Scouting Nederland is open for everyone irrespective of belief, race, skin colour, handicap, political context, sexual preference, or age. Scouting Nederland is
co-educational and open, but single sex
Scout Groups and Scout Groups with a religion are allowed. In the Netherlands, most Scout groups are regular Scouts, but special programmes have been developed also for
Sea Scouts and
Air Scouts. Apart from the standard age groups, Scouting in the Netherlands has a separate division for handicapped members, called the
Blauwe Vogels (BV, (
Blue Birds) or
Bijzondere Eisen (BE,
Special Needs)). The
Crown Scout rank was the highest a Boy Scout could achieve in the Netherlands, until the mid-1970s.
Regular Scouts The regular Dutch Scouting programme is divided into several age groups, although some age groups partly overlap and there are multiple programmes for some age groups. The age group for ages 5 to 7 is called
Bevers (
Beavers). For ages between 7 and 11 the programme is called
Welpen (
Cubs). Until 2010 there were also
Kabouters (
Brownies), mostly for girls and ''Esta's
for co-educational groups. These programmes and the "Dolfijnen" are being replaced by a redesigned Welpen'' programme with a second main character, the girl Shanti, and more water animals. The age group 11 to 15 is called
Scouts, but often the old, now unofficial, names
Verkenners (
Boy Scouts),
Padvindsters or
Gidsen (
Girl Scout/Guide) are used. The age group for ages 15 to 18 is called
Explorers, but often the old, now unofficial, names
Rowans for boys and ''Sherpa's'' for girls are used. The age group for ages 18 to 21 is called "Roverscouts", before 2010 "Jongerentak", but more often the name "stam" (crew) is used or the old, now unofficial, name ''Pivo's" (Pionier(st)er/Voortrekker
Ranger/
Rover)'' The age group above 21 is called
Plusscouts.
Sea Scouts In the Netherlands there are about 300 Sea Scout Groups. Approximately 32% of the Sea Scouts are girls. The total fleet of all Dutch Sea Scout groups consists of 54
guard ships, 120
tugboats and
motorboats, 100
Lelieschouwen, 1,550
Lelievletten (iron
sailboat for 6 persons) and 40
Juniorvletten (smaller size of the Lelievlet). Sea Scouting has its own sections for many age groups, but
Cub Scout and
Beaver Scout Sections can also be a part of the Group. Officially, there are specialized Sea Scout programs for 12 years and older. Until 2010 there was a special water programme for age 8 to 11, Dolfijnen (Dolphins). This is being replaced by a redesigned
Welpen programme with a second main character, the girl Shanti, and more water animals. Members are called
Water Scouts from 12 to 16 years or more often
Zeeverkenners, a unit is referred to as
Wacht (
Watch). The adult leaders are called
Schipper (
Skipper) and
Stuurman (
Coxswain). A
patrol is called
bak, its leader
Boots(man) and his/her assistant
Kwartiermeester. Water Scouts (which number 5,400 in the Netherlands) use Juniorvletten or Lelievletten. The
(Matrozen ter) Wilde Vaart (
sailors of the high seas in English) are the Sea Scouting version of Explorers, a unit is referred to as
Afdeling Wilde Vaart uses Lelievletten or Lelieschouwen. The 1,400 members are aged between 16 and 18 years. The approximately 2,000
Rover Scouts and
Ranger Guides of the Dutch Sea Scouts are called
Loodsen (
Harbour pilots).
Air Scouts Being not very common, there are only about 15
Air Scout groups in the Netherlands. At the Scouts age (10-15), they are called
Luchtscouts or
Luchtverkenners and Air Scout Explorers are called
Astronauten (
Astronauts).
Camping The Northern Pinkster Camp (Dutch: Noordelijk Pinksterkamp or NPK) is a Scouting camp held on the
military practice terrain Marnewaard in the province of
Groningen. The camp is held every year at
Pentecost. The camp is held for members of Scouting Nederland from the northern Netherlands provinces of
Frisia, Groningen and
Drenthe. The Northern Pinkster Camp is the largest annual Scouting camp of the Netherlands. In 2007 when the camp was held there were almost 3500 participants. ==Uniform==