Kodiak
Connecticut Yankee Council is sponsoring a Kodiak / Ranger Trek in 2009. This will be a fun, high adventure week for Venturers, focusing on many of the activities in the Ranger Guidebook.
Activities include: Hiking, Backpacking, COPE, Kayaking, Canoeing, Climbing, Land Navigation, Leave No Trace, Shooting Sports, Camping, Cooking, Wilderness First Aid/Survival, and Conservation.
When and where: June 27 - July 3, based out of Deer Lake Scout Reservation, Killingworth, CT. The activities are run by the Deer Lake Venturing Wilderness School. The Kodiak is run by the CT Yankee VOA.
The trek is open to all youth of Venturing age with their Advisor's approval. Individuals as well as groups are welcome. Co-ed adult leadership will be available for each group.
Price includes all food, equipment for the activities, Kodiak materials and award, tee shirt, patch and some extras. The cost is $475.
Please read the document below for more details and contact information:
Course Flyer: kodiakflyer.pdf
Trek Details: kodiakdetails.pdf
Registration Form: kodiakregistration.pdf
Permission Form: kodiakpermission.pdf
Gear List: kodiakgearlist.pdf
What is Kodiak?
The Nature of Leadership
Kodiak falls under the umbrella of the Nature of Leadership. There are three leadership courses that compose the Nature of leadership:
- Venturing Leadership Skills Course (VLSC).
- Kodiak.
- Kodiak X.
Although Kodiak is required for Kodiak X, VLSC is not required for Kodiak although it is recommended to take the VLSC first.

The Kodiak Venturing leadership course is unique in that it is offered in an exciting and challenging atmosphere using whatever high-adventure resources you have available. Your crew or council could offer a course backpacking or rafting down a river away from your council or in your local area. Kodiak teaches leadership skills in a fun way that is internalized by the Venturers who take the course. In other words, it is a challenging high-adventure trek with a simple and fun leadership course included. Kodiak is not taught indoors or in a classroom; it is done completely outdoors using nature’s examples of leadership.
It is …
- Fun!
- Relevant to each participant’s life.
- Internalized by participants.
- Based on nature.
- Based on the servant leader concept.
Course Methods
- It is taught by two instructors (one adult and one youth if possible) in an "instructor team."
- Only five skills are taught. They are called "commissions." The five commissions are:
- Effective Teams
- Values/Vision
- Communications
- Decision Making
- Planning
- It is based on symbolism using the Kodiak bear.
- Commissions are introduced with a hands-on exercise followed by a short presentation, then reinforced with one or more exercises.
- It uses constant reinforcement.
- It creates an older teen leadership fraternity.
Who May Offer a Course
This course may be run at any level (crew, district, or council), but must be approved by the Council Scout Executive. Most courses will be offered at the council level to maximize participants, facilities, resources, support, etc. However, the course could be run by a crew going on a week long trip to the Amazon River. It works well on any outdoor trek that last at least 6 days where an hour or two a day would be available to teach the course. There are two trek options; a six-day course or a two-weekend course.
Trek Setting
One course characteristic that the designers of this course (including Venturers) felt very strongly about was that this course should be taught in an outdoor setting. Fight the temptation to teach the sessions in a dining hall, classroom, or even an outdoor pavilion. Have your participants setting on a log, on a sandbar or rock, or other outdoor setting.
Group Size
Most exercises are designed for 5-8 participants. If you have a large group of say 10 participants, you might have participants watching as others participate in exercises. Obviously, this is not good. Likewise, too small of a group will not give enough participants to effectively do the exercises. The ideal size is 8 participants with 2 instructors.
You may have one, two, or more teams of 8 on a trek. However, you still need two instructors for each team of 8. You may choose to have teams travel, camp, and cook together. That is your option. Commission delivery and exercises should be done by teams of 8, not by the larger group.
