There are 8 Girl Scout Councils in Texas.
Cookies are $3.50 per box in all of the Girl Scout councils in Texas:
Girl Scouts of Central Texas
Girl Scouts of the Desert Southwest - Southern New Mexico & West Texas
Girl Scouts - Diamonds of Arkansas, Oklahoma and Texas
Girl Scouts of Greater South Texas
Girl Scouts of Northeast Texas
Girl Scouts of San Jacinto Council
Girl Scouts of Southwest Texas
Girl Scouts of Texas Oklahoma Plains
For Girl Scouts of the USA (GSUSA), each Girl Scout council determines the dates of their cookie sale, however, most of them sell during the months of January through March.
You can go to the Girl Scout Cookie Finder web site, enter your zip code, and find out if your local council is currently selling cookies.
UK by Baden Powell's wife. Baden Powell founded scouting. I GO SCOUTS! Its great! Go! Girls can now go!
Each World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts (WAGGGS) member country sets their own guidelines for money earning projects for their members, so members of The Girl Guide Association of Barbados probably do not sell cookies.
Some national organizations, such as Girl Guides of Canada, Girl Scouts of the USA, and Girl Guides Australia Inc., do sell cookie (biscuits in Australia) products. Members of Girl Scouts Overseas sell cookies as members of the Girl Scouts of the USA (GSUSA).
It depends on the cookie company chosen by the Girl Scout council. There are two cookie companies which provide Girl Scout cookies and they must offer 8 different kinds of cookies.
Both companies offer Thin Mints, Trefoils/Shortbread, Tagalongs/Peanut Butter Patties, Do-Si-Dos/Peanut Butter Sandwich, and Samoas/Caramel deLites. The other four cookies change every so often and are different depending on the cookie company. Currently (2011) for sale are: Thank You Berry Munch, Lemonades, Dulce de Leche, Lemon Chalet Cremes, Thanks-A-Lot, and Shout Outs.
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G. Hannelius
Each Girl Scout council determines the price of the cookies for their council. For the 2011-2012 cookie sale, some councils set their price at $3.50 per box and some councils set their price at $4.00 per box. Other councils may have set a different price.
There are two licensed Girl Scout Cookie Bakers in the US. Each Girl Scout council chooses the cookie baker, either Little Brownie Bakers or ABC Bakers.
Except for THIN MINTS® and TREFOILS®, the cookie bakers choose the names of the cookies.
So, Little Brownie Bakers Calls them Do-si-dos® while ABC Bakers calls them Peanut Butter Sandwich. Each company also develops their own recipes, so if your Girl Scout council switched to a different cookie baker, the cookie will have a different name and may also taste different.
Mainly for safety reasons this is not a good idea. However, in order to sell Girl Scout cookies in front of your house, you should talk to your troop/group leader, or your troop's cookie chair and your service unit cookie chair. This would probably be considered having a booth sale, so permission would have to be given plus they would want to make sure you are following all the safety guidelines.
There would need to be at least one adult present at all times. If a car were to stop by, the people in the car would need to get out and come to you or the adult with you should be the one to approach the car.
Work hard, provide good customer service, and be friendly and helpful!
Be sure you go back to customers from previous years. Generally, if you continue to go back each year, customers will buy more. If you know of a girl who is no longer in Girl Scouts, ask her for a list of customers.
Read through the cookie sale materials for good ideas.
At a booth sale, be sure to ask people if they would like to purchase some Girl Scout cookies. Politely greet anyone who walks by, even if they just keep on walking.
The shortbread cookies (aka trefoils) are the lowest in sugar and the lowest in fat. The Do-si-dos are the lowest in calories (per serving). A serving of do-si-dos is two cookies. A serving of trefoils is 4 cookies.
Girl Scout cookies sold in 1969 included:
Fudge Creme Shortbread Sandwich
Scot-Teas
Mint
Savannahs
Assorted Cremes
Chocolate Mint
Butter Shortbreads
Peanut Butter
Assorted Sandwich
Use the Girl Scout Cookie Locator to enter your zip code. You will be able to find information about the cookie sale in your area or the council you should contact for more information.
Each Girl Scout council determines the price of the product, so it will vary depending on the part of the country you live in. Right now, prices range from $3.50 to $5.00 per box.
Of the five cookie flavors which are the top sellers and are pretty much the same each year, the Shortbreads/Trefoils account for only 9% of the sales.
The other flavors which usually change every couple of years, account for a total of 23% of the total sales. Usually, the lowest selling cookie is changed the next year which was the case for the Reduced Fat Daisy Go Rounds, which were only sold for one year due to low sales.
Each Girl Scout council chooses the incentives for their council. There are two different companies which bake the Girl Scout cookies and each company offers their own incentives for Girl Scout councils to choose from. Girl Scout councils may also order incentives from other sources or offer some form of cookie credit as incentives.
You would need to contact your local Girl Scout council to find out what incentives they are offering.
There are many different varieties of Girl Scout cookies and each variety has its own weight. You can look at each box to determine how much that particular variety of Girl Scout cookie weighs. Be sure to check the serving size as the weight is by serving size, not individual cookie.
For example, 4 Thin Mints weigh a total of 32 grams and 2 Tagalongs/Peanut Butter Patties weigh a total of 25 grams.
Currently there are two licensed Girl Scout cookie bakers. The bakers can offer up to eight kinds of Girl Scout Cookies. The bakers must always offer Thin Mints, Peanut Butter Sandwich/Do-Si-Dos and Shortbreads/Trefoils. Any of the five optional cookies can be changed each year, however, some of the best sellers have been around for many years: Caramel de Lites/Samoas, and Peanut Butter Patties/Tagalongs.
For the 2011 Cookie Sale, between the two bakers, there are a total of 11 different flavors of Girl Scout cookies - the five mentioned above plus Lemon Chalet Cremes, Lemonades, Dulce de Leche, Thank U Berry Munch, Thanks-A-Lot, and Shout Outs!
In many groups, Brownies are still called Brownies, but some groups have adopted the name of "Gumnuts".
In yet other groups, "Girl Guides" encompasses both the younger and older girls' groups.
Each World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts (WAGGGS) member country/organization sets their own guidelines for money earning projects for their members, so it is likely that French Girl Guides/Girl Scouts do not sell cookies. No information about cookie sales is available on the French Girl Guide/Girl Scout web sites.
However, members of USA Girl Scouts Overseas sell cookies as members of the Girl Scouts of the USA (GSUSA) and may be selling cookies in France.
There are at least two.
Here on the east coast we get them from "Little Brownie Bakers".
The other company is called ABC Bakers.
There are two licensed commercial bakers, Little Brownie Bakers and ABC Bakers.
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The first troop known to sell Girl Scout cookies was the Mistletoe Troop in Muskogee, Oklahoma in December of 1917. The girls and their mothers baked cookies in their homes. They then sold the cookies in the school cafeteria. Selling cookies was a good way to earn money to finance troop activities.