In 1977, whilst at Oxford reading theology at
St Stephen's House, Oxford, he re-founded the "St Stephen's House
Rover Crew" as an independent venture, with the blessing of the then principal,
David Hope). In 1979, he discovered that the
British Boy Scouts (BBS) still existed as a single Troop in Lewisham. A former principal of St Stephen's House had been the chaplain to the Lewisham Troop of the BBS. Travelling to Lewisham during the 1979 Easter recess, he sought out Charles Brown, the BBS Chief Commissioner and Grand Scoutmaster. The Rover Crew at St Stephen's House by then had been registered with the university authorities as the Oxford University Rover Crew and was admitted as an affiliated group to the BBS. He was made Commissioner for Oxfordshire. In 1983, when he was the Vicar of Holy Trinity, Nottingham and leader of its BBS troop, he was appointed as Chief Commissioner of the BBS by Charles Brown. In 2000, the then Grand Scoutmaster, Ted Scott, who had joined the BBS and OWS in 1926, asked him if he would become Grand Scoutmaster, allowing Scott to retire. In more than forty years of service to scouting, he was instrumental in the expansion of the BBS and OWS, inspiring the formation of scout organisations internationally and helping to re-establish understanding of scouting as a movement rather than an organisation. In 2017, he retired as Grand Scoutmaster and, in 2020, he resigned from the BBS. ==In succession to Sir Francis Vane==