Wednesday, July 29, 2009

House from space

I was looking up information on geocaching.com a few days ago. We went geocaching at state 4-H camp and I wanted to know more. On the site there was a link to a satallite map page where you could see local geocaches. I found this interesting when I zoomed into our address. I’d looked on google maps before, but the image wasn’t this close last time.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Book Review- World War Z

Book Reviews

I’m no critic, but I do have an opinion. I enjoy reading and thought I might share my opinions on what I read on my blog. By now you have guessed that I enjoy science fiction and read a good deal of that, but I have been expanding my horizons. I am, however a very slow reader and ADD when it comes to books. I’m usually reading four or five at a time, but I will post what I think as I finish them. It just so happens that I just finished one…

World War Z

In The Zombie Survival Guide Max Brooks provides us with the cold hard details of what to expect when the zombies start rising and how to fend them off. He states facts and creates lists of the necessities. In World War Z, however he gives us the opposite of the cold information. He provides us with the stories of people who have fought for their survival. While the Guide made zombie fighting sound exciting, WWZ gives the reader a harsh taste of reality (sort of) in reminding them that this hypothetical situation would be terrifying. Where the Guide made it feel like the reader could go out and kick zombie butt then walk back inside, put on a cup of coffee, and watch Cheers reruns, WWZ vividly describes a world in chaos. It places the reader in a world where government incompetence allows a seemingly impossible virus to infect a majority of the world’s population, a world where people are forced to flee the comfort of their homes and routines and wall themselves up in whatever refuge they can find.

It is Brook’s creation of this world that sets his books apart from other zombie fiction. He established rules to govern the books and does not break from them, unlike Romero’s Dead series. One thing that always disappointed me about the Romero zombie films was the confined feeling, which I’m sure was in part intentional. Unfortunately, Romero only gives us the story of three or four people, when the disaster is supposedly worldwide. That’s what I loved about World War Z, Brooks provides all angles of the zombie uprising. You get to see how it is handled by different countries and people with different ideals.

Friday, July 3, 2009

4-H Bling

Throughout my three weeks of camp this summer (two as a counselor, one as a camper) I stocked up on various 4-H related items.
The camp director had each of the counselors make one of these so we could teach the campers.

On a rainy day my friend Jessica taught us how to make beady buddies so I made one with my tribe on it. I also made a spirit stick.
My friend Eric told me I should be ashamed that after years of counseling and camping I still didn’t have a cross-stitch nametag. So I asked the cross-stitch instructor to start one for me. Then, my friend Kelly added the clover during Older Camp. Here it is complete with my Charting and Tenth Year Pin.

Another counselor was making these bracelets with tribal colors so I asked for one.
Some of the campers at intermediate were making different things with Perler Beads so I sat down with them and made a council circle. I think I might have made more crafts than most campers.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

One Small Step For Man, One Giant Leap For 4-H!

Finished with 4-H camping for the year. Older was great. I earned my charting pin, so working on that book and doing all those activities paid off.
Charting, which I didn’t really explain when I made the vlog, is a self discovery project. It has you evaluate your beliefs and think about the life ahead of you. It’s a great project and I encourage everyone in 4-H to take it. As part of the project, Charters have to take a class at camp. In this class we did exercises that really opened our eyes to a lot of things. We had heated debates and played fun teambuilding games. We were lucky to get two great ECIs (Extension Camping Instructors) to help us through.
As part of the class the Charters have to run council circle on Thursday night. We have to give it a theme so we did “When I grow up I’m gonna be…” and all the Charters dressed up as a profession.

I was an astronaut. We had only minutes to pull our costumes together so a friend and I wrapped a box in white paper, my legs in tin foil and I scribbled “Mars IFYE”, International (or Interplanetary) 4-H Youth Exchange, on a plastic container stolen from the dining hall.
Everyone's favorite game was definately "Waa!" We got video of it and all agreed it needed to be posted. Enjoy...



Thanks again to all my fellow Charters for a great week! How How!