Adventurous Journey Planning 🧭

Your complete guide to planning an epic Scout adventure – from first idea to final review!
πŸ“… Start 6 months early
πŸ—ΊοΈ For Venture Scouts aged 14–17
πŸ‘‘ King Scout pathway
πŸŽ–οΈ Duke of Edinburgh eligible
πŸ—ΊοΈ

Planning Workflow

Follow these 6 phases to plan your Adventurous Journey like a pro!

⏰

Super Important: Start planning at least 6 months (2 Terms) before your journey. The best Venture Scouts start 12 months (4 Terms) early β€” so don't leave it too late!

πŸŽ–οΈ

Duke of Edinburgh (DofE) Tip: If you're working toward your Duke of Edinburgh Award, you can use your Adventurous Journey to count toward the Adventurous Journey section of the Bronze, Silver, or Gold award β€” just make sure it meets both the DofE and Scouts NSW requirements! Talk to your leader early to plan this.

Team Formation
Route & Safety
Administration
Logistics
Approvals
Go Time!
β˜… Mandatory
🀝
1
Team Formation
12 months out
β–Ά
πŸ—ΊοΈ
Find an Adventurous Journey
Choose route, activity & water locations
πŸ§‘β€πŸ«
Find a Mentor
Qualified Leader or OAS Stage 7 Youth
🦺
Appoint Journey Supervisor
Adventurous Activity Guide (AAG)
🧭
2
Route & Safety
9–12 months out
β–Ά
πŸ—Ύ
Topographic Map Route
Mark route, campsites & water crossings
πŸ“‹
Route Cards
Daily waypoints, timing & hazards
⚠️
Risk Assessment (5Γ—5)
Hazards, likelihood & controls
🌦️
Historical Weather Research
Check normal conditions for area & season
πŸ“
3
Administration
6–9 months out
β–Ά
πŸ“„
Activity Planning Sheet
Official Scouts NSW form
🀝
Unit Council Agreement
Get unit council sign-off
🌿
OAS Stage 4 Bushwalking
All participants must qualify
🚣
OAS Stage 4/5 Activity Area
Canoeing, Cycling, etc.
πŸŽ’
4
Logistics
3–6 months out
β–Ά
β›Ί
Book Campsites
Reserve all overnight spots early
πŸ’§
Water Location Planning
Map water sources, crossings & hazards
πŸ“„
Activity Plan (includes EMS)
Official form with Emergency Plan
🌱
Minimal Impact Plan
Leave No Trace principles
🍽️
Menu Plan
All meals & dietary needs
🚌
Transport Plan
Getting there & back
🧳
Packing Lists
Individual + Group gear lists
πŸ’°
Journey Budget
All costs + contingency
βœ…
5
Approvals & Prep
1–3 months out
β–Ά
πŸ’»
Submit in Terrain
Enter & submit for approval
πŸ›οΈ
State Approval (ANS)
Activity Notification System
πŸ“ž
Emergency Contact
Reliable person stays reachable
πŸ–₯️
Online Patrol Briefing
~3 weeks out β€” review route & plan
🌀️
Weather Forecast Review
Update risk assessment if needed
πŸŽ’
In-Person Kit Meeting
~1 week out β€” check packs, allocate gear & food
πŸ“‘
Final Weather Check
Send info by 6PM day before
πŸ†
6
Go Time!
Journey day
β–Ά
πŸ₯Ύ
Conduct the Journey
Follow your approved plan
πŸ“”
Journey Journal & Photos
Document everything daily!
πŸ“€
Submit Final Review
Complete review in Terrain
πŸ“–

Detailed Steps Guide

What to do, why it matters, and tips to nail each step!

🀝 Phase 1 – Initial Planning & Team Formation
1

Find an Adventurous Journey

Research locations that match your skills and interests. Consider activity type (bushwalking, canoeing, cycling), terrain difficulty, duration, and seasonal conditions. Note any water crossings, rivers, or lakes along the route β€” these need extra planning. Check OAS requirements for your group.

β˜… Mandatory
2

Find a Mentor

Your mentor is a Qualified Leader OR a Youth member with OAS Stage 7. They guide you through the whole process and keep you on track. Think of them as your planning coach! 🎯

β˜… Mandatory
3

Appoint an Activity Guide (AAG)

The Adventurous Journey Supervisor oversees your safety during the journey. They must hold the right qualifications for your activity type β€” e.g. paddling qualifications for a canoeing journey.

