Mistletoe Picked, Packaged, Peddled, As Cub Scouts Secure Operating Funds KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON', Sl'XDAY four youths. Armed with saws, ropes and inexperience, we took off early on Sunday, Dec. 8. for tlie mistletoe country. We arrived in good shape, spotted our target, and headed for the hills. From a distance, mistletoe hunting looks easy because it seems to hang within easy reaching in the trees, b u t surprising as it sounds, those trees grow as one approaches them and when you get there, they are 20 feet above the ground and always out on the end of the thinnest limbs. 1 promptly manned the ground observation post, and the others "not so experienced" headed into the upper branches. Alter a lengthy skirmish, many anxious moments and considerable scratches and bruises later, ue had a pickup load and were on our way home. At this point, we turned the job back to the den mothers with an expressive sigh of hav ing clone our bit for the cause. Cub Scouts packaged the mis tletoe and then were off on their sales campaign to friends and relations. Each year, the project turns out to be one of the most ef fective money making projects for the Roosevelt School Cub Scout Pack 3. It's an excellent example of youtb at work (fath ers, tool earning their own funds to finance their own operations. , DECEMBER 22. 1963 -t9&B&' tSf A" OUT ON A LIMB Frank Slices, 844 Eldorado, chair man of Cub Scout Pack 3, spots a nest of mistletoe out on the end of a long, long limb. With saw in hand he inches out onto the branch. This was one of many careful, hazardous trips for Frank as a party of adults and Cub Scouts collected mistletoe for their annual sales project. A parisitic growth, mistletoe has become an accepted Christmas greenery. The custom of using mistletoe goes back to early times when the European species was held to be sacred by the Druids and the Germans, and was credited with magical properties by the Celts. By FLOYD L. WYNNE ' (Text and Photos) Den mothers have llieir mo ments of trials and triumphs with a band of happy, boister ous Cub Scouts, but Cub cout fathers come in for their share of tribulations, also. Such an event is the mistle toe gathering time that rolls around the early part of IVcem ber. A few years ago some thoughtless Cub Scout commit tee member came up from nowhere with the suggestion that the pack sell mistletoe as a money-making project. The idea was embraced wholeheartedly, and the sober ing afterthought was where to find and how to secure the mis tletoe. This year marked this mem ber as a veteran of the mistle toe brigade and entitled me to an extra helping of mcrcurn chrome as a service award. However, being an old hand at these types of campaigns gives one some privilege and I auto matically converted this into the "on-thc-ground" privilege. To the non-mistletoers this may sound senseless, hut to those who now have weathered the c a m p a i g n it has great meaning. The first several sorties of this type, f tried my hand at climbing trees, scraping shins, pelting caught in branches and falling out of trees, but not this year. I had a privileged "on-the-ground" status. While others inched and climbed and sawed and hoped, I handled the ground chores, such as calling up precautions about getting out on thin limbs for fat men, and tossing up such dropped items as saws while collecting misletoo that rained down. Our party was five adults and MISTLETOE ADVENTURE Cub Scout members of Roosevelt Pack 3 and fathers comprise this mistletoe hunting expedition that traversed the Green Springs to find the proper greenery. From right, Marvin Reed (back E-WWW HMD:. aw to camera); Jay Dent, Jimmy DeNault lin front; Frank Sikos, Wes Hunt, Tom Reed, Robert Wynne) and Peter Sikes. Neither the DeNault or Sikes youth are Cub Scouts, but aided in the project. OFF ON THE HUNT The heads off down the road toward a distant group of trees where the mistletoe can be seen hanging in the upper ...... ... .. f n1 . , fir m ff , , ,"V.ii.itv t" mistletoe hunting party I branches. Childhood tree-climbing experience came handy for the mistletoe seekers. READY FOR PACKAGING Mark Drew, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Drew, 1991 Van Ness Avenue, examines one branch of mistletoe. A member of the Cub Scout den of Mrs. Wes Hunt, I860 Manianita, Mark aided in the packaging and the selling. DOING THE PACKAGING These Cub Scouts of the den of Mrs. Wet Hunt, I860 Manianita, are busy packaging the mistletoe for the sales drive. Left to right, Mark Dent, Robert Wynne, Jeff Thomas, Jos Martin, Brad Hunt, John Hosley (back of head visible); John Hanson and Mark Drew. The assembly line method produced 80 packages in about an hour's time. INTO THE WILD BLUE YONDER Wes Hunt, I860 Manianita, works his way care fully up the thinning branches to a bunch of mistletoe. The greenery is most easily spotted just below the snow line where frees have shed their leaves and only the mistletoe remains. The denuded trees are I'lhouetted against a background of mourv. tains with snow covered peaks. wATncKINO IT Ur Attar the paintul sortie into the branches hat produced a pile of mistletoe, it mutt be gathered up and carried to the pickup. Here, Jimmy DeNault, left, and Peter Sikes, gather it up. Neither boy is a Cub Scout, but lent a hand in the expedition anyway. Peter it e former member of the Roosevelt School Cub Pack 3 and is a son of the Pack chairman. DeNault it the son of Mr. egd Mrt. O. A. DeNault. NON-CLIMBERS AT WORK Those who worked from the ground up had to rely on other methods to tecure the mistletoe from tho tipt of the treat. Thit ii one method which it not recommended. It utiliiet a rope and rockt to bring the tip down within reach but the rewardt were tmall from thit method, even though eontiderably lest risky.