Since there was a gas leak at one of the FVCC buildings on Thursday, and it happened to be the building I had class in, my drawing class’s mid-term critique was today. I don’t know if there will be an actual grade handed out, but my drawings were well received by classmates and teacher alike. I had been feeling like I shouldn’t have taken the class — I couldn’t finish anything within the class period, and it seemed that my classmates’ work was so much better than my own. After looking at the collections of work by the other students I realized that my method of comparison was based solely on my lack of confidence and not based on the overall quality of my body of work.

Another drawing bonus is that Dan got me this cool easel. It’s fully adjustable so you can change the angle of your canvas or paper, and it even has legs. I started working on the bird skull tonight. It’s far from finished, and I’d like to tweak a few measurements and lines, but I think it’s off to a good start.

In other class notes, I have an English Comp. mid-term exam tomorrow. I’m not terribly nervous about it. While my grammar may lapse here, I actually do know what most of the rules are, and that’s all the test is on — basic grammar. And we can use our notes.

I also have another quiz in Philosophy and my third test in Math coming up. Dr. Scott’s Philosophy quizzes are easy, I know the information well, and he’s a generous grader with plenty of ‘bonus-point’ opportunities. I’m a little more worried about my math test, I know the information (solving systems of equations in two variables), but that didn’t help me on the second test. I got an ‘A’ on my first, and bombed the second with a ‘C’. I was so certain I was going to get an ‘A’ on the second test, but I lost a lot of points on “little things”. Meaning that I didn’t show all of my work properly. There were also a few problems that I didn’t complete quite to the satisfaction of my teacher.

For a little Mathematics fun I thought I’d give you one of my math problems. I’ve already figured out the answer, so don’t think I’m trying to get anyone to do my homework for me. It’s the type of question you might see in a trivia type game, I know I’ve seen it before. Here it is:

Suppose there are a number of rabbits and pheasants confined in a cage. In all, there are 35 heads and 94 feet. How many rabbits and how many pheasants are there?

November 1st, 2007Flash Little Punks

All Dan wanted out of a video game console was Guitar Hero. All I wanted was Zelda. Naturally I won. It was a Nintendo Wii for us and The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess goodness.

Then came Sunday’s release of Guitar Hero III for the Nintendo Wii.

I anticipate sleeping again sometime in 2008.

Side note: I went to my 12:30 Drawing class today prepared for mid-term critique. I got out of the car, pulled my portfolio out of the back seat and began to head towards the building. “Excuse me, Miss? Classes in the ATB building have been cancelled; there was a gas leak.”

The brand-spanking-new, ten-million-dollar, ATB building — had a gas leak.

Wonderful.

In my last Thursday Thirteen, I mentioned the B I got on my first English Comp. essay. On Friday, my second essay was handed back with an A. I am marginally less angry.

I thought I’d post the second essay. My first essay is a little more personal in nature, so I’m not up for posting it, but if you think you’d like to read it, I do have an email address… I won’t guarantee that I’ll send it to you, though!
;)
(Note: Before anyone gets excited, yes I refer to Dan as ‘my husband’. He technically is not. And, no, we’re not getting married, either.)

Geocaching And The Art Of Preparedness

Geocaching is the outdoor sport of using multi-million dollar satellites and a GPS receiver to find geographic coordinates. Tupperware, or more commonly, ammunition boxes, are hidden at these coordinates by other players. Geocachers fill these containers with all sorts of things, making the sport a high-tech treasure hunt. My husband and I enjoy geocaching because it gives us the opportunity to spend time together. We also get outside for exercise, and it’s always a surprise to see what items previous players have hidden in a cache. Like any outdoor activity it is important to be prepared for a variety of situations. These include possible injury, wildlife encounters, not having everything required for a pleasant excursion, equipment malfunctions, or failure to pack enough water.

