Thursday, May 28, 2015

5/28/2015

Day 3  #1

Today we went to Cox Arboretum our goal was to capture pictures of five different trees and one animal. Inside the park there was a pond full of turtles and fish. So we threw small pieces of bread in the water to attract them closer to get better pictures, and to our amazement a huge snapping turtle appears. To attract it closer we started tossing miniature cookies into the water to get it to come closer. One of us had a Go Pro but we were not able to get a good video because of how murky the water was much to are displeasure. But we were able to get multiple good pictures of the trees.

the first tree we took a picture of was a Bur Oak
Our next tree was a Sweet Gum tree
We also got a picture of a Blue Spruce

We also had a normal spruce tree
But best of all we were able to get a picture of an imported Dawn Redwood 
It's already one of the tallest trees in the area but my favorite is still the Blue Colorado Spruce. That maybe because my favorite color is blue but who knows. We also had to settle for a picture of a red ear sliding turtle and a bull frog.
5/27/2015

Day 2

Today we went to Delco park to spend time with the novelist Rob E. Boley and to immerse ourselves in nature. When we met he thought us fun exercises where you take three words from a random page and make a haiku from them. The words I chose were "especially one made" form these words I made the haiku

Lone Sparrow

Especially here
One lone sparrow flies higher
made small by the world

He also showed us how to make a story from a magazine page. You take one sentence and every word in the sentence becomes the beginning of the next line. My sentence was "juncture a point in time especially one made critical or important by a concurrence of circumstances. The short story I wrote was of a dragon talking to a hero who keeps putting off his fate.

Dragon: juncture a time has has come to choose your path do you choose to save our love or the kingdom
A choice must be made
Pointing one way the key to your happiness
In the other direction is the lives of the innocent
Time is not on your side, you have fought against your duties for to long
Especially now more than ever
One choice could either spell the end of all or a new beginning
Made soon the choice must be
Critical it is but, only to you it falls
or a change could be made, there is a chance to save all
important it is that you make the right choices
By storm or flame
A choice will be made
Currently you have two roads laid out before you
Of your choices these have come to be, which path shall you follow

Hero Juncture:...Circumstances may have dictated the paths I can choose but, one destiny is what you choose to make it. I shall carve my own path towards my goal and none shall stop me.

I call It hero's choices

After this we had a small world exercise where we would observe a one square patch of nature and right down what we see form a standing or close up position. So we can see some of the brilliantly beautiful occurrences in nature that we miss from our high vantage points.

After I had finished the activity I had gone down to the dock to sit and observe the water. Out of the corner of my eye I saw something jerk. There was an old fishing line tied to the railing, so I started to pull it in and on the end of it was a catfish. So my friends and I pull it up and work the hook out of its mouth and released it back into the lake.



Tuesday, May 26, 2015

5/26/2015

Day 1

Today in To The Woods we talked about what was expected of us and what we thought nature writing was and some of the ways it could be done. Before we started our conversations about what we thought nature writing was we did a few activities. First we read the quote “I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately…”by Henry David Thoreau. We had to write down what we thought the quote meant. To me I envisioned a life were you do what you want  to better your own life instead of working fro others to get what you need, or in simpler terms I could reference the Lion King and just say Hakuna Matata.  After this we had a team building exercise  how to cross river stones


This in its self was pretty interesting and fun. We were also racing another team trying to find the fastest and most effective way to transport our team across the path, but as always team one is number one. After this exercise we had guess speaker Scott Gesel come in to talk to us about what is nature writing and what form it might take so one can describe there connection with nature to others. We recognized that putting detail into the smaller things can allow you to show a greater over all image to your readers, and how you can use metaphors, symbolism, and personification to help guide your reader to see and feel your experience and connection to the great outdoors.