β˜… Mandatory
4

Identify Participants

Invite a minimum of 5 and a maximum of 7, ideally 6 participants to take part in your journey. Make sure all participants are free during the activity period and that they have blocked off their calendars so clashing activities such as holidays etc are not booked.

When identifying participants, you have to be confident that they are able to manage the physical and emotional stresses of the journey.

Every participant must have completed OAS Stage 4 in the Activity Area (e.g.: Bushwalking, Canoeing) before the journey. Log it in Terrain. This proves that they can navigate, set up camp, and stay safe when outdoors.

β˜… Mandatory
🧭 Phase 2 – Route Planning & Safety Documentation (9–12 months out)
5

Topographic Map Route

Download PDF topographic maps (1:25,000 scale) and print them on A0 size paper. Draw your complete route on the topo map. Mark start/end, daily checkpoints, campsite locations, water sources, river crossings, and emergency exit points. Identify any water hazards β€” rivers, creeks, dams β€” and note them clearly on the map.

β˜… Mandatory
6

Route Cards

Create a route card for each day β€” include distance, estimated walking time, elevation change, navigation waypoints with grid coordinates, water crossing locations, campsite details, and emergency contacts. Also include notable landscape features that will help you locate yourself if you get lost (e.g: ridge, knife edge, cliff, saddle, valley, hill, power lines, river, fence gate). These are your daily roadmaps! Include escape routes for emergencies.

β˜… Mandatory
7

Risk Assessment (5Γ—5 Matrix)

Use the 5Γ—5 risk matrix to identify hazards. Rate likelihood (1–5) Γ— consequence (1–5) for each. Don't forget water-specific hazards: river crossings, flash flooding, and changing water levels. Document control measures for every hazard. Update as plans change!

β˜… Mandatory ⚠️ Safety Critical
8

Historical Weather Research

At 9 months out, research the typical weather conditions for your journey area and time of year using BOM.gov.au. Understand average rainfall, temperature range, and seasonal risks (storms, floods, snow). Use this to inform your risk assessment and planning. You'll update the forecast again as you get closer to the date.

β˜… Mandatory
πŸ“ Phase 3 – Administrative Requirements (6–9 months out)
9

Activity Planning Sheet

Fill out the official Scouts NSW Activity Planning Sheet with all journey details, participant info, emergency contacts, and required sign-offs. This is your core planning document β€” keep it updated!

β˜… Mandatory
10

Unit Council Agreement

Present your journey plan to your Unit Council and get their agreement with signatures. This shows your whole unit supports the journey. Record it properly!

β˜… Mandatory
11

OAS Stage 4 – Bushwalking

Every participant must have completed OAS Stage 4 in Bushwalking before the journey. Log it in Terrain. This proves you can navigate, set up camp, and stay safe in the bush.

β˜… Mandatory
12

OAS Stage 4/5 – Activity Area

Participants need OAS Stage 4 or 5 in the specific activity area for your journey (canoeing, cycling, horse riding, etc.). Check what level is required for your activity type and make sure everyone qualifies!

β˜… Mandatory
πŸŽ’ Phase 4 – Logistics & Preparation (3–6 months out)
13

Book Campsites

Reserve your overnight spots ASAP β€” popular sites book out fast! Confirm what facilities are available (water, toilets, fire pits) and note any restrictions. Keep your confirmation emails safe. Check if campsites are near reliable water sources.

β˜… Mandatory
14

Water Location Planning

Map ALL water sources along your route β€” drinking water refill points, river crossings, creek crossings, dams, and lakes. Note seasonal reliability of water sources. Identify potential flood-prone areas and plan alternate routes if needed. For water crossings: assess depth, flow rate, and footing.

β˜… Mandatory ⚠️ Safety Critical
15

Activity Planning Sheet (includes EMS)

Complete the official Scouts NSW Activity Planning Sheet with all journey details including the Emergency Management Plan (EMS). This combines your core planning document with emergency procedures β€” what to do if someone is hurt, evacuation routes, nearest hospitals, who to call, and communication protocols. The EMS is now part of your Activity Plan!

