Sonora Scouts BSA Troop 555

Sonora Scouts BSA Troop 555 Chartered by Twain Harte Rotary, Troop (2)555 is the first female Scouting America Troop in Tuolumne County. We are the ONLY all girl unit in the county.

We do service projects, go on monthly adventures, and build leadership skills!

Our girls took first place at Klondike this year!!Klondike is our annual Scout skills winter competition, where we compe...
02/15/2026

Our girls took first place at Klondike this year!!

Klondike is our annual Scout skills winter competition, where we compete with other units in our council.

These girls not only did a great job showcasing their skills, they went above and beyond throughout the competition lending a helping hand to other units. They exemplified everything that Scouting stands for and we couldn't be more proud of them.

It was so great to have 2 patrols this year! It just shows that our program is healthy and we are busy growing. We spent years at just 2-3 girls and now we have 10 that regularly attend all outings, meetings, and service projects.

Our older girls (14-16 yrs old) are all now under a year to starting/finishing their Eagle projects. Our younger girls (10-12) are all gaining the necessary Scout skills and learning how to function in the units. It is so exciting to watch all of these girls grow in their Scout career and in their personal lives!

Again, we couldn't be more proud of them; first place was just a bonus.

01/06/2026

OMGoodness! What a trip! What a way to break in the New Year!!! 🎉 🎉

We don't camp with our brother often, but when we do we make sure it is EPIC!

We walked the Golden Gate Bridge both directions, went to the Marine Mammal Sanctuary, the old missile silos, and Rodeo beach.

It poured rain. We camped, cooked, and shared hours of fireside activities!

We are exhausted but our hearts are full and adventures were had!

As always, if you know a youth interested in joining our shenanigans contact our Scoutmaster, Ashley. She can hook you up with our various Scouting units ranging in ages from kinder-17! (209) 303-7980. She really likes texts but will answer via phone too😉

Someone extra special joined us for ice skating. Miss Aspen is busy catching some zzzz while waiting for the girls to fi...
12/15/2025

Someone extra special joined us for ice skating. Miss Aspen is busy catching some zzzz while waiting for the girls to finish up ice skating. Aspen is in the very beginning stages of training as a service dog and we are so excited she will be a part of our unit moving forward!

Also she is so cute next to our favorite hat! Thanks to Steve Parks

Tree Lot is OPEN!! Girls will be onsite tomorrow to help you load your tree. Otherwise we are self-serve with PayPal and...
11/28/2025

Tree Lot is OPEN!!

Girls will be onsite tomorrow to help you load your tree. Otherwise we are self-serve with PayPal and Venmo codes posted!

Thank you all for your support of these youth!

Our girls rocked it this weekend and harvested 100 Christmas trees for our fundraiser. We are so thankful that our Fores...
11/24/2025

Our girls rocked it this weekend and harvested 100 Christmas trees for our fundraiser. We are so thankful that our Forestry department works with us to make this possible!

The Christmas Tree lot will open this week at Divine Market! Another great company that works so hard to serve our community!

Our tree lot will be self-serve. We will have codes posted for Venmo and PayPal. Please share and help our girls get to summer camp and National Advanced Youth Leadership Experience (NAYLE) this summer.

We will make another post once we are fully operational, but couldn't resist sharing how hard these girls work to make their Scouting journey a success!

This weekend our Scouts teamed up with our "brother" unit, Troop 500, and had our 1st Annual Merit Badge Midway. We offe...
11/17/2025

This weekend our Scouts teamed up with our "brother" unit, Troop 500, and had our 1st Annual Merit Badge Midway. We offered 5 Merit Badges and had more than 20 youth in attendance over the weekend!

Signs, Signals, and Codes learned about various ways to communicate, went on a one mile hike to demonstrate signs, learned some ASL, and so much more.

Pulp & Paper learned all about the history of paper making, how the industry is working to be good stewards of the environment, and made their own paper.

Animal Science got to learn all about livestock. We talked different uses of various animals, illness, husbandry, and got to make our own butter and cream cheese, and even got to play with some baby goats.

Emergency Preparedness learned all about staying safe during an emergency, they created evacuation plans, learned about HAMM Radio hobby, and how the county emergency system works.

Communications learned how we communicate in various ways, learned about lots of careers in the communication industry. They learned how to sell products, give speech's, and plan events.

These kids knocked it out of the park!

These girls collected somewhere around 1005lbs of food to donate to ATCAA Food Bank! All 10 of our girls participated in...
11/16/2025

These girls collected somewhere around 1005lbs of food to donate to ATCAA Food Bank! All 10 of our girls participated in the annual Scouting for Food drive and we collectively did 75 hrs of service!

