And now back to our regularly scheduled programming:
Winter’s Back Folks!
Annoucing Weather Quotes
It’s been a while. No, it’s been quite a while. Actually, it’s been 6 months, 4 days, and approximately 4 hours since my last post. Fortunately, Matthew has been keeping the blog somewhat sputtering with life, but most would admit that our writings have been few and far between. Like almost once a month.
I will begin by calling your attention to one of the new features of our sidebar: I installed a ‘Cellar’ which has some ‘Buried, but tasty, morsels.’ The first item of business in the cellar is the music player control, of which you can finally see the entire thing (a known problem with our previous setup). To get to the cellar, look for a picture of an underground canning storage center, otherwise known as a ‘Cellar.’ Some of you may have one of these at home. Anyway, click either on the picture or the text below. At the bottom, there’s a link to get back. It’s got some other interesting stuff down there too.
So, if you don’t want the music to play, and have lost the controller, it’s down in the Cellar.
Next order of business: On a contract basis, I’ve started doing tech support for the company mom tutors with (you remember that from back 3.5 eons ago, right? A homeschool supportive, though not exclusive, company that provides English speaking tutors to Koreans? She teaches them over the internet?). It’s kind of challenging work, as the software they use is about 90% broken, as in it doesn’t work. However, we’re now working on transitioning over to another program, that’s much nicer in terms of technical foundation.
And here’s the third and final major announcement: I’m going to graduate this year. I’ve decided that I have spent enough time focusing primarily on academics, and that I’m ready to start focusing on other things, like starting various businesses that I’ve had ideas for for quite a while, and learning new skills, etc. One might also argue that I’m getting tired of Integrands and Anti-differentials. While I don’t plan to go to college, there’s still some more things I’d like to get wrapped up on the academic front–we’re a little over a third of the way through the calculus book, which I’d like to finish, and we’re a little further back in the Adv. Physics book. If I can still add 2 and 2 by the time I get all that done, I think Adv. Chemistry would be interesting, too. But my primary focus will be shifting from stuffing my head with new things that I probably won’t use that much, and switching to useful things.
Here ends the first part of the post.
This, if ya’ll ‘ll get my point, is what you’d call the second half. I’m done making those dull, boring, tedious, stuffy things called ‘announcements’. Now, I’m (hopefully we’re) gonna have some fun. and I just might stop writing in complete sentences. ‘Cuz I said so. Now, wasn’t that fun! Exciting! and enough to make an English teacher about bust? :)
Sunday, over to the church, I’ll be playin’ the piano. For congregation singin’.Ya see, our regular pianist has done gone and messed up her shoulder. The right one, I believe. But she went and tricked it by bein’ a lefty. :) Anyhow, she can’t play the piano, and is goin’ to therapy ‘n all to prove it, so I (being the next-in-line for the bench [Mom resigned her place in that line a while back{It’s really a lot of stress}]) am gonna do if for her. As of now, I’m supposed to be in two places at once. At the piano and At the computer. I still do the projector presentation too (you remember that, right?). It aught to be interesting. :) And it’s my week to play the offertory. So, It’ll be a downright ball, I’m sure. Then, there’s a Solo and Ensemble competition that I’m doing stuff for, that will be on the 21st. So I’m keeping busy with music. :)
I’m afraid I’m running out of apostrophized words, so it’s going to be back to the kings English. Two points for my teacher, eh?
In the way of other interesting tidbits, the weather has warmed up some, not tons, but you can at least go out side without having to wear facial protection from the wind, which has really slowed down in the past couple of days. If you came here looking for a story of Michigan weather, since I haven’t been outside enough to tell you about it (there have been some pretty pressing things inside), head over to Jonathan Bartlet’s place for a harrowing story of heroism in heat-less North Dakota Winter, where a little forethought and some sleep did and could have, respectively, saved the day. I hope that satisfies your taste for snow. :)
Mom and I have also been doing some literary analysis: so far, we’ve done ‘Great Expectations’ by Dickens, and are working on ‘To Kill a Mocking Bird’, by Lee. Other things on the list include ‘Paradise Lost’ by Milton, ‘Macbeth’, by Shakespeare, along with some others.
