Thursday, January 23, 2014
Pokegama
My mom said that this year she wants to enjoy winter instead of waiting for it to pass. She said she wanted to go snowshoeing and skiing. Another thing she wants to do is go ice fishing. My mom loves to fish during the summer but she has not gone ice fishing since she was a kid. She is never on the ice for very long; once she hears the ice crack she usually gets off quickly. On the warmest weekend of the winter so far, my mom decided she wanted to try ice fishing. My dad and I loaded a sled filled with ice fishing gear in our truck and my mom and dad left to go fishing. My sister her friend and her friends dad met them on the ice. I left later in my own vehicle because I had basketball game that day and would have to leave early. When I got out there all of the holes were drilled through the ice and my dad was working on setting up the ice house. I got rods ready for my mom, sister, and her friend and they got to fishing right away. Very few fish were caught but everyone had fun throwing a football and enjoying a unusually warm winter day.
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
Lake of the Woods
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My dad's 29 inch walleye |
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My 25 inch walleye |
We got off the ice an hour after sunset and drove back to
the cabin. We kept 20 fish the first day and once we got back to the
cabin we cleaned and cooked the fish, after we were finished eating we still
had extra fish we ate the next day. In the morning of our last day we got
to our ice house 30 minutes before sunrise. The first fish of that day was an Eel pout the only one we caught all trip. The last day of fishing was slower
than the first but we caught 10 fish over 20 inches, including a 33 inch
northern that tangled up every line in the ice house. We had to cut all of our
lines to untangle them and after all that we had to release it because it
was in a protected slot. It took us about ten minutes to get all the rods how they were before the northern. We left the ice house at four and came back to our cabin to grab our gear; we left our cabin at five and got back to Duluth at
11:30. Wednesday, January 8, 2014
What I learned from the Sherman Alexia project
Sherman Alexei is a poet, writer and performer. He is the author of the book we are reading in class, Flight. I was in a group with Jack Baker, Jake Serrie, Dan Kulas, Stefan Granados, and Hanvit. Sherman was born 1966 on the Spokane Indian reservation. He attended school outside the reservation where he was the only Indian. He currently live in Seattle with his wife and two sons. Our group also learned about the Ghost Dance and the Sand Creek Massacre.
A Ghost Dance is an important ritual in the messianic religion that many native American groups used to summon spirits to help them with cultural revival. Two other ways to describe it is , as a plea for supernatural intervention in their lives by people whose culture has been destroyed, or as an effort by a minority to regain power and dignity that will give them a sense of meaning and stability to their lives. Jack Wilson or Wovoka was the prophet that had a vision from god. In That vision god told him the earth would die and come back alive; all the white people would die; and all Native Americans dead or alive would be reunited free of death, diseases, and suffering. For the prophecy to come true Native Americans would have to follow Wovoka's Doctrine of pacifism and take part in the sacred dance Wovoka taught them. Wovoka went from a prophet to the messiah and the religion he created spread to multiple other tribes. Wovoka's prophecy never happened and tribes that followed his religion were forced onto reservations.
Sources
Alexie, Sherman. "Fiction and Poetry Award Winner: The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian." Horn Book Magazine [Plain City] Jan. 2009: 25-28.
Print.
McLoughlin, William G. "Ghost Dance Movements: Some Thoughts on Definition Based on Cherokee History." Ethnohistory 37.1: 25. Print.
A Ghost Dance is an important ritual in the messianic religion that many native American groups used to summon spirits to help them with cultural revival. Two other ways to describe it is , as a plea for supernatural intervention in their lives by people whose culture has been destroyed, or as an effort by a minority to regain power and dignity that will give them a sense of meaning and stability to their lives. Jack Wilson or Wovoka was the prophet that had a vision from god. In That vision god told him the earth would die and come back alive; all the white people would die; and all Native Americans dead or alive would be reunited free of death, diseases, and suffering. For the prophecy to come true Native Americans would have to follow Wovoka's Doctrine of pacifism and take part in the sacred dance Wovoka taught them. Wovoka went from a prophet to the messiah and the religion he created spread to multiple other tribes. Wovoka's prophecy never happened and tribes that followed his religion were forced onto reservations.
Sources
Alexie, Sherman. "Fiction and Poetry Award Winner: The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian." Horn Book Magazine [Plain City] Jan. 2009: 25-28.
Print.
McLoughlin, William G. "Ghost Dance Movements: Some Thoughts on Definition Based on Cherokee History." Ethnohistory 37.1: 25. Print.
Saturday, December 14, 2013
Preparing for winter
With the first few snowfalls of winter I have realized I have not yet prepared for winter. There is more to preparing for winter that just finding winter jackets and hat and mittens. I have already done that along with finding snow shovels and putting a window scraper in my car. I have emptied the lower unit of the boat motor, but have yet to put the boat in the barn. I also need to organize the barn and put all the other summer equipment away like lawnmowers, rakes, and summer fishing rods. The biggest part of getting ready for winter for me is changing my summer fishing equipment into winter equipment. Part of that includes finding, cleaning and fixing the following: the ice fishing rods and reels, the auger, the ice fishing house, the sunflower heater, and buckets. I also need to put away summer rods and reline reels with bad line. The last and most important part is to take all of the jigs, hooks, and spoons that can be used under the ice into a ice fishing tackle box and but equipment I still need.
