Joeys Programme Resources

East Ryde Joey Scout Program

 

Date:   

Leader:   

Theme:    Growing Things!

Meeting Type:       Hall

 

Time

Activity Description

Leader

Equipment

Required:

 

Coming in activity

 

 

6.00

Opening parade

 

Flags

6.05

Who’s who

 

ball

6.10

Growing a seed

 

nothing

6.15

Seed relay

 

Seeds, pots, chalk rope

6.20

Craft:

 

Milk carton, soil, popsticks, glue, elastic band, sunflower seed

6.30

Battleship

 

nothing

6.35

NSEW

 

Nothing – quick run around

6.40

Trees and squirrels

 

Balloons

6.45

Mats:

What does a plant need to grow?

Story

 

 

Picture

 

Story

7.00

Closing parade

 

Flags – invest Christophe?

 

 

 

 

spare

Draw a plant

 

Long bit paper in 3 folds, pencil

 

 

LEADERS AVAILABLE:

 

HELPERS: 

 

BIRTHDAYS:

 

MATILDA:

 

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bless all joeys everywhere,

Help them remember their promise to share.

Guide them all safely home today

And watch over them while they work and play.

 

Amen

Games/Craft Information:

 

Who’s who…

On parade, throw or roll the ball to a joey and call their name.  See who knows who?

 

Growing a seed:

Like captains coming…. Seed (curl up in a ball) sun (phew its hot!) rain (run an splash in puddles) soil (dig)

 

Seed Planting Relay

Following a line, or rope on the ground, and by walking heel to toe, each team member must stop (about every 3 feet and drop a seed in a small mouthed jar set near the line. When he reaches the end, he runs back and taps the next on the team.

 

Craft:

Grow a sunflower seed.  Decorate the ‘pot’ with popsticks, put an elastic band around while they stick.  Fill with soil and plant sunflower seed.

 

Battleship:

Get across the flower bed without getting eaten by a bird!

 

NSEW

N – sun S – soil E – seed W - water

 

Trees and their nuts…

Trees on one side dropping their nuts, the squirrels gather them and throw them back to the tree.  Stop and see who won the trees or the squirrels

 

What does a seed/plant need to grow.  What harm can too much or too little sun and water do?

 

Draw a plant

Long thin bit of paper with 3 folds.  First person draws the roots on the plant (maybe straggley roots, or a potato or a carrot).they fold their bit back so the next person can’t see.  The next person draws the stem (maybe thin, or a tree trunk, or celery) they fodl their bit over and the last person draws the top (may be a sunflower, a tree or a plant).  Nfold the plant and see what it looks like!

 

 

 

 

 

The Empty Pot (Chinese tale)

BY royal proclamation, the Emperor of China announced a contest to decide the next heir to the throne. The Emperor was old and had no son, and because he had been a plant-lover for years, he declared that any boy who wanted to be king should come to the palace to receive one royal seed. Whichever boy could show the best results within six months would win the contest and become the next to wear the crown.

You can imagine the excitement!  Every boy in China fancied himself likely to win. Parents of boys who were talented at growing plants imagined living in splendour at the palace. On the day the seeds were to be handed out, thick crowds of hopeful boys thronged the palace. Each boy returned home with one precious possibility in his palm.

And so it was with the boy Jun. He was already considered the best gardener in the village. His neighbours fought over the melons, bok choy, and snow peas that flourished from his garden.  Anyone looking for Jun would probably find him bobbing between his rows, pulling out new weeds, moving one sapling over to catch more morning sun, transplanting another to the shade. Jun carefully carried the Emperor's seed home, sealing it securely in his hands so it wouldn't fall, but not so tightly that it might crush.

At home, he spread the bottom of a flowerpot with large stones, covered the stones with pebbles, then filled the pot with rich black moist soil. He pressed the seed about an inch below the surface and covered it with light soil. Over the next few days Jun, along with every boy he knew and hundreds he did not know, watered his pot every day and watched for the telltale unfurling of the first leaf as it burst through the surface.

Cheun was the first boy in Jun's village to announce that his seed was sprouting through the soil, and his announcement was met with whoops of excitement and congratulations. He bragged that he would surely be the next emperor and practiced his royal skills by bossing around the younger, adoring children. Manchu was the next boy whose tiny plant had emerged from his pot, then it was Wong. Jun was puzzled - none of these boys could grow plants as well as he!  But Jun's seed did not grow.

Soon sprouts emerged from pots all over the village. Boys moved their plants outside so the baby leaves could bask in the warmth of the sun. They built stone fences around their pots and zealously guarded them from mischievous children who might accidentally - or not so accidentally - topple them over. Soon, dozens of sprouts in pots throughout Jun's village were stretching out their first leaves. But Jun's seed did not grow.

He was confused - what was wrong? Jun carefully repotted his seed into a new pot with the very best and richest black loam from his garden. He crumbled every ball of soil into tiny particles. He gently pressed in the seed, and kept the top moist and watched the pot every day. Still Jun's seed did not grow.

Strong, powerful stalks soon emerged from the pots cared for by other boys in Jun's village. Jun was thrown into despair. The other boys laughed at him and started to mockingly say "as empty as Jun's pot" if there were no treats in their pockets, or if they had just finished their bowls of rice. Jun repotted his plant yet again, this time sprinkling dried fish throughout the soil as fertilizer. Even so, his seed did not grow.

Six month's passed. The day approached when the boys were supposed to bring their plants to the palace for judging. Cheun, Manchu, Wong and hundreds of other boys cleaned their pots till they shone, gently wiped the great leaves till the green veins glistened, and prepared themselves by dressing in their finest clothes. Some mothers or fathers walked alongside their son to hold the plant upright as he carried the pot to the palace, to keep the plant from tipping over.

What will I do?" wailed Jun to his parents as he gazed out the window at the other boys joyfully preparing their triumphant return to the palace. "My seed wouldn't grow!  My pot is empty!"

You did the best you could," said his father, shaking his head. Added his mother, "Jun, just bring the emperor your pot," said his mother, "it was the best you could do."

Shame-faced, Jun carried his empty pot on the road to the palace, while gleeful boys carrying pots tottering with huge plants strode to his right and left.

At the palace, all the boys lined up in rows with their blossoming plants and awaited judgment. The Emperor, wrapped in his richly embroidered silk robe, strode down the line of hopeful entrants, viewing each plant with a frown. When he came to Jun, he scowled even more and said, "What is this? You brought me an empty pot?"

It was all Jun could do to keep from crying. "If you please, Your Majesty," said Jun, "I tried my best. I planted your seed with the best soil I could find, I kept it moist and watched it every day. When the seed didn't grow I repotted it in new soil, and I even repotted it again. But it just didn't grow. I'm sorry." Jun hung his head.

"Hmm," said the Emperor. Turning so everyone could hear he thundered, "I don't know where all these other boys got their seeds. There is no way anything could grow from the seeds we passed out for the contest, because those seeds had all been cooked!"

And he smiled at Jun