β˜… Mandatory ⚠️ Safety Critical
16

Minimal Impact Plan

Plan how you'll Leave No Trace β€” waste management, human waste disposal, campfire rules, wildlife interactions, and staying on tracks. True Scouts leave nature better than they found it! Follow the Scouts Victoria Minimal Impact guidelines.

β˜… Mandatory
17

Menu Plan

Plan all meals for every day. Think about nutrition, pack weight, cooking equipment, fuel, and any dietary requirements or allergies. Trail snacks are critical β€” you burn a LOT of energy! Aim for 2,500–4,000 calories/day on the trail. 🍽️

β˜… Mandatory
18

Transport Plan

Sort out how everyone gets to the start and back from the finish. Confirm drivers, vehicles, and backup transport. Include cost per person and ensure parents know exact pick-up times and locations. Include if Opal cards are required.

β˜… Mandatory
19

Individual Packing List

Give every participant a detailed packing list β€” the right boots, rain gear, sleeping bag, first aid kit, water treatment, navigation tools, etc. Test your pack weight before the journey β€” aim for under 20% of body weight. No cotton β€” go synthetic or merino wool! Note down if any participants need to borrow group gear like hike packs. There is some group kit that can be borrowed from the Unit. 🧳

β˜… Mandatory
20

Group Gear List & Journey Budget

List all shared equipment (tents, stoves, ropes, first aid kit, navigation gear) and assign who carries what. Spread the weight fairly but also take into consideration who is stronger! Also prepare a detailed budget covering transport, food, campsite fees, permits, gear hire, and a 10–15% contingency.

β˜… Mandatory
βœ… Phase 5 – Approvals & Final Preparation (1–3 months out)
21

Submit Journey in Terrain

Log into Terrain and enter all your journey details. Attach all your planning documents and submit for leader approval. Allow plenty of time β€” the approval process can take weeks!

β˜… Mandatory
22

Review & Update Before ANS Submission

Before submitting to ANS, conduct a final review of all your planning documents. Update information that may have changed (weather patterns, contact numbers, route details). Ensure your Activity Plan, Risk Assessment, and all supporting documents are complete and consistent. This review prevents last-minute issues!

β˜… Mandatory βœ“ Quality Check
23

Arrange Emergency Contact

Choose a reliable adult (not coming on the journey) who is reachable 24/7 during your trip. Give them the full journey plan, daily check-in schedule, and clear instructions for what to do if they don't hear from you. πŸ“ž

β˜… Mandatory ⚠️ Safety Critical
24

State Approval via ANS

Submit the Activity Notification System (ANS) form for state-level approval. Mandatory for all adventurous activities. Don't leave it to the last minute β€” submit well before your journey date!

β˜… Mandatory
25

Online Patrol Briefing (~3 weeks out)

Hold an online video call with ALL participants roughly 3 weeks before the journey. Walk through the full route, daily schedule, safety procedures, emergency plan, and personal kit requirements. Answer every question β€” a well-briefed patrol is a safe patrol! πŸ–₯️

β˜… Mandatory
26

Weather Forecast Review

As you get closer to the journey, check updated weather forecasts for your area. Review and update your risk assessment if conditions look different from historical norms. Set clear go/no-go decision criteria based on forecast severity.

β˜… Mandatory
27

In-Person Kit Meeting (~1 week out)

Before the in-person meeting, make sure to purchase all the required food. Depending on your menu, some food items might need to be ordered online and will have a delivery time. Meet in person about 1 week before the journey. Check everyone's packs are correctly packed, allocate and distribute group gear, distribute food portions, weigh packs, check first aid kits, batteries charged, verify navigation tools are working, and sort out any final logistics. No surprises on the day! πŸŽ’

β˜… Mandatory
28

Final Weather Check & Comms

Check the final weather forecast and send a complete information update to ALL participants and parents by 6:00 PM the day before. Include any last-minute changes, conditions, or updated meeting times. Also check National Parks alerts for any park closures, fire bans, or safety warnings in your activity area. This is your final go/no-go check! 🌀️

β˜… Mandatory
πŸ† Phase 6 – Journey Execution & Review
29

Conduct the Journey! πŸ₯Ύ

This is what all the planning was for! Follow your approved plan, check in with your emergency contact at scheduled times, monitor weather and group energy levels, and use your safety procedures if needed. Have an absolutely epic time! πŸ†