Now, enough of me, and here’s someone else:
“Anyone who is capable of getting themselves made President should on no account be allowed to do the job.” – Douglas Adams
“When I was a boy I was told that anybody could become President — I’m beginning to believe it.” – Clarence Darrow
“If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their money, first by inflation and then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around them, will deprive the people of their property until their children will wake up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered” – Thomas Jefferson
You know why there’s a Second Amendment? In case the government fails to follow the first one.
– Rush Limbaugh
“When you enter the land the LORD your God is giving you and have taken possession of it and settled in it, and you say, “Let us set a king over us like all the nations around us,” be sure to appoint over you the king the LORD your God chooses. He must be from among your own brothers. Do not place a foreigner over you, one who is not a brother Israelite. The king, moreover, must not acquire great numbers of horses for himself or make the people return to Egypt to get more of them, for the LORD has told you, “You are not to go back that way again.” He must not take many wives, or his heart will be led astray. He must not accumulate large amounts of silver and gold. When he takes the throne of his kingdom, he is to write for himself on a scroll a copy of this law, taken from that of the priests, who are Levites. It is to be with him, and he is to read it all the days of his life so that he may learn to revere the LORD his God and follow carefully all the words of this law and these decrees and not consider himself better than his brothers and turn from the law to the right or to the left. Then he and his descendants will reign a long time over his kingdom in Israel.” – Deuteronomy 17:14-20
“I pray that out of his glorious riches he may strengthen you with power through his Spirit in your inner being, so that Christ may dwell in your hearts and established in love, through faith. And I pray that you, being rooted may have power, together with all the saints, to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, and to know this love that surpasses knowledge–that you may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God. Now to him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to his power that is at work within us, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, for ever and ever! Amen.” -Ephesians 3:16-20
Ever in his peace,
Jonathan
Fire Rainbow!? & etc…
Well, I finally have something to blog about. Looking south over our house, I believe I have seen a fire rainbow! What a gift from God!
According to Wikipedia,
A circumhorizontal arc or circumhorizon arc (CHA), also known as a fire rainbow, is a halo or an optical phenomenon similar in appearance to a horizontal rainbow, but in contrast caused by the refraction of light through the ice crystals in cirrus clouds.
It occurs only when the sun is high in the sky, at least 58° above the horizon, and can only occur in the presences of cirrus clouds. It can thus not be observed at locations north of 55°N, except occasionally from mountains.[1]
The phenomenon is quite rare because the ice crystals must be aligned horizontally to refract the high sun. The arc is formed as light rays enter the horizontally-oriented flat hexagonal crystals through a vertical side face and exit through the horizontal bottom face. It is the 90° inclination that produces the well-separated rainbow-like colours and, if the crystal alignment is just right, makes the entire cirrus cloud shine like a flaming rainbow.[2][1]
A circumhorizontal arc can be confused with an infralateral arc when the sun is high in the sky; the former is however always oriented horizontally where the latter is oriented as a section of a rainbow, e.g. as an arc stretching upwards from the horizon.[2]
I checked the pictures of infralateral arcs, and this wasn’t it. Although I realize that this rainbow in the sky wasn’t nearly as bright as some of the ones documented across the internet, I doubt that I will ever see one again–a circumhorizontal arc, the rarest of all meteorological phenomena!
Pretty Cool, huh?
One of our music providers has gone off line, so all we have on the blog right now is bluegrass. Sigh… ;-)
Lets see…there are some flowers out, so here’s some pictures of them:
These are just a few of the little wonders God has scattered across our yard.
Here’s a picture of our front sign (the one mom painted):
And one of the beloved dog who wishes that I would quit taking pictures and play with him. :-)
Speaking of the dog, I reciently found some pictures of him from before he came to our house:
And here are matthew’s chicks (more due to arrive Monday):
Some of those chickens(by my reckoning) have got to be from the weirdest parts of God’s creation.
Finally, Matthew’s newly revised (and much sturdier [he replaced his 12 1/2″ pvc pipe hoops with 6 1″ steel pipes {bent to spec–he went over to the gentleman from church’s house
and curved them on his trailer–and anchored to the ground via fence posts}]) hoop house:
And now I’m running out of pictures.
