Boondoggle: Difference between revisions

From ScoutWiki, For Everyone, Everywhere involved with Scouting and Guiding...
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (1 revision(s))
m (This article was propably imported from Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/{{PAGENAME}})
Line 1: Line 1:
{{ThisPageWasImported}}
{{portal|Scouting|Scout logo2.svg}}  
{{portal|Scouting|Scout logo2.svg}}  
{{Cleanup|July 2006}}
{{Cleanup|July 2006}}

Revision as of 22:00, 30 March 2007

Template:Cleanup

Boondoggle is a North American arts and crafts activity in which you use flat strings. Originally the term was boon doogle referring to a bone or metal ring used to secure the scarf of a Boy Scout (also called a woggle). American Scoutmaster Robert H. Link (died 1959) is credited with coining the term. From this, the term came to refer to the lanyards worn on the uniform of a scout, or to similar small decorative objects.

File:Boondoggle keychain2.JPG
A simple boondoggle keychain

Boondoggle has also come to refer in the USA for the plaiting craft known elsewhere as Scoubidou, since many such objects are made by this craft. For examples of "boondoggle" in this sense, refer to the article on the movie Napoleon Dynamite.

File:Gimpthreadspools.JPG
Two spools of plastic lace used for boondoggle keychains

References