MerryPoppins
<font color=coral>I posted around Woo Hooty time<b
- Joined
- Sep 2, 2000
- Messages
- 16,323
Our family is heavily involved with Scouting. In fact, DH and I are patrol parents for DS's Boy Scout patrol. We have recently run into a problem and I wondered if any of you had a brilliant idea.
First a little background information. We collect patrol dues whenever our funds are getting low. These funds are used to help pay for fun activities and food supplies for campouts. Parents are pretty good about turning in money whenever needed, so this method has worked for us. It cuts down on the need to count heads, divide the cost and collect from each family at each campout.
No problem with this has ever surfaced that we couldn't figure out. Last year one of our new Scouts informed us he didn't eat meat. But his parents said not to worry about it because they would bring some extra food like peanut butter to fill in the menu when he wouldn't eat. Dad eats meat, and said it wouldn't be a problem and not to plan around the son's diet.
This year, we have several new Scouts that have whole families that are vegetarian. We just found this out this week. We have no idea how strict their diet is - I know that finding that out is the first step is working this out. Each campout, a boy serves as grubmaster and plans the menus, asigns cooking/clean up chores, and buys the food for the group. Some of these boys are 6th graders, and have no clue how to feed a vegetarian. And many of our teens would die if they had to go without meat for a meal, especially when they are working outdoors. LOL!
How would you deal with this? Would you put together a "cookbook" with meals that could have meatless meals pulled out before the meat is added? This would help the boys who are planning the menus. Or would you cut back on these families dues? Maybe present them with the menu in advance and ask them to fill in the gaps with stuff from home? Or would you have them do their own meals? That doesn't work quite as well, since it divides them more from the group.
Also, dare we suggest when the vegetarian is grubmaster that at least one meal a day needs to include meat? Our other boys expect it and it could even be hot dogs that each boy cooks himself. I think we could probably get by with peanut butter at lunch and oatmeal and fruit at breakfast, but my son would croak if you gave him a veggie burger for dinner.
We are meeting this Thursday night and we have a campout coming up the end of the month. So these issues all need to be ironed out.
BTW, don't get me wrong. I have no issues with vegetarian diets. I just am confused about how to handle the situation. Help!
First a little background information. We collect patrol dues whenever our funds are getting low. These funds are used to help pay for fun activities and food supplies for campouts. Parents are pretty good about turning in money whenever needed, so this method has worked for us. It cuts down on the need to count heads, divide the cost and collect from each family at each campout.
No problem with this has ever surfaced that we couldn't figure out. Last year one of our new Scouts informed us he didn't eat meat. But his parents said not to worry about it because they would bring some extra food like peanut butter to fill in the menu when he wouldn't eat. Dad eats meat, and said it wouldn't be a problem and not to plan around the son's diet.
This year, we have several new Scouts that have whole families that are vegetarian. We just found this out this week. We have no idea how strict their diet is - I know that finding that out is the first step is working this out. Each campout, a boy serves as grubmaster and plans the menus, asigns cooking/clean up chores, and buys the food for the group. Some of these boys are 6th graders, and have no clue how to feed a vegetarian. And many of our teens would die if they had to go without meat for a meal, especially when they are working outdoors. LOL!
How would you deal with this? Would you put together a "cookbook" with meals that could have meatless meals pulled out before the meat is added? This would help the boys who are planning the menus. Or would you cut back on these families dues? Maybe present them with the menu in advance and ask them to fill in the gaps with stuff from home? Or would you have them do their own meals? That doesn't work quite as well, since it divides them more from the group.
Also, dare we suggest when the vegetarian is grubmaster that at least one meal a day needs to include meat? Our other boys expect it and it could even be hot dogs that each boy cooks himself. I think we could probably get by with peanut butter at lunch and oatmeal and fruit at breakfast, but my son would croak if you gave him a veggie burger for dinner.
We are meeting this Thursday night and we have a campout coming up the end of the month. So these issues all need to be ironed out.
BTW, don't get me wrong. I have no issues with vegetarian diets. I just am confused about how to handle the situation. Help!
But she took it well. This is a little different. It is something that should be planned around but not exclusively.