Monday, March 22, 2010

How to Destroy the World with a Smokey Bear Costume

Many times, in my job, I do really awesome things. Sometimes, frankly, I do really boring things. And sometimes, I do ridiculous things.

Wearing the Smokey Bear costume is one of those ridiculous things.

Ridiculous, according to Mr. Webster, means "deserving or inviting mockery". Now, let me say this: all Forest Service employees should wear the Smokey suit at least once. It is an experience not to be missed when given the opportunity. Unfortunately, for people sized about 5'5" and 135 pounds, wearing the Smokey suit is not only an unmissable opportunity, it is a ridiculous endeavor, because a "small (read: not huge)" person in a Smokey suit begs for mockery. Let me illustrate with a case study: my own.

For part of my job, I am asked to help the wildfire crews teach first and second graders in local schools about fire safety and the whole "stop, drop, and roll" deal. For part of it, each fire team member takes a group of 3 to 7 kids into a corner and teaches them that Smokey's friends never play with matches and what to do if they find matches. Or, if they're second graders, we go over "stop, drop and roll" with them. Then, if we successfully squash their stories about EVERY SINGLE TIME THEY'VE EVER SEEN FIRE and their questions of "why do you lie to us and tell us Smokey's real when he's just a person in a costume?", Smokey Bear and Sparky Dog come out for a little quality time.

One Friday, Maria, one of my coworkers, decided that I should be Smokey. There were six classes that afternoon, amounting to about two hours of time in the Smokey suit. Sure, I said, I'll try it once.

First, I was led into the teacher's break room. Smokey always uses a secluded back room to dress (preferably guarded by dragons and trolls with angry little knives), because if a child ever saw Smokey with his head off, it would be the end of the world. There, I was zipped into the suit, which comes in five pieces: the two fur-covered shoebox feet, the pants (extra extra large jeans), the upper body, and the head. The jeans and upper body are NOT connected. This was important, because not having a sufficiently glorious gut to hold up the jeans, I found them suddenly around my ankles right before my first class. A lot of cinching of the belt and I was ready to go.

Next, the head. Unfortunately, the mechanism that holds the giant, wire-mesh-plastic-fakefur contraption in the right place on the wearer's head was a little broken. The head sat just barely wrong, so that when I looked straight, the head faced about four degrees to the right. This actually wasn't so bad, since the eye holes to see out of were a little too high and a little too far apart for my relatively small noggin. Because of that, I had to chose an eye and tilt the head so that I could see out of that hole. I chose the left, in keeping with the natural rightward tilt of Smokey's head. This left Smokey with a slightly cynical and perhaps a little creepy sideways look when he greeted children.

The suit does not ventilate well. Because of this and the added weight, I was hot and breathing harder than normal. So hard, sometimes, that I was worried that the kids could hear me wheezing from inside the suit when I stood behind them for class pictures. And if a kid ever hears the person inside the Smokey suit make a sound, once again, the world will end. This thought probably contributed to my wheezing.

The problem with the hands: the arms were just too long for me, and my hands only reached about a third of the way into Smokey's. I kept having to scrunch up the arms like you would an oversize sweater, which just does not help an already skeptical child's belief in the "reality" of Smokey Bear. Not to mention that when I waved, the last two thirds of Smokey's hands flopped side to side lifelessly, resulting in not a few widened eyes and dropped jaws from gullible six year olds.

Like I said, being encased in two inches of fake fur is quite hot. For much of the time between classes, I sat outside the school in a chair so that I could take advantage of the occasional breeze that could snake through the mesh of the eyes and nose. This meant I sat in front of a large, tinted mirror, in which I could see my reflection. So when I waved, a jean-clad brown bear waved back. At one point, I decided that I needed to take the head off or I might suffocate. I went back to the teacher's break room where had I changed, took the head off, decided I was still too hot, and proceeded to stick my head as far into the freezer as possible. Maria saw me and snapped a picture of Smokey with his head in the freezer... I'll upload it later.