One of our caching expeditions was ruined by our failure to pack enough water for the hike. Just what should you pack for a four mile hike with a 2300 foot elevation gain? Undoubtedly, you should carry more than a 32 ounce container of water. I’d feverishly checked online hiking guides for information about the Strawberry Lake Trail in the Jewel Basin. We expected the fridged, bubbling, mountain streams the guides had promised, but it was only the 25th of July, and the brooks had long since dried. All that remained were the shriveled detritus of once thriving mosses and the powdered dregs that were once soft mud. Normally we would have turned back, but the trailhead to Strawberry Lake is deceitful. It’s located in an old-growth, Hemlock forest. It is a chilly forest, free of mosquitoes, flies, and free of parchedness. The Hemlock forest belied the high summer waiting above us. Leaving the cool hideout of the Tsuga woodland, we chose to continue on the trail, which was now much steeper, to search for water in the more direct sunlight. It wasn’t long before heat exhaustion set in. Our muscles beseeched us to stop; our minds became obscured by confusion. Had we not reached the lake when we did we could have become extremely ill, suffered heat-stroke, or even died. At the lake we soaked our trail weary bodies in the water and rested. Later, we pulled out our reliable GPS and found the geocache that had brought us on this odyssey to begin with.

Before we left for our hike to Strawberry Lake, I made sure to put fresh batteries in our GPS; our painful trip was not a wasted effort. That doesn’t mean I hadn’t forgotten to make sure our equipment would work before. A few weeks prior to our poorly executed hike, we drove to a wilderness area west of Kalispell in pursuit of several caches we had not yet visited. There was no need to hike long distance to their locations or lumber up severe elevations. We did, however, spend several hours driving the maze of mountainous, forest-service roads. Our driving directions were complicated and the word ‘road’ was a generous descriptor for what we were driving on. The drive was slow-going, jarring and dusty. With every crater and hollow in the ‘so-called’ road that we hit, I worried that our filthy, old-beast of a car would rattle to the ground and fall apart. When we found the campground we were looking for, I nearly kissed the ground. After my sigh of relief, I focused on the task at hand. A GPS has a map function that will point an arrow towards a selected waypoint or coordinate. My husband and I checked the direction of the electronic arrow, gathered our bag of items to trade at the cache, and happily marched in our intended direction. After walking only 30 to 40 feet, and with only 100 or so more to go, the ‘Low Battery’ indicator began to flash. I habitually stowed extra batteries in the side pocket of my camera bag, but I didn’t that day. By the time I had looked through all of our bags, the minute amount of life left in our GPS’s batteries had gone. With a dead GPS we would not be able to find the cache we had come so far to find. My failure to anticipate the simplest of problems had turned this quest into a wasted effort.

While it may be true that the journey is no less important than the destination, the destination is why we ultimately make the journey. To us, an insignificant aspect of geocaching is the trade of items at a cache. This trading has never been the focus of why we participate in geocaching, and therefore, it is not the reason we make the journey. But it is fun. After opening the tight, weather-proof seal of an ammo can, there may still be the slight stink of gun powder and oil. The stench is forgotten as we begin to explore the collection of articles inside. One might feel like a crow, carrying off a set of dropped, shiny keys to a nest. Many times the items are utter junk. McDonalds Happy Meal toys are coldly referred to as ‘McSwag’ and quickly set aside. A cache is almost a miniature curiosity or junk shop, and every now and then a player will put a much desired item into it, like a rare, old, coin or a beautiful, beaded, bracelet. The rules to geocaching are simple: “If you take an item, you must replace it with an item of equal of greater value.” There are many times we have encountered items within a cache that we would enjoy or be able to put to good use. There are also many times that we have forgotten to take along our bag of trade items. Not being able to trade doesn’t ruin the experience for us, but it does sometimes leave us with a slight pang of disappointment.

Sometimes the failure to prepare may include necessities that could endanger our lives. After our Strawberry Lake hike, I never forget to pack an ample supply of water. Other times, my forgetfulness simply meant that we made a long trip for nothing or we weren’t able to participate fully in a sport we enjoy. With every mistake made along the way I’ve learned to pack one more thing, or now remember to double check one more bag. The lessons learned may have been dangerous or painful, but they were learned. As we said in Girl Scouts, “Be prepared.”

(I hate the last line, but everyone said I should keep it in!)

October 19th, 2007Still Life

Alright, so the photos are less than stellar, but this is the first real still life I’ve done in my drawing class. The white tone isn’t quite as bright as it looks in the photo. This is charcoal and conté crayon on a brown paper that I don’t remember the name of.