β˜… Mandatory
30

Journey Journal & Photos

Write in your journal every day β€” what you did, what you saw, how you felt, what challenges you overcame. Take heaps of photos! These memories last forever AND count toward your award review. Your journal can also count toward your DofE evidence! πŸ“”

β˜… Mandatory πŸŽ–οΈ DofE Evidence
31

Submit Final Review in Terrain

After the journey, complete your final review in Terrain. Upload your journal, photos, and personal reflections. This closes the loop on your adventure and counts toward your OAS progression β€” and your King Scout Award! πŸ…

β˜… Mandatory πŸŽ–οΈ Counts for DofE
πŸ‘‘

King Scout Award

The highest Scout award β€” your adventure journey is a key part of earning it!

πŸ‘‘ The King Scout Award

The King Scout Award is the highest award you can earn as a Venture Scout. It's recognised everywhere in the community and is the ultimate milestone of your Scouting journey. Your Adventurous Journey is one of the key requirements β€” plan it well, lead it brilliantly, and make it epic!

🎯

Program Essentials

Complete Milestone 3 in your Scout program. Milestones 1 & 2 are optional but strongly recommended to build your skills along the way!

🌿

Outdoor Adventure Skills

Reach Stage 5 in all 3 core areas: Bushcraft, Bushwalking & Camping. Progress 12 OAS stages total, with at least 4 at Stage 4 or above.

πŸ’‘

Special Interest Areas

Complete 6 projects across at least 2 Special Interest Areas. Each project is a minimum 8 hours including Plan β†’ Do β†’ Review. Speak to your PL or Leader about what activities you do can count towards an SIA.

πŸ—ΊοΈ

Adventurous Journey

Plan AND lead a journey of at least 4 days / 3 nights. Minimum 5, maximum 7 participants (ideally 6). Maximum 2 Scouts may co-lead. This journey can also count toward your DofE Award! πŸŽ–οΈ

πŸ§‘β€πŸ’Ό

Personal Development Course

Attend a weekend Personal Development or Personal Development Course. Builds your skills as a leader and a great addition to any resume!

πŸ“

Personal Reflection

After completing all elements, write a personal reflection reviewing your whole Scout journey. This is YOUR story β€” make it honest and meaningful!

πŸŽ–οΈ

Duke of Edinburgh Award Link: Your Adventurous Journey can simultaneously count toward the Adventurous Journey component of the Duke of Edinburgh Bronze, Silver, or Gold Award. Make sure to discuss this with your leader before you start planning so that your journey meets both sets of requirements. Your journey journal and Terrain review can also serve as DofE evidence!

πŸŽ“

Extra Training Courses

Recommended course types to help you prepare β€” check Scouts NSW Events for current dates!

πŸ’‘ How to find courses: These are example course types available through Scouts NSW. Search events.nsw.scouts.com.au for current dates and availability in your region. Always check with your leader for the most up-to-date offerings!
πŸ₯Ύ Bushwalking
🚣 Water / Canoeing
🚴 Cycling / MTB
πŸ§— Rock & Vertical
πŸ”οΈ Alpine / Snow
🩺 First Aid & Safety
πŸ₯Ύ

Beginner Overnight Bushwalk

A great starting point β€” covers navigation basics, campcraft, and overnight logistics. Perfect for building your OAS Bushwalking stages before your journey. Usually run at local Scout camps.

Pre-Journey PrepOAS 1–4
πŸ—ΊοΈ

Navigation & Map Reading Workshop

Focuses on map and compass navigation using 1:25,000 topographic maps, grid references, contour reading, and GPS basics. Essential skill for any journey leader!

Strongly RecommendedOAS Progression
🌿

Multi-Day Training Bushwalk

A 3 day training walk to build stamina, pack management, and campcraft. Great conditioning walk before your qualifying adventure journey. Often offered as a DofE practice journey too.

RecommendedDofE Practice
🩹

Provide First Aid – HLTAID011

Standard first aid certification covering CPR, wound care, fractures, and emergency response. A foundational qualification for all journey participants and highly recommended for anyone leading outdoor activities.

Highly RecommendedAll Journeys
🩹

Wilderness First Aid

Learn how to manage medical emergencies in remote areas, including patient assessment, wound care, fractures, and evacuation decisions. Essential for any multi-day journey leader in remote terrain.