Finally, the whole point of having someone in a Smokey suit is so that the kids can give him high fives and hugs. It's the highlight of the whole thing. There is a problem, however, when Smokey can't see whether the child approaching him wants a high five or a hug. The kids get into a rhythm of hugs and high fives, so that if one kid gives a hug, an untold number of kids behind him follow suit. However, when this rhythm changes, and Smokey can't see, we end up with Smokey awkwardly holding his arms wide in preparation for a "bear hug" and a confused child standing there with his hand out for a high five. Or the opposite, and worse, scenario, in which a child comes barreling in for a hug and Smokey sticks out his hand, which then collides with the child's face and leaves her at least a little dazed, if not on the floor.

Add this last thing to the flopping lifeless hands, the cynical sideways look, the wheezing, and the pants falling down, and I think you can sufficiently call my experience in the Smokey suit ridiculous.

But hey, maybe one of these kids will remember the day Smokey came to school, remember the things we taught them, and one day stop a fire and indirectly or directly save a life. Even just the possibility of that makes me not care about looking ridiculous. They can't see me anyway. Not that I am a person who never looks ridiculous. I'm pretty used to it.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Loss of vision does not equal loss of fun.

Want to get a completely new perspective on life AND a workout at the same time? Want two days to go by so fast you can't believe it's Wednesday already?

Teach a blind kid how to cross-country ski!

That's what I've been doing for the past two days. I was paired with David Hammond, a completely blind student from Washington State School for the Blind. I got to help him ski around Teacup Sno-Park, and then helped lead a lesson on tree growth for him and the rest of the kids at night.

That kid is SO brave. I've tried closing my eyes and skiing before, and I get so anxious that I'm going to run into something that I lose my balance after about ten seconds. But after some practice, he just zipped down hills, singing the fight songs to every university on earth. Including "The Eyes of Texas" (which we decided is certainly creepy beyond belief).

Also, blind kids have good aim with snowballs. Don't make a sound or they will peg you in the face.

It must be a little nerve-wracking, coming into a situation you've never been in before, having contraptions strapped to your feet that you can't see, that make the ground slippery and that stick out to some untold distance in front of and behind you, and being told, "This is Hillary, she's going to help you learn to ski today." He doesn't know what I look like, whether I'm trustworthy or even if I know what I'm doing. Once again, such a brave kid.

And talk about a lesson in communication! Here's a typical few minutes on the track from the last two days:

Me: "Dave, I'm right here. Are you tired?"
Dave: "No, I want to go up again and then get hot chocolate."
Me: "Okay, come over here so we can get you in the tracks. Oh, your right ski is crossed on top of your left ski, so pick up the right ski... and then move the left one a little farther left so that you can keep turning to your left. There you go. Okay come towards me a few more feet... okay stop. Now you're diagonal on top of the tracks, and the fronts of your skis are off of the groomed part and in powder. I want you to turn your skis to your left so you are facing uphill so that we can get you in the track, but it might be hard because your tips are in powder. Keep going, a little more. Stop. Now step your right foot sideways. There you go. Now can you find the other track? You got it! Let's go!"
Dave: "Did I do really good?"
Me: "Definitely. And right now I can't keep up with you, you're going so fast."
Dave: "Are we going uphill now?"
Me: "Yup, we're about 100 yards from the top."
Dave: "What was that?"
Me: "That's Janet and Jackie coming down the hill in the opposite direction."
Dave: "HI JACKIE!!"
Jackie: "Hello, David."
Dave: "Are we at the top?"
Me: "Not yet."
Dave: "What was your mom's name again?"
Me: "She has two first names, Margaret and Jordan, but she goes by Jordan."

We continue talking about family, or music, or TV, or politics (the guy knows a lot) for a few minutes. Then we turn around to get in the track going downhill and then he makes me time him.

So basically, there was never ever down time. Did I mention the first day was 13 hours long and the second one started at 5:30am? I am tired.

Now I just got back from a Master Recycling class (my choice) that I barely stayed awake through and now I'm going to sleep.

