I've been trying to date my mess kit for several years. My mother gave it to me when I became a scout in the 70's. I am #10 in a family of 11 and none of my siblings have been able to help. The only logo is on the frypan handle. It has an aluminum cup where as the other scouts in my troop had a green plastic cup. I now think it is probably from the 60's thanks to your video. I'm glad sarge vinning referenced you in his video.
I’m 62 years old and still have friends who laugh when I pull out my old Boy Scout knife. It’s saved my rear end more times than a toilet seat though, so let them laugh.
Awesome! I was hoping you would create this exact video. I hit a lot of estate sales and have a wide variety of BSA mess kits so this will help me date those. Thank you!
I used that kit a lot when I was a teenager. It works but I don't find it fits my needs. I was fascinated by the video and watched the whole thing. It's interesting to see how it only slightly changed over the years. For a long time now I mostly use an old aluminum bush pot and a sheet steel frying pan with a square socket handle and a stainless cup with folding handles. Sometimes also a aluminum pot that the bush pot fits in. Or a Swedish m40 with a us canteen cup inside it. Or some combination of those things. Great video
I like the WWII version of the BSA kit because of the carbon steel skillet and the tinned pot and plate but a pot and skillet are really the only things one needs. Why a square socket handle instead of a round one brother?
@honorableoutfitters with a square socket there is no chance of the pan turning on the green wood handle and dumping your food in the fire or dirt. Also its easier to carv a handle. Just cut four flats rather than dozens of cuts to make a round or cone shape.
Excellent content as ever! Great to see all the versions of the BSA cook kit made over the years. Don't know if something similar existed overhere in Europe, never seen kit like this. Outdoor greetings from the Netherlands 🇳🇱🏕️
Bulldog in England made one almost identical. www.ebay.com/itm/135053032652?itmmeta=01HZMWVG3NW6RGCXFD06AGT3ZA&hash=item1f71c9bccc:g:U~cAAOSwOc9mPbK~&itmprp=enc%3AAQAJAAAA4Doctxh1CPzDsdRbizxFxCnJnJLDbf6N%2Bx%2FIG%2FqMHCmN2VkP%2BndlbxrNFLSjs%2BiUoZiXj7IgZvrayeiDpzr38kHcz5Bye6ie7N8kGdLRSg6JntUYTMYSk%2FjpfCXS%2FMDufpqBCqnjY9HevgmuD%2B7squOYTs6tn5fylENCxGx%2FUvMhr0Z7wn039PJ7gem2Klh4E5L1XFpJHcSxswwfmtWjwAFumOOSb9JHR7IdRT4s%2FbaRpNWd2auiN9zFdAUYHPnAotMNQhvXjxXjogX2ol1yp3Kc2YSrBUnbVKJHLoSTtEdJ%7Ctkp%3ABk9SR_qB7pz9Yw
It's hard, on ebay there may be several right now but you have to filter through the 100's of common aluminum ones. Often they post a picture of the cup which is unique to that set so using that to pinpoint your focus or use Google Image search may help you. Good luck my friend and thanks for watching!
I have found a cook set that has no boy scout emblem and the case has a flap like the others you have, but also a split on it and an extra snap. Any idea how old it is? It’s made by the same company.
I only have later ones from the 1970s. I do have a copper bottom SS set that is the one I use in an emergency. I have two of the bigger aluminum sets but truthfully for an all out historic look it is pretty much the same as the 1880s on through for what an adult carried. I do have a pot with what I call an omega ring on the lid. It is my belief that after the 1960s cooking over a fire was down played and by and large cooking was heating up food on a stove. Maybe not everywhere but in many places.
I have a 1930's (maybe 20's) kit with pocket and knife and fork. My son has a late 50's early 60's kit. What I do not like about the frying pan with the lip is cleaning cheese eggs or something of the like out of it in the field.
Great question, I need to get some catalogues from the 50's to confirm or deny. It is entirely possible that it could be from the 50's. I am basing my dating on the BSA seal, the color of the fabric (which tends to be consistent with other cloth items), the shortened utensils which goes along with the growing lightweight movement of the late 60's into the 70's, and it matches my father's who was a Scout in the early 60's.
I've been trying to date my mess kit for several years. My mother gave it to me when I became a scout in the 70's. I am #10 in a family of 11 and none of my siblings have been able to help. The only logo is on the frypan handle. It has an aluminum cup where as the other scouts in my troop had a green plastic cup. I now think it is probably from the 60's thanks to your video. I'm glad sarge vinning referenced you in his video.
Thank you for visiting and so glad it was of some help! Happy camping friend!
I’m 62 years old and still have friends who laugh when I pull out my old Boy Scout knife. It’s saved my rear end more times than a toilet seat though, so let them laugh.