The DSL Chronicles
Every spring through fall, our DSL internet service becomes spotty. This year, with mom teaching Koreans English, we need better than spotty. So, we(she) have been constantly on the phone with the central office, or shepherding a tech around the house(technically, the service people shouldn’t need to be kept track of, but some of the ones we get need to be told where the mouse is at the computer[really, it’s true!] even though we keep it on a tray like most people do). One tech even came on the phone with the people at headquarters to tell me to undo what he did when he was here. Good thing I was watching. :-)
There was a really nice, knowledgeable guy (definitely a divine blessing) out from AT&T (the owners of the phone line, but unfortunately, not providers of DSL in this area) who checked all the lines for faults, and came up with no problems. He even told us all the technical information to relay to the service provider to backup his story. However, we still cannot seem to reliably and speedily connect to the internet, like we can all winter.
As their last possible fix(or so they say), the service provider is going to order a new line from the roadside box to our house. There’s not much else we can do ether after they throw up their hands, as they seem to be the only DSL provider in this area. The cable line stops up the road, and satellite has too much of a lag. We could look into getting an air card(which gets internet from the cell towers)but that is pretty expensive.
The Close of Band
We had our last band rehearsal on yesterday, and the concert is next Monday. We are playing(not necessarily in this order):
The William Bird Suite(movements 1 and 6)
Abrams Pursuit
Liberty Bell
The 1812 Overture
Marche Hongroise
Salute to America’s Finest
I’m not sure what we will do in the way of brass music over the summer, but we might startup the PotterVilla a Capriccio again.
Friends, Children, Countrymen!
We had some friends from the UP (that’s the upper peninsula to non-Michiganders–we live in the lower peninsula) come down to visit us for the homeschool conference. We got to look after four of their five kids while they went to the big city for the conference. Compared to ‘normal’ kids, these guys (actually more girls, as they only have one boy out of five) are very well behaved, and a joy to have over the weekend. When they come is one of the only times we get out the knex(see knex.com) and build stuff. Since the toys follow basic building principles, it’s pretty easy to build some BIG stuff. While they were here, we built a ferris wheel that stood about three feet high (we have built stuff that scraped the ceiling–and higher). There was some smaller stuff to come out of the weekend too, but not worthy of mention. I plan (if I ever get around to it) to make mother a knex spinning wheel out of the pretty hefty circular center. Knex is sturdy enough that I think it could actually be pretty useful. :-) Mother has this thing about standing up (it’s a miracle that she can even walk, due to a back problem, and a risky surgery–but more on that another day) so a drop spindle doesn’t work the greatest for her. Ether treadled or motorized, I think a knex spinning wheel would do the trick without costing a fortune. Mom doesn’t even know if she likes spinning yet, so the less investment the better.
While the kids were here, Matthew and I slept on the floor, him in his little closet/plant growing room, and me in the office/music room. It wasn’t the most comfortable, but we managed. That way, the four oldest kids could sleep in our room. Their parents slept downstairs in the guest/exercise room (notice that a lot of rooms have two functions? it’s the key to a useful house) with the youngest. We had contemplated sleeping outside, but since the weather was iffy, and we ended up not venturing out.
Current Events
Right now, Matthew is building outside (ether a chicken tractor, a whizzbang chicken plucker, a whizzbang garden cart, or something else I’m not aware of :-), mom is upstairs doing something I’m not aware of, and dad is somewhere I’m not aware of. Our internet is very spotty now, making it difficult to do web programing. Blogger seems to make it through some though.
Self imposed summer school starts several weeks from now, when I can hopefully finish up my advanced physics and trig. Also on the agenda, calculus, art (one of these times, I may finally learn how to draw!) and music should help fill in the time in between doing computer work, helping keep up outside, and operating my brother’s and mine lawn mowing business, dubbed PotterVilla Acres lawn care services. We mow about three of four lawns over the summer (mostly for widows from church, so we don’t charge much–however the price of gas is beginning to change that :-
Concluding Thoughts
I’m afraid I didn’t follow my last post’s advice very well, and sorry for the long post. We did have a lot to catch up on, though. :-)
Let’s finish off with a verse(actually 2):
Now to him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to his power that is at work within us, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, for ever and ever! Amen.
Makes for a nice end of a long post, doesn’t it? When the Apostle Paul wrote it, it was in the middle of a letter to the Ephesians. I still like it at the end.
Anyway, we’ll talk to you all later (whether by reading your blog or in the comments of blogs or whatever :-) and hope all you mothers out there had a wonderful day devoted to you by people who are always devoted to you.
Thanks for reading,
In His name,
For His glory,
And trying to follow His path,
Jonathan Potter
for PotterVilla Academy
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