Oh, I hiked and climbed and hung out with people this weekend. Same as usual. Oh, and I've been in the paper twice since Sunday. Crazy. That is all.


That's me in the back carrying his jacket, and with the giant glasses (which helped some partially sighted kids recognize me)

Friday, February 19, 2010

I've been at my job for more than a month now, and I'm starting to like it more than I thought I would. I didn't really think that I would enjoy teaching in a classroom, but I've done it about six times now and I'm starting to get the hang of it. I still wouldn't want to be a full-time, one-class teacher, but it's nice to get the kids about environmental stuff when I get to leave them in their teacher's hands after in 45 minutes. So far I've brought in animal pelts and skulls, planted seeds and talked about soil, and played water-cycle and water conservation games.

Besides that, I'm in the process of planning a fishing day where kids and their parents come out to fish at a stocked lake and there are stations for things like fish painting, a casting contest, and aquatic invertebrate searches (so creepy crawlies in the water). Plus there's free food. It's pretty cool, but it's a huge project and I'm learning a lot while organizing it.

I'm also trying to get a field trip together and a trails project, as well as an invasive species early detection training/group. This is all on top of other things people have me doing.

Oh, and for my personal CAP project, I'm trying to organize a community garden in Dufur. Since I've never had a garden in my life, this is going to be a daunting task! But it's fun.

Anyway, that's all work... on the personal side, I've done a lot of hiking and fun stuff on the weekends. I hiked the rest of the Siouxon with Wayne and Chris, went cross-country skiing for the first time with some people (that was AWESOME!), and then sort of half-assed an attempt up Mt. Saint Helens on the weekend that a dude died in the crater... we turned back, because we weren't really expecting to get up there. Now tomorrow, Astoria and the coast!! Woo!

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

You can click on the pictures to see them bigger

Why do I love the Columbia Gorge? Oh, you know...


Because it's freaking gorgeous! And every view is different... Unfortunately, I didn't take these pictures, but these are basically what I see when I drive in the Gorge. Whenever I want to. And that's just part of the reason I came back up here. :)

Anyway, my work is picking up. I've already gotten a bunch of lesson plans prepared and a couple of appointments with teachers to lead classes. I'm really glad I tried student teaching at UT, or I would be totally unprepared. Anyway, I hope this goes well.

I really like my coworkers... it's just too bad my supervisor literally has only been in Dufur for a total of about two hours since I've been here. So I've basically been figuring out everything by myself. Most of the other days it has been office work, getting prepared for the year and organizing events. Today, though, I got a little bit of a break - I went on a scavenger hunt put together by my supervisor. I explored Wasco county, where I work. So, a little bit about Wasco county: it used to include most of Oregon, as well as a couple of other states, all the way over to Montana. Now it's just part of north central Oregon.

This weekend I went to a little retreat put on by the Mt. St. Helens Institute. It was about winter survival skills - staying warm and dry, avalanche beacon training, the like. Chris pretty much fits the description of the person most likely to get in an accident (25-32 year old male who does crazy stuff sometimes), so I kept telling him not to die. The next day, he had to lead a snow-shoe hike for the Institute, so I went to the Siouxon Trailhead and hiked here:

Yeah, those are my pictures.

Anyway, I was soaking wet after 6 easy miles, so I came home thinking Chris would be home soon, so we could eat together before I had to drive home. He never came home, and I finally left hoping his thing ran really late and that he wasn't dead in an avalanche somewhere. Turns out he got in a near head-on car crash with a drunk driver an hour and a half before I even got home, and the police didn't send his cell phone with him in the ambulance. Somehow, he got away with about 17 or 20 stitches in his face, a big red/blue swollen eye, and some soreness, but the police expected from the wreckage that he should have at least a few broken bones... or worse. I brought him back to my place to make sure he was around somebody in case of a concussion, but he seems to be doing fine.

So, that was my/Chris's big exciting story for the weekend. Now I'm probably going to be spending a lot of time around St. Helens, because Chris no longer has his awesome car:

The Blue Dragon. Sad face... But I'm just happy Chris is alive.

