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Choosing Boy Scout Patches

By: sellsarasota

The most commonly issued Boy Scout patches are the ubiquitous merit badges, of which there are over one hundred available to be earned by any Scout. These badges have strict requirements and must be approved by and issued from the official Boy Scout network, but this does not stop many organizations from looking to custom patch designers and embroiderers in order to purchase the custom-made patches required for their extracurricular accomplishments. While the rank patches need to be distributed by the authentic designers, there are plenty of custom orders that can be placed for specific individuals or organizations.

Many patches that are issued come from a troop specific achievement that deserves recognition. Some troops design their own patches for individual sub units of the troop (often referred to as packs or tribes) and the leaders of those specific units. Leadership is temporary, usually only lasting a few months, so that it may be necessary to purchase large quantities of these patches in advance for larger troops or organizations with turnover. Furthermore, these Scouts often look to create and customize their own patches, submitting designs and color schemes to match their own specific units.

Other custom patches may reward different types of leadership. The Scout tradition known as Order of the Arrow is one of the most uncommon and reserved achievements that a Scout can earn; the difficulty is so high that it is only available to the most senior and accomplished Scouts. Over a twenty-four hour period, the Scout participating in Order of the Arrow cannot talk with others, cannot eat or drink, and must not use any tools other than a pocketknife to complete his various tasks. Completion of this tradition yields a graduation ceremony with full pomp and circumstance, with the troop ordering individual patches for successful completion.

Of course, not all traditions are as serious -- some are merely achievements that naturally occur. Many scouts use a point system for winter camping, so that each degree below zero is added up as a Frost Point—an award in the form of a patch is often given for Frost Points at the fifty, one hundred, or even two hundred ticker.

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