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Here are the results for each categories classified
by the sum of points collected throughout the game.
Scores
Find the prize list here.

Answers to the enigmas of april, 2007
- Neil Armstrong on 20th july 1969 when landing on the moon.
- Baden-Powell, after discussing it with King Edward VII, created the dignity of king's scout. Father Sevin adapted it to french knight.
- We find ladybirds in scouts of Europe in Italy.
- Guide's cheftain in EPE and KPE (that is to say : in scouts of Europe in Germany) is called : Truppmeisterin.
- A örsizaszlo is a patrol flag in Hungary.
- The veliamos kelimas nuleidimas is the ceremony of flags in the morning, in Lithuania.
- The oraçao est the scout eve in Portugal.
- This badge comes from Canada.
- This badge was worn on the béret of scouts of France until the 60's. The yellow fabric was called brush and was referring to the louvetism branch. This is therefore Akela's badge. The brush stopped being used after Second World War.
- This is a belt buckle of English girl scouts. It was worn in 1960, in particuliar during an international gatherinf of gilrs scouts in London. But we find it in australia and New Zealand too an between 1985 and 1998.

Answers to the enigmas of march, 2007
- Marcel Callo (former French scout and jociste).
- "Une fleur au chapeau", written in 1938 by the Belgian William Lemit).
- Oleg Ivanovitch Pantioukov, captain in the tsarist army. He founded the boy scout in russia in 1909 at the request of the Tsar Nicolas II. He rests in the Caucade Russian cemetery in Nice, France.
- The treaty resulted in the creation og the International Office of Catholic Scouts ( during the first international Jamboree). The initiative was blessed by Benedict XV. In 1922, the charter was approved. In 1948, it becomes the International Catholic Conference of Scouting (ICCS), approved by the Holy See in 1962. It has consultative status on the World Scout Committee.
- Father Christian de Chergé.
- Vera Charlesworth Barclay (1893-1989).
- Captain Teodoro de Iradier y Herrero
- Olave Soames St Clair, Lady Baden-Powell (1889-1977).
- Pierre Geraud-Keraod alias Perig (or PGK).
- Pierre Joubert (1910-2002) : 77 years dedicated to the drawing of scouting.

Answers to the
enigmas of february, 2007
- Kraal is an Afrikaans and South African english word for an enclosure for cattle or other livestock, located within an African homestead or village surrounded by a palisade, mud wall, or other fencing, roughly circular in form.
- The scouts salute during the refrain of the promise song.
- Skill in carving or fashioning objects from wood.
- The badge.
- Deputy Camp Chief : person in charge of the training
camps. He/She wears wood badges, often four of them (The DCC of
Gilwell wore five).
- The thumbstick.
- Rover Scout.
- Robert Baden-Powell, the founder of the Scouting movement, explained that the Scouts adopted the fleur-de-lis symbol from its use in the compass rose because it points in the right direction (and upwards) turning neither to the right nor left, since these lead backward again.
- Baden Powell is the one that decided that scouts will salute with their left hand. The story goes that during one of his military campaign. BP, victorious, received the surrending of a chief. As he extended his right hand, the chief extended his left. He explained the left hand is the hand of the braves, since it is on the same side as the heart.
- The scout uniform dates back to the time when BP had the responsability of organizing South African Police (SAC) units. He wanted to design a uniforme that would fit the climate and be different from the soldiers, to avoid any confusion. Among the different components of this uniforme, we find the scarf, which not only protected the back of the neck against the sun, but coul also be used as handkerchief or to protect and injury. The first SCA scarf was green, thus the first scout scarf was green too.

Answers to the enigmas
of january, 2007
- The Svisloch or Svislach.
- El campamento (the camp) del Cid Campeador.
- We can find ortodox scouts of Europe in Russia and Romania and
protestant scouts of europe in Germany and Canada.
- 1989: first contacts. In April 1992: birth of the organization
(both answers are right).
- They come from Hungaria.
- Latvia or Lettonia ( which used to be attached to the russian
empire until the first world war).
- Argentina.
- Bucarest (Romania).
- Girl scouts: Clover union, boy scouts: Grey ranks
(Szare szeregi in polish).
- A Kostel is a slovak or czech church or a polish cathedral.
Answers to the
enigmas of december, 2006
- Pope John-Paul II.
- Gerlachovsky (2655 meters) in Slovakia. But Rysy (2499 meters
only) is in Poland.
- Bryndzové halusky is a traditional dish in Slovakia
made of small potato balls served with goat cheese.
- The bell of the Carpathian Mountains, the dauphinelle with pointed
sepals, the glacial buttercup, the cranson of the Tatra Mountains,
the carnation of the glaciers, the poppy of the Tatra Mountains
or the gentian of Styrie…
- The Magistrala.
- Our Lady of Fatima in Krzeptowki near Zakopane (in Poland) but
Ludzmierz (traditional sanctuary of Our Lady of Podhale) is an
accepted answer.
- Juraj Janosik. First part of XVIIIth century.
- The Halny, violent wind in Tatra.
- Zapilie is a famous village in Poland where women, in the spring,
cover their house inside and out with floral paintings.
- The gesle resembled a little fiddle played with a bow, called
sometimes rebec.The kozy resembles to the bagpipe made out of
a baby goat skin. The fujara is a huge folk shepherd’s fipple
flute of unique design, originating from Slovakia. It is typically
150-170 cm long, tuned in G (A and F are also available). It has
three tone holes located on the lower part of the main body.
Answers to the enigmas of november, 2006
- The nickname given to BP by his close friends was Stephie
or Stephe.
- On BP’s tumb you can find Chief scout of the world
and the sign « job done went home ».
- Major Kenneth Mac Laren.
- The four patrols were : Curlews , crows, wolves and bulls.
- Charles and Henri Bonnamaux (the patrol kitchen container :
bonnamo).
- The scout branch founded around 1914-1915 with Baden-Powell
and Colonel de Burgh was the rovers.
- Augustin-Marie d’Andréis de Bonson (1883-1960).
- Jamboree of Peace, Moisson (France) 1947.
- The girlsscouts are « éclaireuses de France »,
girlsscouts of France in 1920.
- The unknown scout. According to legend, a rich american
named William Boyce was lost on a foggy street in London when
an unknown Scout came to his aid, guiding him back to his destination.
The boy then refused Boyce’s tip, explaining that he was
merely doing his duty as a Boy Scout. Intrigued, Boyce learned
more about the scout organization and soon thereafter, met with
Lord Robert Baden-Powell, who was the head of the Boy Scout Association
at that time. Boyce returned to America , and, four months later,
founded the Boy Scouts of America on February 8, 1910.

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