed observations. Have them check for:
    • Color. Is the leaf green? Has it started to change color due to the seasons?
    • Texture of the leaf. Is it smooth? Is it rough?
    • Edges of the leaf. Are they smooth or toothed?
    • Can they see the stomata on the underside of the leaf? (Stomata are tiny pores that open during the day to take in carbon dioxide and close at night to avoid losing too much water.)
    • Can they find the midrib and petiole? (The midrib runs along the center of the leaf and contains the central vein. It provides support to the leaf and ends in the petiole, the stiff stalk connecting the leaf to the plant stem.)
    • Unusual features on the blade (the flat part of the leaf made of green tissue which absorbs sunlight, making the sugar needed for the plant to grow). Are there holes from insects? Discoloration? Other damage?
  5. Using the rubbings and the tree identification resources available, have the Cub Scouts work together in small groups to determine if their tree is deciduous or coniferous.

Other Activities Options

You can choose other activities of your choice.

Arrow of Light – 5th Grade
Indoor
2
4
2

Cub Scouts photograph their leaf and enlarge the image to determine if it is deciduous or coniferous.

Arrow of Light – 5th Grade
Indoor
2
5
2

Cub Scouts use a pocket microscope to examine their leaf.

Chat Icon
Scoutly Toggle Size Close Chat