Friday, October 11, 2013
Summer of Family and Friends
A picture of our house. |
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Our dog, Moose, and our cat, Aggie, sleeping together. |
The summer of family added three new family members; two kittens and a dog. The kittens, Aggie and Darby are both female and are now about four months old. They run around all day and are always in a good mood. They look to play with anyone they can. That can get them in trouble when they try playing with our older cat Suzie who is now 15 years old and doesn't like to do anything but eat and sleep. Our new dog moose is female and around a one and a half years old. She is a mastiff Newfoundland mix. She can be very stubborn and is always in the mood for a belly rub. She runs 1-6 miles a day with me, my sister or my mom. She loves to play and that can be scary when she is running full speed at someone with her mouth open. The three new family members have become best friends and eventually maybe they will become friends with our older cat.
The most fun thing I did all summer was play dodge ball during our parties on the weekends. My mom would start baking at nine or ten in the morning. She would make wild rice soup that is always a favorite. To go along with the wild rice soup she would make two different types of biscuits; a biscuit that tastes just like the biscuits you get at red lobster and biscuits that taste like Texas Roadhouse biscuits but way better. After that my mom and sister would make dessert. They would cook chocolate chip cookies, peanut butter cookies, brownies and more. My dad grilled brats, fish, and whatever other meat he had. Friends and family would start showing up around noon and everyone was eating by one. At around two-thirty, the dodge ball games would start. We played dodge ball on a custom-made court that my dad and I made. We put poles in the ground three feet deep and attached grouse netting to the poles to stop the dodge balls from becoming lost in the woods. We would then play dodge ball until it got dark when we all moved to the bonfire. We sit by the fire adding any wood we can scavenge. People started filtering out by around eleven. We sat around the bonfire until everyone left around two or three in the morning.
Labels:
dodgeball,
Friends and Family,
new house,
pets,
summer
Friday, October 4, 2013
What I learned from my Shawshank presentation
My group of Tim, Dan, and I researched post-conviction DNA testing. I learned that innocent until proven guilty is not completely true; someone may have been found guilty but still be innocent. There have been over 311 post-conviction DNA exonerations in the United States (innocence). The main reason for incorrect convictions have been racism, eye witness misidentification, improper forensic science, over-zealous police, and inept defense counsels (Schneider). The average time done in prison for those who have been exonerated is 13.6 years (Van Buskirk). Those people can sue the state but no amount of money can take the years back they have missed, the years the could have spent with their family and family, the years they could have gotten an education or job, but most of all their image. Even though they have been proven innocent people may still see them as criminals and that will never change.
This project helped me better understand shawshank because I saw how easy it is for someone who is innocent to be proven guilty. That relates to Andy who is innocent but found himself stuck in prison. When people who are sent to jail and they haven't done anything they may do crazy things. The average time done in prison for those who have been exonerated is 13.6 years and that gives people time to think. (Van Buskirk). people may go crazy trying to prove their point or like the case of Andy try and escape.
Van Buskirk, Christian. "GUILTY UNTIL PROVEN INNOCENT: CLEARING
MASSACHUSETTS'S UNCERTAIN ROAD TO POST-CONVICTION DNA TESTING."
http://www.innocenceproject.org/Content/Alan_Newton.php.
This project helped me better understand shawshank because I saw how easy it is for someone who is innocent to be proven guilty. That relates to Andy who is innocent but found himself stuck in prison. When people who are sent to jail and they haven't done anything they may do crazy things. The average time done in prison for those who have been exonerated is 13.6 years and that gives people time to think. (Van Buskirk). people may go crazy trying to prove their point or like the case of Andy try and escape.
Van Buskirk, Christian. "GUILTY UNTIL PROVEN INNOCENT: CLEARING
MASSACHUSETTS'S UNCERTAIN ROAD TO POST-CONVICTION DNA TESTING."
St. John's Law Review 85.4 (2011): 1-27. Academic Search Premier. Web. 11 Sept.
2013.
Schneider, Sydney. "WHEN INNOCENT DEFENDANTS FALSELY CONFESS:
ANALYZING THE RAMIFICATIONS OF ENTERING ALFORD PLEAS IN THE
CONTEXT OF THE BURGEONING INNOCENCE MOVEMENT." Opinion: n. pag.
Academic Search Premier. Web. 17 Sept. 2013.
Innocence Project. N.p., n.d. Web. 13 Sept. 2013.http://www.innocenceproject.org/Content/Alan_Newton.php.
Tuesday, September 10, 2013
Snapshots of My Summer
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My house (bottom left corner) as the flood water started receding. |
A view from my bedroom window; the sauna is the building you can see.
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This summer we also got three new pets: two kittens, Aggie and Darby; and a dog ,Moose. The kittens are both female and are now about four months old. The dog is also female and is about a year and a half old; she is a Newfoundland Mastiff mix. Our cat that we have had for 15 years did not get along with any of the new pets; she hissed and paws the new kittens and ran away from our dog. Now she still dislikes our dog but allows the kittens to be in the same room as her. The dogs and kittens have become best friends and the kittens now lay on our dog.
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Me walking my dog Moose. |
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