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69:, relating to the tracking of people and animals. Scouts were encouraged to identify the difference between the tracks of different animals, as well as determining the age of the tracks and the pace of movement. It was in the thirteenth yarn that Baden-Powell introduced sign based tracking, where scouts were encouraged to deduce the location of a person or animal by following signs. The purpose of training scouts in tracking skills was to encourage observation and to make it possible for them to stalk animals for observation, or hunting as food.
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The basic
Tracking signs that all guides and scouts learn include "This way","No Entry or Danger", "Turn Left", "Turn Right", "Water Ahead", "Obstacle ahead", Split Group", Message _ paces this way" and of course "Gone home"
61:. In the eleventh he wrote that "One of the most important things that a Scout has to learn... is to let nothing escape his attention". He suggested several methods of learning observational skills, such as
41:, tracking within the Scouting movement tends to focus on the tracking of people as well as animals. One form of training includes the laying a
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or following a trail laid by others. A trail is made up of a series of signs, largely comprising directions, which are laid on the ground.
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is an element of scouting that encompasses observation, stalking and the following of a trail. Unlike the form of tracking
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Tracking also involves interpreting the calls and movements of animals to determine whether other people are nearby.
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Tracking has been part of scouting and guiding since the beginning; it was the subject of several of
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and other memory games. Following this, in yarn twelve, he wrote about
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135:(fourth edition reprint ed.), London: C. Arthur Pearson
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Element of scouting that focuses on following a trail
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30:Illustration of Porcupine tracks
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21:Tracking (disambiguation)
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63:Kim's Game
224:Tracking
67:spooring
35:Tracking
49:History
164:This
90:Notes
43:trail
170:stub
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