Alright, well, I've got cleaning to do after my amazing dinner that I just cooked. :)

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Ask not what Dufur can do for you, but what you can do for Dufur.

My sponsor, David Gross, has been here in Dufur for about 45 years - since his freshman year in college - and he says that saying's been around for a long time. I guess he's right, since it seems like everyone knows it. I've heard it about thirty times since arriving in the Columbia Gorge last Monday.

I get it, I'm here for service. :)

Anyway, all the interns left the MAC today for our individual terms of service. I met my sponsor for the first time today (everyone else met theirs last Friday). I'm relieved to find that he seems like a great man, with lots of knowledge and experience and a steady personality to boot. He even offered to teach me to drive a stick!

Now I'm taking a break from moving into my bunkhouse. This is NOT what I was expecting. Forest Service bunkhouses, to me, are small, linoleum-floored buildings with the living room and kitchen in the same room, a bathroom with four sinks, two toilets and two nasty showers, and a sleeping area attached to the living/kitchen area with no doors and only portable cubicle walls. In my bunkhouse, I have a master suite, with my own bathroom and a closet the size of my first apartment's bedroom. I have not one, but two dining room tables, a fully equipped kitchen (blender! coffee maker! sharp knives! a pot and pan set! two refrigerators!), three couches and a television. I have an exercise machine. I have an ancient pair of snowshoes. oh, yeah... I have two other bedrooms and another bathroom. What the hell am I supposed to do with all this space?

Not to mention the fact that I have never lived alone in my entire life. I have this huge house all to myself when I'm used to sharing a room with two other girls. Seriously, what do people do when they live alone? I feel like my voice will turn all croaky from lack of use.

Okay that's not true. I work with about ten other people in a building about thirty feet away from where I am now. I'll be working with volunteers. So all day, I'll be talkingtalkingtalking.

But when I come home, then what? There were 588 people living in Dufur in the 2000 census, and the median age is 60. Are there people in this town that I can even invite over, or who will invite me over? Will I have friends whose permanent address is in Dufur, OR? Or will I have to go to The Dalles? Will this just be an exercise in independence? Or loneliness?

So many things I've never had to do before or haven't done in a long time... Figure out what to do for recycling. Remember to leave the taps on when it might freeze. Play my music loud and not worry about it annoying my roommates. Shop and cook for one. Leave my house when I want to see another person.

Alright, now I'm just putting off unpacking.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

New Year, Same MAC

It appears my involvement with last year's blog followed basically the same graph as my involvement with my blog in Turkey... first I was excited about telling everyone all the amazing things that happened, and then life happened, and I didn't have time to sit around talking to nobody on the internet.

The rest of the season was great. It got cold in September, and we ended up being snowed on during our last eight-day. By the end of the season, I was climbing all the time and doing big hikes every weekend, and was feeling great. Then, winter started, the program ended, and I spent three months sitting either in a car, on a couch, in a hammock, or on the beach. Now I am ready to get started exploring again!

After the season ended, my boyfriend Chris and I went on what basically turned into a three-month-long road trip that started in Trout Lake, Washington and ended in Trout Lake, Washington. Chris did the same thing I did last summer, but in 2008. Then he got hired on in the same area by the Forest Service, and lived on the other side of the tree swing in my front yard in Ardenvoir last year. We started dating in August and by then had already decided to go to Mexico. So, when the program was over, we packed up my little Chevy Cobalt, made a stop to climb Mt. St. Helens, and then headed south. Our itinerary included Bend, OR, Crater Lake, the Redwoods, my teammate Lindsay's house in Davis, California (where we learned to pick and make oil out of olives), Yosemite, then Palo Alto to see Lindsay Mac right before her job interview with Google, then Danville to see my aunt and uncle and leave my car at their house to fly to Mexico for 2 and a half weeks. My leader Wayne and teammate Lindsay, as well as a couple of Chris's friends from his home in Michigan, came and stayed for different periods of time, and that was great.