These girls are making moves in our community! Keep your eyes on these future leaders!

08/30/2025

Santa Barbara Boy Scouts Rescue Former Scoutmaster Lost in the Sierra Nevada

"A group of Santa Barbara Boy Scouts hiking deep in the wilderness of the central Sierra Nevada came across a man who, by all appearances, wasn’t supposed to be there.

“He just looked like — basically looked like a homeless guy,” said Scoutmaster M.J. Hey. “He was struggling a bit.”

The Santa Barbara–based troop, Troop 26, was on day four of a seven-day backpacking trip through the Emigrant Wilderness, a part of Stanislaus National Forest that borders Yosemite National Park. Nine younger scouts, all around 12 years old, were accompanied by five adult leaders. They were carrying 40-pound packs, navigating through lakes and meadows, and practicing the same skills that generations of Scouts before them had been taught.

The man they found — standing alone in a high-altitude meadow near Long Lake — was not a stranger to those skills. His name is Douglas Montgomery. He’s 78. And he’s an Eagle Scout.

“I’m an Eagle Scout from Troop 10 in Burlingame,” Montgomery said in an interview with the Independent. “We took Scouts into the Emigrant Wilderness for about 20 years, starting in 1963. At one point, we had 95 Scouts in there.”

But this time, Montgomery wasn’t leading a trip. He was lost. He was on a 14-day backpacking trip that became a test of survival after he lost his pack. Without his backpack, he no longer had shelter, food, water, medication, or a way to communicate.

The solo trip was supposed to be two weeks. He’d hired a horse to take him to Upper Emigrant Meadow Lake and planned to hike out toward Kennedy Meadows on a trail he hadn’t taken in 50 years.

At some point along the trail, Montgomery says he set his pack down to scout ahead. Then he couldn’t find it again.

“I checked and checked and checked and looked and looked,” he said. “It was very, very disconcerting not to be able to find it. But I had to make a decision at the last minute just to stop looking and get where I could save my own life, and that’s what I did.”

That night, with no gear, no tent, and temperatures in the low 40s, Montgomery tried to stay warm in the only way he could: He buried himself.

“Close as I could get, I crammed myself between several lodgepole pines and covered myself with loam,” he said. “I kept myself busy all night, tweaking the loam over parts of my body that were exposed to the air.”

He didn’t sleep. “I complained about the cold out loud many times,” he added, “yelling out of the darkness.”

The next morning, when the sun came up, Troop 26 arrived.

Scoutmaster Hey said the scouts initially stopped and spoke with Montgomery and then called the adults over when they realized something was wrong.

“He didn’t have any equipment with him, didn’t have his backpack, just a pair of old trousers and his shirt, and he was pretty heavily cut up,” Hey said.

Hey and Assistant Scoutmaster Orin Rowe laid Montgomery in the sun to warm up. They gave him food, water, and electrolytes. “He literally couldn’t walk on his own,” Hey said.

Hey, trained in Santa Barbara Search and Rescue, made the call to initiate a helicopter rescue via Garmin InReach. The troop’s other adult leaders took the scouts on toward their next camp at Toejam Lake.

Montgomery, who normally carries his own personal locator beacon, couldn’t call for help on his own. “I carry a personal locator beacon — but that’s in my pack,” he said.

Thanks to Troop 26’s Garmin, within three hours, a California Highway Patrol helicopter arrived from Fresno.

“It took two full-grown men to kind of get him to the helicopter,” Hey said. “He was coherent, in better shape, his blood pressure was actually pretty high, and his heart rate was elevated — but not scary.”

“Always lovely,” Montgomery said, when asked about the ride. “I love helicopters. I was in the Navy for four years — a lot of helicopter experiences.”

He was transported to Kennedy Meadows. A deputy met him there. His niece drove out in his 1984 Volvo.

“I got in my ‘84 Volvo and drove home the next morning,” he said.

The irony wasn’t lost on anyone — an Eagle Scout and former Scoutmaster rescued by a troop of kids doing exactly what they’d been trained to do.

“It became a tremendous teaching point,” Hey said. “They were close enough to it, so it was very visceral for them. They really felt the reality of the situation and the seriousness.”

For Montgomery, the main takeaway is “how to protect yourself from hypothermia.” Luckily, Montgomery is a very experienced outdoorsman who knew how to do so. And as such, he provided the scouts with many great tales as they waited for the helicopter. “He was like one of these real characters … like out of a Forrest Gump movie,” Hey said.

Montgomery said he’s sea kayaked the waters off Greenland, Madagascar, Venezuela, British Columbia, Alaska, and Lake Superior. He’s paddled through French Polynesia and the Baltics. He’s cycled most of Europe, the Crimean Peninsula, South Africa, New Zealand, and the Andes. He’s backpacked Argentina, Chile, India, the Himalayas, and pretty much every mountain range on the West Coast.

