


What is Cub Scouting?
While various activities and youth groups teach basic skills and promote teamwork, Scouting goes beyond that and encourages youth to achieve a deeper appreciation for service to others in and around their community.
Scouting provides youth with a sense that they are important as individuals. It is communicated to them that those in the Scouting family care about what happens to them, win, lose, or draw.
Finally, and perhaps most importantly, Scouting promotes activities that lead to personal responsibility and high self-esteem. As a result, when hard decisions have to be made, peer pressure can be resisted and the right choices can be made.
Cub Scouts will use these learned skills and have the time of their lives making new friends and learning new things in an environment designed to help them succeed.
From building Pinewood Derby cars to learning how to roast the perfect marshmallow at a family campout, your child will love being a Cub Scout.
So, if your child is in kindergarten through fifth grade or 5 to 10 years old, it’s time to have some fun in Cub Scouts!
Cub Scout Colors
The Cub Scout colors are blue and gold.
The blue stands for truth and spirituality, steadfast loyalty, and the sky above.
The gold stands for warm sunlight, good cheer, and happiness.
Together, they symbolize what Cub Scouting is all about.