After that, we flew back to CA and drove to TX, where I basically sat around and whined about some parasite I'd picked up, and Chris flew back to Michigan for Christmas. I visited some friends in Austin, met my seventeen-year-old half-sister for the first time (long story), and eventually headed to Michigan to pick Chris up. From Michigan, we drove to St. Louis to visit a good friend of Chris's, and then to Denver and Breckenridge to ski and visit more friends, made a short stop in Arches National Park in Utah, and then came up here to start a new year with the Northwest Service Academy.

I breeze through all that because if I tried to describe it all, it would take hours.

Anyway, now I'm starting an 11-month-long Americorps NWSA internship with the Forest Service in a town south of The Dalles, OR. It's just on the dry side of the razor's edge that divides the dry, high-desert of the east side of the Cascades from the wet rainforesty west side. One day, I'd love to live in the rain. For now, I'll spend the year falling in love with Dufur, hopefully. How could you not love a town called Dufur?

Oh, and I'll let you know what I'm actually doing when I find out.

Anyway, now Chris (who also has an internship based out of the NWSA, but with the Mt. St. Helens Institute) and I, as well as my team leader Wayne, are back at the MAC for training. I miss my people with a passion. With this program, the dynamic is way different, since we're all placed individually and really have little incentive to bond as a team. It's also a little more professional, and the people a little older. Wayne, Chris and I also have a little bit more responsibility than the rest of the bunch since we know the MAC, so we have to do things like drive the rigs and lead clean-up crews before and after meals.

I kind of like having people I know here, but at the same time I miss being a completely unknown entity to everyone at first. I kind of wish I had that fresh start. But it's okay, this will work out too.

Anyway, it's late and I'm tired.

Saturday, August 15, 2009

Ah sorry it's been such a long time

I really don't know if more than one person reads this thing. Oh well! I like writing! 

SO the last couple of weeks have been some of the most fun in my life. 

After the crazy mosquito week, my team and I took a little side trip to the beach. We stopped at Port Townsend, went to a blues festiv
al there (and realized none of us know how to dance to blues), then to Cape Flattery, which is the farthest northwest point in the co
ntinental US. After that, we went to Second Beach, where we hiked our stuff in about a mile and a half and camped on this beautiful beach that was basically constantly shroude
d in fog and mist. The best part (besides the yummy sausages), were these things called sea stacks, which look like parts of the hillside that forgot to wash away. They
 are giant rocks off the coast, some of which have little forests on top. They're gorgeous. 

Then we went back to the MAC, where we had training, for our middle-of-the-summer relax/get-together weekend. We hiked this hill called Sleeping Beauty, where you could see Mt. Adams, Mt. St. Helens, Mt. Hood, and other stuff. We picked our own huckleberries and made huckleberry jam... The most useful part of the week, though, was "Life After Americorps," when we basically got resum

e tips and job hunting tips and were told about opportunities. We also did a little service project, where my group painted signs at a museum in the Gorge. I got to see their rehabilitated 
raptors, which was sweet. 

Then, on Friday, Lindsay and Wayne (who are on my team), Chris (who works for the Forest Service in Wenatchee) and I climbed Mt. Adams!!! It was the most fun hiking I've had in a looong time. We camped out under the stars at about 9000 feet, and then woke up at 4:30 and hiked the rest of the way. It was hard, but worth it. Then, on the way down, we glisaded,
 which basically means we wore trash bags over our pants and used ice axes and trekking poles as breaks to slow us down as we SLEDDED down the mountain! It was so fun. 

Not to mention that after that, everything else seemed easy. We had a backcountry spike where we hiked about 10 miles a day, and one day gained a few thousand feet of elevation in a couple miles (to get up to this beautiful glacial lake), and it was all much more enjoyable because I'd done Adams. Plus, I've been rock climbing lately, and yesterday I noticed that my legs have WAY more power than they did before. 

Well, it's time for me to go write a few cover letters and work on my resume. I'll write again soon.