Outdoor Repairs

Req 2 — Outdoor Fix-It Options

2.
Under the supervision of your parent, guardian, or counselor, do THREE of the following:

This requirement gives you six outdoor and exterior repair choices, and you must complete exactly three of them. All six teach a similar lesson: weather, dirt, water, and everyday wear slowly damage tools and surfaces, but careful maintenance can stop small problems from spreading.

Your Options

How to Choose Your Three

Choosing Your Outdoor Repair Options

Compare the time, tools, and lessons in each job
  • Best beginner project: Req 2a or Req 2e. Both teach careful hand skills without opening up a major house system.
  • Best energy-saving project: Req 2b or Req 2c. These options help stop drafts and water intrusion.
  • Best heavy-duty surface repair: Req 2d. Choose this if you want to work with patching compounds and outdoor surfaces.
  • Most delicate project: Req 2f. Replacing glass requires extra caution, precise cleanup, and close adult supervision.
  • Fastest visible improvement: Req 2b, 2c, or 2e. A sealed door, fresh caulk line, or repaired screen makes a difference right away.
  • What you will gain: Tool maintenance builds self-reliance, sealing projects teach prevention, and repair jobs teach you how to restore a damaged item instead of throwing it away.

A good mix for many Scouts is one tool-care project, one weatherproofing project, and one repair project. That gives you a wider range of skills and a better feel for the different kinds of work a home repairer handles.

If you enjoyed the safety planning in Req 1 — Safety Basics, use that same habit here. Before you pick an option, ask what could cut, fall, leak, or require cleanup.

You are ready to start the first option page. Even if you do not choose yard tool maintenance as one of your three, it is a great model for how careful cleaning, inspection, and storage prevent future problems.