NOTE: The official merit badge pamphlets are now free and downloadable
HERE or can be purchased at the
Scout Shop.
1.
Do the following:
- (a)
Explain to your counselor the most likely hazards you
may encounter while participating in rowing activities,
including weather- and water-related hazards, and what
you should do to anticipate, help prevent, mitigate, and
respond to these hazards.
- (b)
Review prevention, symptoms, and first-aid treatment
for the following injuries or illnesses that can occur
while rowing: blisters, hypothermia, heat-related illnesses,
dehydration, sunburn, sprains, and strains.
- (c)
Review the Scouting America Safety Afloat policy. Explain to your
counselor how this applies to rowing activities.
2.
Before completing requirements 4, 5, 6, and 7, successfully complete the Scouting America swimmer test.
3.
Review the characteristics of life jackets most appropriate
for rowing and why one must always be worn while rowing.
Then demonstrate how to select and fit a life jacket.
4.
Do ONE of the following:
- (a)
Alone or with a passenger, do the following in either a
fixed-seat or sliding-seat rowboat:
- (1)
Launch.
- (2)
Row in a straight line for 100 yards. Stop, pivot, and
return to the starting point.
- (3)
Backwater in a straight line for 25 yards. Make a turn underway and return to the starting point.
- (4)
Land and moor or rack your craft.
- (5)
Tie the following mooring knots—clove hitch,
roundturn with two half-hitches, bowline,
Wellman's knot, and mooring hitch.
- (b)
Participate as a rowing team member in a competitive
rowing meet. The team may be sponsored by a school,
club, or Scout unit. The meet must include competition
between two or more teams with different sponsors.
Complete at least 10 hours of team practice prior to
the meet.
5.
Do ONE of the following:
- (a)
In a fixed-seat rowboat, come alongside a pier and
help a passenger into the boat. Pull away from the pier,
change positions with your passenger, and demonstrate
sculling over the stern or side. Resume your rowing
position, return alongside the pier, and help your
passenger out of the boat.
- (b)
In a sliding-seat rowboat, come alongside a pier and,
with your buddy assisting you, get out onto the pier.
Help your buddy into the boat. Reverse roles with your
buddy and repeat the procedure.
6.
Participate in a swamped boat drill including righting and
stabilizing the craft, reboarding in deep water, and making
headway. Tell why you should stay with a swamped boat.
7.
Alone in a rowboat, push off from the shore or a pier.
Row 20 yards to a swimmer. While giving instructions
to the swimmer, pivot the boat so that the swimmer can
hold on to the stern. Tow the swimmer to shore.
8.
Describe the following:
- (a)
Types of craft used in commercial, competitive, and recreational rowing
- (b)
Four common boatbuilding materials. Give some positive and negative points of each
- (c)
Types of oarlocks used in competitive and recreational rowing.
9.
Discuss the following:
- (a)
The advantage of feathering oars while rowing
- (b)
Precautions regarding strong winds and heavy waves, and boat-handling procedures in rough water and windstorms
- (c)
How to properly fit out and maintain a boat in season, and how to prepare and store a boat for winter
- (d)
How to determine the proper length of oars
- (e)
The differences between fixed-seat and sliding-seat rowing
- (f)
The different meanings of the term sculling in fixed- and sliding-seat rowing
- (g)
The health benefits from rowing for exercise