Highly RecommendedKing Scout Bonus
🚣

Introduction to Canoeing / Kayaking

Entry-level paddling skills β€” canoe/kayak control, paddle strokes, capsize recovery, and basic safety on flat water. Required before progressing to river or whitewater journeys.

Required for Water AJOAS Water
🚣

Flat Water Canoeing

Focuses on skills for calm water canoeing β€” advanced paddle strokes, tandem and solo paddling, loading gear for journeys, and navigation on flat water lakes and slow-moving rivers. Essential foundation before attempting whitewater journeys.

Required for Water AJOAS Water 3-4
🌊

Whitewater Paddling Workshop

River reading, moving water paddle techniques, eddy turns, ferrying, and whitewater safety. Covers reading water hazards and how to avoid strainers, hydraulics, and undercut rocks.

River AJ RequiredOAS Progression
🌊

River Crossing

How to safely cross rivers on foot β€” assessing water depth and flow, crossing techniques (butterfly, tripod), and what to do if someone is swept away. Throw bag rescue techniques included. Essential if your route has any river crossings!

Safety MandatoryRiver Crossing
🏊

Basic Water Rescues

A mandatory requirement for leaders wishing to take their youth members swimming at unpatrolled flatwater environments. Also meets requirements for other aquatic qualifications such as Trained Participant in canoeing, kayaking, sailing, and snorkelling.

Water ActivitiesLeader Qualification
β›΅

Powerboat / Sailing Course

Covers boat handling, safety, and navigation on open water. Useful for water-based journeys involving motorised support craft or sailing as the primary mode of travel.

Water JourneysOAS Water
🩹

Provide First Aid – HLTAID011

Standard first aid certification covering CPR, wound care, fractures, and emergency response. A foundational qualification for all journey participants and highly recommended for anyone leading outdoor activities.

Highly RecommendedAll Journeys
🩹

Wilderness First Aid

Remote area first aid with a focus on water environment emergencies β€” cold water immersion, hypothermia, near-drowning management, and evacuation from water environments.

Highly RecommendedWater Safety
🚴

Mountain Bike Skills Progression

Trail technique, bike maintenance, gear selection, braking, cornering, and descending safely. Covers navigation by bike and planning multi-day bike journeys with loaded panniers.

Required for Cycling AJOAS MTB 4–5
πŸ—ΊοΈ

Navigation & Route Planning

Map and compass navigation is just as critical on a bike as on foot. Covers topo map reading, GPS use, and planning bike routes that account for terrain, surface type, and distance.

RecommendedCross-Skill
🩹

First Aid – Provide First Aid (HLTAID011)

Standard first aid certification covering CPR, wound management, and emergency response. Nationally recognised and recommended for any journey leader regardless of activity type.

Strongly RecommendedAll Journey Types
πŸ§—

Rock Climbing Workshop

Two-day workshop covering climbing technique, belay skills, equipment use, and safety management at a crag. Includes a theory session. Essential for any vertical adventure journey.

Required for Climbing AJOAS Vertical
πŸͺ’

Rigging & Rescue / Abseiling Course

Covers rigging, abseiling technique, rescue techniques, and guide skills. Weekend course with theory session. Great for progressing toward your Guide (TP/AG) qualification for abseiling.

King Scout BonusAbseiling
πŸ”οΈ

Canyoning Course

Canyon navigation, swimming techniques, abseiling into water, and canyon safety. Epic weekend course β€” covers unique hazards like flash flooding and keeper potholes.

King Scout BonusCanyoning AJ
🩹

Wilderness First Aid

Remote first aid with vertical environment focus β€” managing injuries from falls, patient packaging for vertical extraction, and emergency communication from remote locations.

Strongly RecommendedRemote Safety
πŸ”οΈ

Alpine School (7-Day Program)

Full week in alpine terrain β€” snow travel, self-arrest, navigation in whiteout, alpine camping, and emergency procedures. Held during school holidays. The ultimate alpine preparation!

Alpine AJ RequiredKing Scout Bonus
❄️

Introduction to Alpine / Snow Skills

Weekend program covering snow travel basics, layering systems, avalanche awareness, and cold weather camping. Great introduction before attempting a full alpine journey.

