Small Changes; BIG RETURNS

 
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Christmas

 

A story, some treats, and my Christmas card to you all

This post is in 3 parts: first I tell you a story; next I pass along some 'edustuffers' for your Christmas stocking; finally I have added my Christmas card to you all. (Note to self: figure out how to hyperlink inside an email so readers don't have to scroll through.)

I. First my Christmas story -- this really happened to me in the early 1980's:

One year when I was living and teaching in the Yukon, my then husband-to-be had gone off on a Christmas jaunt with another friend to Calgary.  Alone and feeling a little abandoned on Christmas night, I helped serve dinner at the Skookum Jim Native Friendship Center and then went to other friend's home for dessert and a cutthroat round of Monopoly. I was to fly out the next day to meet up with said husband material in Vancouver, and anxious about unforseen problems that might keep me from making the flight, I had invited a large group to Boxing Day brunch at my place at the Carcross Cutoff.

(from the Mt Lorne Firefighter maps collection)

In those days I drove a 3/4 ton pickup truck that was actually parts of several trucks pieced together. From time to time it let me down. There was no way I was going to miss that flight so having friends come out to visit ensured I had both good company and a ride to the airport if I needed it. As it turned out my intuition was right.

After the festivities as I was driving back to my place from town, the fan belt on the truck suddenly let go.  It was 30 below (-30o C). Unless you've lived in a place with no artificial lights and no pollution, you will find it hard to imagine what the night was like. The air was crisp and clear; the scraggy pines and snowy hills and the black ribbon of 2 lane highway that led homeward were bathed in the light of the full moon.  I pulled the car over to the side of the empty road to survey the valley ahead, to wonder at the sight and to ponder my plight.

(This image from Bryce Muir captures the quality of the light.)

I was about half way home and out in the middle of nowhere with no spare fanbelt, no pantyhose to cut up and tie into a loop to replace it, and really no knowledge of how install either anyway.  It was too cold and too far to walk, and without a fan to recharge the battery, the headlights and the heater would very shortly become useless.  My friends had to drive the same route out to brunch, but they weren't due for 12 hours and that was too long to wait. I stood and looked at the moon and searched my memory for some snippet of overheard truck talk that might give me a clue about how to get the hapless truck back on the road.

I will admit that for a few minutes the headline 'Local Teacher Found Frozen to Death' ran through my mind as did the bits of a Robert Service poem where the narrator tells of having to cut up the frozen corpse of his dead friend to get it into the coffin.  

"Have you ever stood in an Arctic hut in the shadow of the Pole,
With a little coffin six by three and a grief you can't control?
Have you ever sat by a frozen corpse that looks at you with a grin,
And that seems to say: "You may try all day, but you'll never jam me in?"
I'm not a man of the quitting kind, but I never felt so blue
As I sat there gazing at that stiff and studying what I'd do.
Then I rose and I kicked off the husky dogs that were nosing round about,
And I lit a roaring fire in the stove, and I started to thaw Bill out.

Well, I thawed and I thawed for thirteen days, but it didn't seem no good;
His arms and his legs stuck out like pegs, as if they were made of wood.
Till at last I said: "It ain't no use -- he's froze too hard to thaw;
He's obstinate, and he won't lie straight, so I guess I got to -- saw."
So I sawed off poor Bill's arms and legs, and I laid him snug and straight
In the little coffin he picked hisself, with the dinky silver plate,
And I came nigh near to shedding a tear as I nailed him safely down;
Then I stowed him away in my Yukon sleigh, and I started back to town."  

From: The Ballad of Blasphemous Bill in BALLADS OF A CHEECHAKO* *newcomer to the Yukon -- still in their first year of living there

(Dawson City Yukon in 1899 From: 5/02/08 in Ursi's Blog: Fine Things for Your Delight -- Ursi also has some terrific webcams posted here including 2 of Santa's Office at the North Pole.)

 

(to finish the story . . .) As I stood, it slowly dawned on me that the extreme cold was not my enemy me but could actually save me.

When it goes below -15o 0r -20o and you're driving out on the highway, you normally wedge a rectangle of cardboard between the front grill and the radiator so the wind chill doesn't turn the antifreeze inside the rad to jelly.  I realized that if I pulled that out, the cold rush of air might just replace the action of the fan and prevent the motor from overheating and cracking the block. There was plenty of light to drive without headlights, so I wrapped myself up in an old sleeping bag that I kept in the back for the dogs and continued on my way. Half an hour later I was safe at home and drinking a hot rum beside the barrel stove that had been restoked with the driest of logs and was belching smoke out into the starry night.

And that was my greatest Christmas adventure.

II. Next some 'edutreats' -- because we all know that teachers have nothing but free time to play around with new tools during their holidays.

Creative Tools For and By Kids :a wiki project for students ages 9-14.

 


Paul Hamilton advocates inclusive classroms; click Quick Links tab for tools.

 

From Larry Ferlazzo: great post on resources for royalty free music.

 

Quick Media Converter: untried by me but says it does flv files.

 

Over 24,000 images: public domain.

A free online collaborative writing tool

 

There's bound to be something in her lists in Diigo that you'll find useful.

 

III. I want to finish up this morning by wishing you all a Merry Christmas and Happy Whatever Holiday You Celebrate at this time of year.

Here is my favourite Christmas card of all time. It could have been painted in the Yukon but is from a South Dakota artist. I grew up in Winnipeg in Manitoba which is north of North Dakota which is north of South Dakota so I still feel connected to this image.  

 

"A Christmas Tale" by Mick Harrison

To play mp3s in your browser, you will need to have Javascript turned on and have Flash Player 9 or better installed.

