StihlyinEly
Addicted to ArboristSite
This brings up one of the complaints I had with our local Boy Scout troops - Even Eagle candidates were not allowed to use power tools.
One thing I didn't see mentioned - Get them hauling around the biggest saw they can immediately. When you go to the woods let them carry the saw, preferably with PPE. There is some experience gained in just learning to correctly handle a non-running saw.
Show them how, and get them to sharpen the chains. They will probably get a couple of nicks doing this and gain more respect for a sharp chain.
If you eat things like pork shoulder or full bone-in ham an excellent memorable visual clip is to tie one of the hams down and then show them how quickly a chainsaw will go thru one. Sort of like "this is your brain, this is your brain on drugs".
I would recommend MINIMAL ear protection the first couple of times they actually hold a running so they learn the deafening loudness of a WOT saw.
After they learn to carry, sharpen, fuel and hold saws let them join the "girl scouts" and make some cookies on logs set at an appropriate cutting height off the ground so the logs don't move, and the boys don't hit the ground with the saw chain. With full PPE, including good boots.
Then of course you have to buy them each their own saw. The 13 yr old will probably be able to handle a 441.
+1, except for the last sentence. A 13-year-old and a 70+ cc saw, in the opinion of many, won't mix well. If by "handle" you mean "carry," then I'll buy that. But IMO it'd take quite the strapping young 13er to cut safely and effectively with it.