Montgomery also spent four years in the U.S. Navy as a JAG officer and served as a prosecutor aboard an aircraft carrier, the USS Coral Sea.The irony wasn’t lost on anyone — an Eagle Scout and former Scoutmaster rescued by a troop of kids doing exactly what they’d been trained to do.

Santa Barbara’s Troop 26 (pictured above left) gathered around the campfire) helped get former scoutmaster Douglas Montgomery warmed up on a boulder after finding him lost in the wilderness during a backpacking trip in the Emigrant Wilderness this August. | Credit: Courtesy
By Ella HeydenfeldtSun Aug 24, 2025 | 03:06pm
A group of Santa Barbara Boy Scouts hiking deep in the wilderness of the central Sierra Nevada came across a man who, by all appearances, wasn’t supposed to be there.

“He just looked like — basically looked like a homeless guy,” said Scoutmaster M.J. Hey. “He was struggling a bit.”

The Santa Barbara–based troop, Troop 26, was on day four of a seven-day backpacking trip through the Emigrant Wilderness, a part of Stanislaus National Forest that borders Yosemite National Park. Nine younger scouts, all around 12 years old, were accompanied by five adult leaders. They were carrying 40-pound packs, navigating through lakes and meadows, and practicing the same skills that generations of Scouts before them had been taught.

The man they found — standing alone in a high-altitude meadow near Long Lake — was not a stranger to those skills. His name is Douglas Montgomery. He’s 78. And he’s an Eagle Scout.

“I’m an Eagle Scout from Troop 10 in Burlingame,” Montgomery said in an interview with the Independent. “We took Scouts into the Emigrant Wilderness for about 20 years, starting in 1963. At one point, we had 95 Scouts in there.”

But this time, Montgomery wasn’t leading a trip. He was lost. He was on a 14-day backpacking trip that became a test of survival after he lost his pack. Without his backpack, he no longer had shelter, food, water, medication, or a way to communicate.

‘I Had to Make a Decision’
The solo trip was supposed to be two weeks. He’d hired a horse to take him to Upper Emigrant Meadow Lake and planned to hike out toward Kennedy Meadows on a trail he hadn’t taken in 50 years.

At some point along the trail, Montgomery says he set his pack down to scout ahead. Then he couldn’t find it again.

“I checked and checked and checked and looked and looked,” he said. “It was very, very disconcerting not to be able to find it. But I had to make a decision at the last minute just to stop looking and get where I could save my own life, and that’s what I did.”

That night, with no gear, no tent, and temperatures in the low 40s, Montgomery tried to stay warm in the only way he could: He buried himself.

“Close as I could get, I crammed myself between several lodgepole pines and covered myself with loam,” he said. “I kept myself busy all night, tweaking the loam over parts of my body that were exposed to the air.”

He didn’t sleep. “I complained about the cold out loud many times,” he added, “yelling out of the darkness.”

‘He Was Very Disorientated’
The next morning, when the sun came up, Troop 26 arrived.

Scoutmaster Hey said the scouts initially stopped and spoke with Montgomery and then called the adults over when they realized something was wrong.

“He didn’t have any equipment with him, didn’t have his backpack, just a pair of old trousers and his shirt, and he was pretty heavily cut up,” Hey said.

Hey and Assistant Scoutmaster Orin Rowe laid Montgomery in the sun to warm up. They gave him food, water, and electrolytes. “He literally couldn’t walk on his own,” Hey said.

Hey, trained in Santa Barbara Search and Rescue, made the call to initiate a helicopter rescue via Garmin InReach. The troop’s other adult leaders took the scouts on toward their next camp at Toejam Lake.

‘They Had the Garmin’
Montgomery, who normally carries his own personal locator beacon, couldn’t call for help on his own. “I carry a personal locator beacon — but that’s in my pack,” he said.

Thanks to Troop 26’s Garmin, within three hours, a California Highway Patrol helicopter arrived from Fresno.

“It took two full-grown men to kind of get him to the helicopter,” Hey said. “He was coherent, in better shape, his blood pressure was actually pretty high, and his heart rate was elevated — but not scary.”

“Always lovely,” Montgomery said, when asked about the ride. “I love helicopters. I was in the Navy for four years — a lot of helicopter experiences.”

He was transported to Kennedy Meadows. A deputy met him there. His niece drove out in his 1984 Volvo.

“I got in my ‘84 Volvo and drove home the next morning,” he said.

