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Southeast Wisconsin Council is the home of two great camps
Camp Oh-Da-Ko-Ta
3363 Dyer Lake Road 185 acres of year-round camping fun! Camp Oh-Da-Ko-Ta offers complete year-round facilities for Cub Packs, Scout Troops, and Venture Crews. The camp encompasses 185 acres of beautiful rolling hills and woodlands including waterfront on Dyer Lake. Facilities incl Weekend camp reservations must be made through the Southeast Council service center. It is important to make your reservation as early as possible. Cabin sizes vary from 20 to 32 campers. All facilities are available and each unit must provide 2 deep adult leadership with proper certification. Camp Oh-Da-Ko-Ta also operates summer Cub Scout programs. Programs offered are Cub Day camp, Mom-and-Me weekend, Webelos weekend. From September 1 through May 31, camp is available for winter cabin camping, tent camping, camporees, and other outdoor activities. Family camping is available on Labor Day and Memorial Day weekends. Over 500 campers can be accommodated on any given weekend. Camp Oh-Da-Ko-Ta is just 2 miles north of Hwy 50 on Hwy P. It is 25 miles west of Kenosha, 5 miles south of Burlington, and 15 miles from Lake Geneva and Elkhorn.
Robert S. Lyle Scout Reservation
Robert S. Lyle Scout Reservation:
Operated by the Southeast Wisconsin Council Boy Scouts of America, the Robert S. Lyle Scout Reservation is a 640 acre wilderness Boy Scout Camp. The Reservation, located 25 miles Northeast of Antigo, WI, encompasses two lakes, Aninan and Perch, and has the Wolf River running through it. The Scouts and adults who attend the reservation are typically from Racine or Kenosha counties, and the camp serves approximately 800 youth and 350 adults each summer.
Boys who attend Robert S. Lyle are exposed to a plethora of outdoor activities, both educational and recreational. Program areas include:
· Outdoor skills (wilderness survival, orienteering, pioneering, fire building, knots and lashings, etc…) · Ecology/Conservation (environmental science, fish and wildlife management, nature study, etc…) · Waterfront (swimming, rowing, snorkeling, canoeing, kayaking, etc…) · Health Lodge (first aid, cpr, emergency preparedness) · Shooting Sports (archery, action-archery, rifle and shotgun shooting, blackpowder shooting, tomahawk throwing)
There are also high-adventure opportunities, including mountain biking, tubing and canoeing trips on the Wolf River, over night outpost hiking trips, climbing wall, as well as fishing, golf, and volleyball.
One of the most unique program aspects of the Robert S. Lyle Scout Reservation is Patrol Cooking. The Reservation provides all food to the campers, but the boys themselves must cook the food in their campsites utilizing dutch ovens, campfires, and other outdoor cooking techniques. Patrol Cooking is one of the best ways for youngsters to apply the skills they’ve learned in the Scouting Program, and it forces scouts to work together toward a common goal – FOOD!
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