Nothing better than a reliable old friend!
Awesome! I was hoping you would create this exact video. I hit a lot of estate sales and have a wide variety of BSA mess kits so this will help me date those. Thank you!
Glad it was helpful!
I used that kit a lot when I was a teenager. It works but I don't find it fits my needs. I was fascinated by the video and watched the whole thing. It's interesting to see how it only slightly changed over the years.
For a long time now I mostly use an old aluminum bush pot and a sheet steel frying pan with a square socket handle and a stainless cup with folding handles. Sometimes also a aluminum pot that the bush pot fits in. Or a Swedish m40 with a us canteen cup inside it. Or some combination of those things.
Great video
I like the WWII version of the BSA kit because of the carbon steel skillet and the tinned pot and plate but a pot and skillet are really the only things one needs. Why a square socket handle instead of a round one brother?
@honorableoutfitters with a square socket there is no chance of the pan turning on the green wood handle and dumping your food in the fire or dirt. Also its easier to carv a handle. Just cut four flats rather than dozens of cuts to make a round or cone shape.
Thanks for the Video and History Lesson. Always Thrilling To Learn New Things!
Appreciate you watching!
Excellent content as ever! Great to see all the versions of the BSA cook kit made over the years. Don't know if something similar existed overhere in Europe, never seen kit like this. Outdoor greetings from the Netherlands 🇳🇱🏕️
Bulldog in England made one almost identical. www.ebay.com/itm/135053032652?itmmeta=01HZMWVG3NW6RGCXFD06AGT3ZA&hash=item1f71c9bccc:g:U~cAAOSwOc9mPbK~&itmprp=enc%3AAQAJAAAA4Doctxh1CPzDsdRbizxFxCnJnJLDbf6N%2Bx%2FIG%2FqMHCmN2VkP%2BndlbxrNFLSjs%2BiUoZiXj7IgZvrayeiDpzr38kHcz5Bye6ie7N8kGdLRSg6JntUYTMYSk%2FjpfCXS%2FMDufpqBCqnjY9HevgmuD%2B7squOYTs6tn5fylENCxGx%2FUvMhr0Z7wn039PJ7gem2Klh4E5L1XFpJHcSxswwfmtWjwAFumOOSb9JHR7IdRT4s%2FbaRpNWd2auiN9zFdAUYHPnAotMNQhvXjxXjogX2ol1yp3Kc2YSrBUnbVKJHLoSTtEdJ%7Ctkp%3ABk9SR_qB7pz9Yw
Great video. Some good info thanks. God bless. From Glenn CATT. In Massachusetts.
I appreciate you man!
Lovely video. Personally, I've been searching for my grail mess kit, one of the steel ones from the 40s. No luck yet, sadly.
It's hard, on ebay there may be several right now but you have to filter through the 100's of common aluminum ones. Often they post a picture of the cup which is unique to that set so using that to pinpoint your focus or use Google Image search may help you. Good luck my friend and thanks for watching!
@@honorableoutfitters thanks for the tip. I'm also checking for welded instead of riveted construction.
Great video. I've owned those kits as a kid.
JT
One can drown themselves in all the minor changes made over the years including the covers that came with them
I have found a cook set that has no boy scout emblem and the case has a flap like the others you have, but also a split on it and an extra snap. Any idea how old it is? It’s made by the same company.
I only have later ones from the 1970s. I do have a copper bottom SS set that is the one I use in an emergency. I have two of the bigger aluminum sets but truthfully for an all out historic look it is pretty much the same as the 1880s on through for what an adult carried. I do have a pot with what I call an omega ring on the lid. It is my belief that after the 1960s cooking over a fire was down played and by and large cooking was heating up food on a stove. Maybe not everywhere but in many places.
I am heavily inclined to agree with you my friend
I have a 1930's (maybe 20's) kit with pocket and knife and fork. My son has a late 50's early 60's kit.
What I do not like about the frying pan with the lip is cleaning cheese eggs or something of the like out of it in the field.
Yeah, eggs are a real pain to clean out of them. Eggs and oatmeal is like glue and cement when cooled down!
Could that 60's kit possibly be late 50s? No marks, odd shaped D ring and aluminum cup. When did they switch to plastic cups?
Great question, I need to get some catalogues from the 50's to confirm or deny. It is entirely possible that it could be from the 50's. I am basing my dating on the BSA seal, the color of the fabric (which tends to be consistent with other cloth items), the shortened utensils which goes along with the growing lightweight movement of the late 60's into the 70's, and it matches my father's who was a Scout in the early 60's.
I have a kit that resembles a Boy Scout kit in fairly heavy guage stainless made by Tatonka
Thanks, I never heard of them before. They look like a premium supplier with a great variety of cooking outfits!
Mines hand down looks like 60s.