So here in Dispatch at Crater Lake National Park there's a little game we like to play. Called "Ellie's Question of the Day", the game consists of me (Ellie) having nothing else to do with my time but lean back in my puffy black chair and ask random questions that nothing but pure silence and boredom can produce.
There is one rule: am only allowed one question per day. So the questions must be weeded through, evaluated for quality-of-answer-potential, and tested out on Google search before the final question is verbalized to my Comm mates.
"Does a healed broken nose ache when you go up in altitude?"
"What's the 'lime' part of limelight?"
"Do any of you guys know where the phrase "gung-ho" come from?"
etc, etc, etc...
I think my co-workers hate this game.
However, one of them chimed in with her own question the other day:
"Hey Ellie, how do you say teeth plural?"
Anyone can play the game.
WARNING: once you start, there is no going back. You've opened a can of worms. You are forever doomed to think up random questions that can only be answered by obscure, slightly-questionable blogs found on Google. So don't say I didn't warn you.
Welcome, welcome.
You have found your self here: on Ellie's semi-kept-up blog.
Lots of tidbits and nothingness reside here. Don't feel obligated to read anything.
If you're interested, here's a random blog I wrote (+photos) while traveling in New Zealand in 2012: newsieland.wordpress.com
With love,
Ellie
Friday, June 29, 2012
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
Nat Geo
There's something addicting about National Geographic's website.
Take, for example, their "Photo of the Day" page. One photo, one day: hooked.
Don't believe me?
Take, for example, their "Photo of the Day" page. One photo, one day: hooked.
Don't believe me?
Now you do.
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Nomad
Finals are wrapped up (tightly and in 'A' form, I do hope), and the next few things to plan for are my au pair trip to France and the Music Therapy audition next spring.
Yes. You heard me right. A trip to France. After discovering that I wasn't going to be able to start my Music Therapy program this upcoming fall (bummer, I know, but that's a different, long and discouraging story) I started surfing the internet for alternative ways to spend my year. The options: working, traveling, or doing nothing.
I pondered over my three options:
I could work - probably SHOULD work - but that's no fun and besides, that's what I'll be doing for the rest of my life, so why join the permanent job ranks so early?
Doing nothing could be fun. Laze around. Eat fruit. Watch other students slave over their homework.
And then there's traveling... Which could still involve lots of fruit and slothery (that's a word), but also include some type of volunteer work, or paid work, or struggling-to-understand-that-roadsign work.
So travel it was - and is.
Shortly after deciding I wanted to travel I came across the term "au pair". I was not aquainted with this term and started researching. Turns out au pairing is essentially nannying for a family in a foreign country. The perks are that you get free room and board and the family is somewhat obligated to show you their culture and teach you their language.
It didn't take more than a couple of days before I had myself a profile on an au pair website and had contacted several host families from Australia and France.
Now, I am currently in contact from a little family in France and planning on flying over mid-September and staying until late December. And yes, I am dang excited.
The family lives about 15 minutes by train outside of Paris, France. They have three children - a 6 yr old boy, 3 year old girl, and 3 month old baby girl - and they want me to come help them learn to speak English. Things are getting underway.
I've skyped with them, during which they told me one of their favorite parts of my profile was the line, "I will encourage the children to be out in the sunshine; to play in the water and feel the grass beneath their feet", which I seriously thought about taking out because it reeked of sappiness. Next on the agenda is applying for a visa and preparing all the documents.
Pretty exciting, no?
So as if that's not enough excitement, I'm also considering backpacking through either Europe or the States (can't decided which; to go where where they speak English, or not to go where they speak English - that is the question) after I get done au pairing.
A lot is up in the air, but better something up in the air than nothing at all.
As for this summer, Crater Lake, weddings and reunions will have me booked and smiling.
2012 has got "incredible" written all over it.
Yes. You heard me right. A trip to France. After discovering that I wasn't going to be able to start my Music Therapy program this upcoming fall (bummer, I know, but that's a different, long and discouraging story) I started surfing the internet for alternative ways to spend my year. The options: working, traveling, or doing nothing.
I pondered over my three options:
I could work - probably SHOULD work - but that's no fun and besides, that's what I'll be doing for the rest of my life, so why join the permanent job ranks so early?
Doing nothing could be fun. Laze around. Eat fruit. Watch other students slave over their homework.
And then there's traveling... Which could still involve lots of fruit and slothery (that's a word), but also include some type of volunteer work, or paid work, or struggling-to-understand-that-roadsign work.
So travel it was - and is.
Shortly after deciding I wanted to travel I came across the term "au pair". I was not aquainted with this term and started researching. Turns out au pairing is essentially nannying for a family in a foreign country. The perks are that you get free room and board and the family is somewhat obligated to show you their culture and teach you their language.
It didn't take more than a couple of days before I had myself a profile on an au pair website and had contacted several host families from Australia and France.
Now, I am currently in contact from a little family in France and planning on flying over mid-September and staying until late December. And yes, I am dang excited.
The family lives about 15 minutes by train outside of Paris, France. They have three children - a 6 yr old boy, 3 year old girl, and 3 month old baby girl - and they want me to come help them learn to speak English. Things are getting underway.
I've skyped with them, during which they told me one of their favorite parts of my profile was the line, "I will encourage the children to be out in the sunshine; to play in the water and feel the grass beneath their feet", which I seriously thought about taking out because it reeked of sappiness. Next on the agenda is applying for a visa and preparing all the documents.
Pretty exciting, no?
So as if that's not enough excitement, I'm also considering backpacking through either Europe or the States (can't decided which; to go where where they speak English, or not to go where they speak English - that is the question) after I get done au pairing.
A lot is up in the air, but better something up in the air than nothing at all.
As for this summer, Crater Lake, weddings and reunions will have me booked and smiling.
2012 has got "incredible" written all over it.
Monday, June 18, 2012
Oh THAT girl!
After an extremely long day of work, Audrey and I talk about the YCC trail crew kids at Crater Lake this year.
Mid-discussion:
Me: "... And the other girl and boy I don't know who they are."
Audrey: "Is the girl pretty?"
Me: "Yeah. She's blonde, about your age. She had a sweatshirt."
*I fall to the ground in exhausted giggles*
Mid-discussion:
Me: "... And the other girl and boy I don't know who they are."
Audrey: "Is the girl pretty?"
Me: "Yeah. She's blonde, about your age. She had a sweatshirt."
*I fall to the ground in exhausted giggles*
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