Intro SnowOAS Alpine
🩹

Wilderness First Aid (Alpine Focus)

Remote first aid covering hypothermia management, frostbite, altitude sickness, and alpine-specific emergencies. Critical for alpine journeys where rescue can be hours away!

Strongly RecommendedAlpine Safety
πŸ”

Search & Rescue Awareness

Understand how search and rescue operations work, how to activate emergency beacons (PLB/EPIRB), and how to assist rescuers on arrival. Helps you prevent needing a rescue in the first place!

RecommendedAll Journey Types
🩹

Provide First Aid – HLTAID011

The standard nationally recognised first aid certification. Covers CPR, wound management, fractures, anaphylaxis, and emergency response. Multiple dates available throughout the year via Scouts NSW.

All Journey Leaders
πŸ•οΈ

Wilderness First Aid

Advanced remote area first aid β€” patient assessment in the field, improvised splints and stretchers, wound management without hospital access, and evacuation decisions. Essential for any multi-day remote journey!

Remote JourneysKing Scout Bonus
🌊

River Crossing

Safe river crossing techniques β€” assessing water depth and flow, crossing techniques, and what to do in a swift water emergency. Throw bag rescue included. Must-do if your route has river or creek crossings!

River CrossingsSafety Critical
🏊

Basic Water Rescues

A mandatory requirement for leaders wishing to take their youth members swimming at unpatrolled flatwater environments. Also meets requirements for other aquatic qualifications such as Trained Participant in canoeing, kayaking, sailing, and snorkelling.

Water ActivitiesLeader Qualification
πŸ”

Search & Rescue (SAR) Awareness

Understand SAR operations, emergency beacon (PLB) activation, helicopter landing zone preparation, and survivor behaviour. Knowing how SAR works helps you make better decisions in an emergency.

RecommendedRemote Journeys
🧠

Mental Health First Aid (MHFA)

Looking after your group's mental wellbeing on a multi-day journey is just as important as physical safety. Learn to recognise signs of stress, anxiety, and how to support teammates effectively.

Leadership Skill
πŸ“‘

Emergency Communication & PLB Use

How to use satellite communicators, personal locator beacons (PLBs), and emergency protocols when out of mobile range. Every journey leader should know how to call for help in a true emergency.

Remote JourneysAll Types
πŸ’»

Online Training Modules

Complete these free online modules at training.scouts.com.au

πŸ’‘ Why complete these? These online modules build essential knowledge for safe journey planning and leadership. They're free, self-paced, and provide certificates upon completion. Essential for King Scout Award progression!
πŸ‘Ά

SP CHILD - Child Safe Scouting

Mandatory for all adults. Covers child protection policies, reporting procedures, and creating safe environments for youth members.

⚠️

SP WHS - Workplace Health & Safety

Essential for planning and conducting safe activities. Covers risk management, hazard identification, and safety responsibilities.

πŸ›‘οΈ

SP SAFE - Safety in Scouting

Comprehensive safety training covering all aspects of safe Scouting, activity procedures, and emergency response planning.

πŸ‘€

AA1 - Welcome to Scouting

Introduction to Scouting, the Australian Scout Promise and Law, and the fundamentals of the Scouting program.

🧬

AA2 - Fundamentals of Scouting

The Scout Method, the New Program framework, and how activities support youth development in the Australian context.

🎯

AA3 - Program Support

Understanding the planning process, linking activities to program elements, and supporting Unit Council decisions.

πŸ—ΊοΈ

SA1 - Introduction to Adventurous Activities

Overview of the Adventurous Activity framework, safety requirements, and the progression pathway for outdoor activities.

πŸ“‹

SA2 - Planning for Adventurous Activities

Step-by-step guide to planning safe adventurous journeys, risk assessment, and approval processes (Terrain & ANS).

πŸ•οΈ

SA3 - Bushwalking Fundamentals

Core skills for bushwalking journeys including navigation, route planning, campcraft, and remote area safety.

🚣

SA4 - Paddling Fundamentals

Essential knowledge for canoeing and kayaking journeys including water safety, paddle techniques, and water-based navigation.

πŸš‘

SR - Scout Recognition (First Aid Basics)

Foundation first aid knowledge covering basic life support, wound management, and emergency response in remote settings.

⛑️

SA5 - Emergency Planning

Comprehensive guide to emergency management for journeys, including EMS planning, communication protocols, and evacuation procedures.

