Do Patrol Boxes work? I guess the question really is are they worth the effort of storage, transporation, maintenance, etc?
They seem big and heavy. So big you need a trailer just to get them to campsites. Once there, you need an entire patrol to carry and setup. Once back home, they need to be restocked and stored between campouts. Periodically the quartermaster needs to clean, repair, and replace lost implements.
I have reviewed a variety of plans and drawings from the web. Each has a minor variation on the theme but are basically the same.
When I was a Boy Scout 25 years ago, we had a cardboard box. It stayed in my crawlspace between campouts. We kept a few kitchen utensils, pots, pans, etc. The designated patrol member would buy the food for the weekend and bring it in a different cardboard box. Once at the campsite, we would just pluck items from the boxes and throw them back in. At the end of the weekend, the food box would likely be burned in the campfire since the food would have been eaten. The other box went back to my crawl space until next time.
Does your troop use patrol boxes? Are they worth the effort and expense? If you don't use patrol boxes, how to you handle the whole kitchen experience on campouts?
(This message has been edited by resqman)
They seem big and heavy. So big you need a trailer just to get them to campsites. Once there, you need an entire patrol to carry and setup. Once back home, they need to be restocked and stored between campouts. Periodically the quartermaster needs to clean, repair, and replace lost implements.
I have reviewed a variety of plans and drawings from the web. Each has a minor variation on the theme but are basically the same.
When I was a Boy Scout 25 years ago, we had a cardboard box. It stayed in my crawlspace between campouts. We kept a few kitchen utensils, pots, pans, etc. The designated patrol member would buy the food for the weekend and bring it in a different cardboard box. Once at the campsite, we would just pluck items from the boxes and throw them back in. At the end of the weekend, the food box would likely be burned in the campfire since the food would have been eaten. The other box went back to my crawl space until next time.
Does your troop use patrol boxes? Are they worth the effort and expense? If you don't use patrol boxes, how to you handle the whole kitchen experience on campouts?
(This message has been edited by resqman)


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