September 19th, 2007Thursday Thirteen #27

Thirteen Things About Returning to College

1. The fresh-out-of-high-school freshman are so tiny! Much smaller than my peers were when I was eighteen.

2. 140 dollars for a book? Is it made of gold? $140 is actually nothing compared to what the nursing students are paying for their books or what the engineering students paid at the UofI.

3. What exactly am I going to major in? Since it’s a small community college I’m attending, I have four choices: associate of science, associate of arts, assosiate of applied science and associate of applied arts. But what to do after these next two years? Beats me!

4. If my English instructor asks me where I learned something one more time…

5. I remember math being a lot more difficult. Oh wait, it wasn’t, I just didn’t do my homework. Why didn’t I do my homework in high school and get this stuff out of the way?

6. 97% on my English placement exam? I missed a question? Show me! I want proof! (If any of you regularly read my blog you might be asking, “how did you score so well on your English placement exam?” The answer is simple, my blog does not affect my GPA.)

7. When DickBlick said that this 18″ x 24″ portfolio actually holds 18″ x 24″ paper, they were lying.

8. My classes and homework had better not interfere with Dancing with the Stars, Heroes and Lost, or I’m not going! I kid!

9. Can they teach me how to think inside of the box? This abstract thinking that no one but me understands is beginning to get frustrating.

10. I’m almost certain that the pre-Socratic philosophers must have had an early bid on the opium trade.

11. I can overcome my disrespect for authority and check my attitude. I will not be asked to leave.

12. My photography instructor attends Burning Man every year and says, “it’s cool!” a lot. This is going to be a fun class!

13. Dan must love me a lot to bust his tail like he does so that I can go to school full time. I shouldn’t be so hard on him when he leaves his dirty socks turned inside-out on the floor.

Get the Thursday Thirteen code here!

The purpose of the meme is to get to know everyone who participates a little bit better every Thursday. Visiting fellow Thirteeners is encouraged! If you participate, leave the link to your Thirteen in others comments. Trackbacks, pings, comment links accepted!


September 18th, 2007The Blah Blah Blahs

If Plato is 87 percent certain that a kneaded eraser should not be used with graphite, can he complete his Narrative Essay using 100 ISO Black and White Film?

Pop. Crack! Smoke! Fizzle!!

Pretty pictures….


Actually classes are going well, and my schedule is easy to manage. I’m merely a little groggy since my planned nap took longer than expected.

These photos were taken at Glacier National Park.

Erm… I haven’t posted these before, have I?

August 30th, 2007And so it Goes

Classes started today. Already have homework. I’ve never spent so much money on a calculator before! :O

But, it has a USB connection! :D

Oh, and I got all of the classes I wanted!

July 19th, 2007Is it Time to Panic Yet?

FVCC application sent, received and processed. Check.

Copy of high school transcript sent. Check.

Verification of residency. Check.

Records of two MMR’s. Not so check. If my mother ever kept my immunization records, I have no idea where they are. Panic.

Placement Exams. Tomorrow at 9:30 in the A.M. Not worried about those. Check.

Orientation session scheduled. I turn in my card after my placement exam. Check.

Everthing else. Panic, panic and more panic. Check, check and check.

I think I’ll have to have a couple-three of these Crayola Crayon Pens for next fall when classes start. I can only hope a prof asks why I’m taking my notes with a Crayon! If you look at the plunger ends, you can tell they’re pens, but I think they look pretty realistic. Well, for an online picture, anyway!

Our Crayola Crayon Executive Pen is hands down the most fun you can have at work! Get ready to hear a few giggles as you nonchalantly take notes in your next meeting. Who said you had to give in completely to “the suits” at the office?

This Sign & Seal, balancing pen act is just too cute!

All work, no play…how boring is that? Bring a touch of whimsy to your desk with Sign & Seal, the pen-holding pinniped with perfect balance and a magnetic personality. Just give it a whirl!

Prepare Taxes
File Taxes
Prepare FAFSA
File FAFSA
Prepare FVCC Application
Get nasty, horrible vile shot MMR
File FVCC Application
(edit: 01/19)Review SAR
(edit: 01/19)Submit SAR
Find out status of FAFSA
Party or Cry

Wish me luck!

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