Music by Incompetech

 

 

 

 

 

Filed under  //   Christmas   clipart   collaborative writing tool   Dianne Krause   Larry Ferlazzo   media converter   Paul Hmilton   tools   tools wiki for kids   Yukon  

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Countdown to Christmas Break

When the number of readers for any one of my Big Returns blog entries reaches between 80 & 100, I try to write something new. In fact two particularly distasteful interactions with my principal filled me with some 'last week of school' venom, and I was getting ready to spill it out into cyberspace. I would have started with a nice quote about the need for positive and effective school leadership and then go on to how it can be very demoralizing when said leadership is either absent or negative: i.e it is tainted by unevenness, inconsistency, and inequity. I was ready to pour more than little poison into your collective ear, but along the way I started looking for music to add to the Christmas video the students and I have been working on at school for the big dinner on Monday night, and fortunately for us all I got diverted into more pleasant territory.

Business first: let me introduce you to Adam.

(click the pic)

I have been looking for a way to embed Teacher's Domain videos into Earth Science course materials and they have actually offered to write the embed code for me!!!!! It might actually work. I’ll be trying this over the holidays. I think these guys may be from my global neighbourhood because there's a reference to Vancouver Island. I'm wondering if one could integrate Glogster posters with Adam's pop-up functions? It might make a nice mash-up. (Is that today's euphemism for 'marriage'?)

(click the pic)

If you have Freepath installed, there's been an update to some of the features. You can click the picture below for 4 short information videos or sign into myFreepath import the playlist entitled Freepath December Update which is on the main page. These links can also be found in my profile at the right.

What I really like is that Dave is working on ways to mash different free applications together with Freepath which will make me less dependent on online streaming. That's a real problem at our school where we suffer from strangulation by limited bandwidth. I need resources I can store on thumbdrives so I can avoid the internet altogether when the computers are sluggish and non-responsive. (Hmmmm . . . that sounds like many of our students especially after a weekend or a holiday . . . )

What I have to do this weekend:

(1)  finish a video Christmas Card of the students to be shown at the school's annual Christmas Dinner on Monday night

(2) get enough of my new "fossils no more -- surrey's 23 things" blog finished so that I can issue an invitation to Surrey staff to work on the program with me starting in January

(3) write proposals for 2 different conferences: Learn BC which is for the e-learning world and our own STA convention day

(4) figure out who might want my services enough o give me a contract!!! I want to buy some new equipment -- a flip camera, a tablet, and possible a new computer -- and would love to be able to write them off against income!!!

What I'd like to be doing this weekend:

(1) buying a new flip cam -- but that will have to wait until Boxing Day just in case Best Buy puts them on sale

(2) working on a Voicethread for Christmas

(3) taking Thelma, the wonder dog, for a walk at the dike at Boundary Bay to watch the sandpipers dip and flash as they swoop by and to see if the snowy owls are back

(4) watcing the Geminid meteor shower

I was supposed to be snowbound this weekend which would have made the first list much easier to 'plough' through. Instead it has cleared and I have been shooting pictures this morning from my ice-coated deck.  A full moon is setting into the trees in the northwest. Due north across about 30km across the Lower Mainland and the Fraser Valley are the pink, dawn-lit Coast Mountains fully laden with snow after yesterday's high elevation dump (I had rain!). My computer faces southeast where the sun has just cleared the cloud tops and is hitting me full in the eyes as I work.

In the spirit of Canadian Christmas, I offer 4 links:
(a) a haunting First Nations version of Canada's Huron Carol written by Jean Brébeuf a Jesuit priest who worked with various tribes in Canada in the 1600's; (b) a page written about the song and the priest; (c) an account of Brébeuf's time in Canada which reads just like the 'history of heroism' I was taught as a kid in Winnipeg, Manitoba (late 1950' & early 1960's). Written on 'History's Homepage' by an organization called AmericanHeritage.com, this is a terribly skewed version of events, but it offers enough geographical references than one can follow the progress of the priest's voyage from France all the way to where the Huron settlement would have been on what we now call Georgian Bay close to Point A on (d) this map.

CANADIAN CHRISTMAS GALLERY

               

(1 & 2)  Illustrations of the Huron Carol

(3,4,5) Lake Huron in winter -- not far from the location of the native settlement Brébeuf visited

(6,7,8) South Coast Christmas images: *Raven eating the Sun (our school's spirit image is the raven);  *Blue heron carrying the sun across the sky (see how low in the sky the sun is, and herons are a common sight here in the winter);  *Santa riding Rudolf over a mountain that reminds me of the glacier covered peak of Mount Baker

ONE WEEK TO GO!!!!

[UPDATE: I had to repost this blog entry because the first one had too many non-working parts. Thanks to the patience of Sachin and Gary, the 2 fellows behind the scenes at Posterous, I have finally discovered that I was making a very simple process complicated and broken. In the meantime the clouds and snow and gusty cold winds have come to my area so there will be no meteor shower viewing for me.]

[UPDATE 2: I have managed to figure out enough HTML code to nearly have completed the customization and launch of my new project called ..fossils no more -- surrey's 23 things.. on another blog site. I feel a bit like the Mac vs PC commercials we see in North America, but my first loyalty is to Posterous and my personal blog is staying right here. When the new site is ready, I'll issue a general invitation to anyone who might want to join this course and make it's debut a smash hit!! Meanwhile if you're interested, please leave a reply with an email contact in the comments list and I'll be sure to get back to you.]

Filed under  //   Adam   Brebeuf   Christmas   Freepath   Geminids   Huron Carol   meteor shower   myFreepath  

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