πŸŽ“

How to Access: Visit training.scouts.com.au, log in with your Scouts account, and browse the "Online Learning" section. Each module takes 20-60 minutes to complete and provides a certificate. Keep your certificates for your King Scout Award portfolio!

πŸ“

Templates & Links

All the forms and documents you need β€” bookmark this page!

πŸ“‹ Activity Plan Templates
Template What It's For Where To Get It Status
πŸ“„ Activity Planning Sheet
Scouts NSW official form
Main planning document β€” all journey details, participant info, contacts, and authorizations. Keep it updated throughout the planning process. Scouts Activity Plan Template β†’ β˜… Mandatory
🀝 Unit Council Agreement
Council sign-off form
Records your unit council's approval of the journey plan with member signatures. Terrain System β†’ β˜… Mandatory
πŸ“” Journey Logbook Template
1st Ermington logbook
Official logbook template for recording your journey β€” daily entries, reflections, and evidence for your Terrain review and DofE submission. 1st Ermington Website β†’ β˜… Mandatory
🍽️ Menu Plan Template
Meals & nutrition planner
Plan all meals for every day including dietary requirements, cooking methods, pack weight, and calories per day. 1st Ermington Website β†’ β˜… Mandatory
πŸ’° Journey Budget Template
Cost calculator spreadsheet
Track all journey costs β€” transport, food, accommodation, permits, gear hire, and 10–15% contingency fund. 1st Ermington Website β†’ β˜… Mandatory
🚌 Transport Plan Template
Getting there & back
Organise all transport logistics β€” vehicle details, drivers, costs, and pick-up/drop-off times and locations. 1st Ermington Website β†’ β˜… Mandatory
⚠️ Risk Assessment & Safety Templates
Template What It's For Where To Get It Status
⚠️ Risk Assessment 5Γ—5 Matrix
Hazard identification form
Identify hazards, rate likelihood (1–5) Γ— consequence (1–5), and document control measures. Include water crossing and weather hazards. Scouts Risk Assesment Template β†’ β˜… Mandatory
πŸŽ’ Group Gear List
Part of risk assessment
Master list of all group gear with assigned responsibility for each item. Ensures nothing is forgotten and weight is shared fairly across the group. Part of Risk Assessment β˜… Mandatory
🚨 Activity Plan
Activity Plan
Emergency procedures, evacuation routes, nearest hospitals, communication protocols, and emergency contacts. Everyone must know this plan! Scouts Activity Plan Template β†’ β˜… Mandatory
πŸ›οΈ Activity Notification System (ANS)
State approval portal
Online system for state-level approval of adventurous activities. Must be submitted and approved before every adventure journey. ANS Portal β†’ β˜… Mandatory
🩹 First Aid Plan
Medical response guide
Documents first aid kit contents, trained participants, nearest medical facilities, and step-by-step emergency response procedures. 1st Ermington Website β†’ β˜… Mandatory
πŸ—ΊοΈ Route Plan Templates
Template What It's For Where To Get It Status
πŸ“‹ Route Card Template
Daily route documentation
One card per day β€” distance, estimated time, elevation, navigation waypoints, water crossings, campsite details, and emergency info. 1st Ermington Website β†’ β˜… Mandatory
πŸ—ΊοΈ Topographic Map Guide
Map reading basics
Download latest 1:25000 topo maps for NSW β€” full coverage available through NSW Spatial Portal webapp. Essential for route planning and navigation.
NSW Spatial Portal β†’ β˜… Mandatory
🧳 Individual Packing List
Personal gear checklist
Everything each participant needs β€” clothing, footwear, sleeping gear, personal first aid, navigation tools, and water treatment. 1st Ermington Website β†’ β˜… Mandatory
🌱 Minimal Impact Plan
Leave No Trace planner
Documents your Leave No Trace approach β€” waste management, campfire rules, wildlife interactions, water usage, and staying on tracks. Scouts Victoria Guide β†’ β˜… Mandatory
πŸ“” Journey Journal / Logbook
Daily reflection log
Daily journal recording experiences, achievements, challenges, and reflections. Required for your Terrain review and can serve as DofE evidence. 1st Ermington Website β†’ β˜… Mandatory

πŸ”— Quick Reference Links

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