Troop 26 Scoutmaster M.J. Hey and Assistant Scoutmaster Orin Rowe aided Montgomery into the CHP Helicopter for evacuation. | Credit: Courtesy
The Tales of a Scout
The irony wasn’t lost on anyone — an Eagle Scout and former Scoutmaster rescued by a troop of kids doing exactly what they’d been trained to do.

“It became a tremendous teaching point,” Hey said. “They were close enough to it, so it was very visceral for them. They really felt the reality of the situation and the seriousness.”

For Montgomery, the main takeaway is “how to protect yourself from hypothermia.” Luckily, Montgomery is a very experienced outdoorsman who knew how to do so. And as such, he provided the scouts with many great tales as they waited for the helicopter. “He was like one of these real characters … like out of a Forrest Gump movie,” Hey said.

Montgomery said he’s sea kayaked the waters off Greenland, Madagascar, Venezuela, British Columbia, Alaska, and Lake Superior. He’s paddled through French Polynesia and the Baltics. He’s cycled most of Europe, the Crimean Peninsula, South Africa, New Zealand, and the Andes. He’s backpacked Argentina, Chile, India, the Himalayas, and pretty much every mountain range on the West Coast.

Montgomery also spent four years in the U.S. Navy as a JAG officer and served as a prosecutor aboard an aircraft carrier, the USS Coral Sea.The irony wasn’t lost on anyone — an Eagle Scout and former Scoutmaster rescued by a troop of kids doing exactly what they’d been trained to do.

Montgomery aboard the USS “Coral Sea” in 1974 | Credit: Courtesy
Montgomery cycling Brittany in 1995 | Credit: Courtesy
Montgomery cycling Mongolia in 2006 | Credit: Courtesy
Montgomery and his partner, Matthew, on their 2007 expedition to the Norwegian archipelago Svalbard | Credit: Courtesy
Montgomery kayaking in Madagascar in 2010 | Credit: Courtesy
Montgomery with his partner, Matthew, on their Arctic Refuge expedition in 2013 | Credit: Courtesy
1 / 6
Until his retirement in 1989, Montgomery was a practicing attorney and estate broker. Afterward, he did pro bono legal work for AIDS patients through 2001. He now lives in San Francisco with his partner, and when asked about slowing down, he just says he “does less backpacking, more kayaking.”

“Backpacking was my first love,” he said. “But once you learn how to live in the wilderness … and your backpacking skills become more challenged by age, you like stuff where you’re sitting down.”

Hence the kayaking. “His Kodiak-to-Chignik [sea kayaking] journey puts Jack London to shame,” Hey remarked.

When asked about whether Montgomery regrets the most recent adventure, he says he does not. He is, however, hopeful that his missing pack will turn up someday.

“My pack is a time capsule,” Montgomery said. “If somebody makes the same mistake I made and goes off the trail in the right place, they may find it. Maybe they’ll find it soon.”

For now, it’s buried out there — just like he was."

Written by Ella Heydenfelt for Santa Barbara Independent , tinyurl.com/bdxrepe2

Triple Nickels and a couple of our "little sisters" from Pack 513 set out over the last couple of weekends to collect fo...
11/18/2024

Triple Nickels and a couple of our "little sisters" from Pack 513 set out over the last couple of weekends to collect food for Interfaith. These girls walked Crystal Falls neighborhood dropping off and then picking up bags full of nonperishable foods!

This small group was able to collect about 380 lbs of food!!

Our "brothers" from Troop 500 hit Willow Springs and collected over 850 lbs to donate to their nonprofit!

It's not too late to order your tree. They will be fresh cut a couple of days before pick up on Nov. 30th. 100% of the c...
11/18/2024

It's not too late to order your tree. They will be fresh cut a couple of days before pick up on Nov. 30th. 100% of the cost directly benefits our local girls.
This will help them go to summer camp, pay their annual dues, help cover the cost of our monthly outings (camping/hiking), and to purchase some desperately needed gear, such as high quality tents, and a trailer to store their gear in.

10/25/2024

🎉 Ready for adventure, leadership, and fun? 🏕️ Join Scouting America Troop 555 – The Triple Nickels! 🎖️

💪 Our games aren’t just fun – they build teamwork, teach leadership, and spark personal growth. From outdoor challenges to mastering survival skills, Troop 555 is where girls like YOU become confident leaders.

🌟 Why join the Triple Nickels?

Learn life-changing skills

Make new friends

Take on adventures that lead to growth

Experience that lasts a lifetime!

Are you ready to grow, lead, and have a blast with us? We’d love for you to join our troop of strong, adventurous girls! 💫

📅 DM us to learn more and start your journey today! 🔥 .

Address

P. O Box 4434
Sonora, CA
95370

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Sonora Scouts BSA Troop 555 posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share