Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Creative Complex: Mr. Snuffleupagus

Hello, Friends!

Today, we are talking about people/animals that do not exist. Technically. However, if you've ever seen some of the older Sesame Street shows, you know that Big Bird had an imaginary friend, Mr. Snuffleupagus. Until one Mr. Snuffleupagus turned into a real character. What are some characters you wish would turn into real people?


Spruce Nogard

Monday, August 28, 2017

Extra Week Post: Character Complications*

Hello Friends!

I started school recently, so I haven't been as on top of this blog as I usually am. Sorry about that!

Today, we are talking about character complications. I know we've talked about character habits, but this is a little different. Character Complications are things that cause issues for your character. These could be physical, mental, or spiritual.

Physical Examples:
  • Allergies
    • It's always fun to think outside the box, so what are some really weird allergies you've heard of? Does your character have an allergy to the sun? (I discovered, unfortunately, that there is a possibility I am allergic to sunlight. I mean, honestly?)
  • Paralysis--partial or full
  • Limitation of senses
    • I mean, things that are wrong with your senses. For example, deafness, blindness, not being able to feel your fingers or toes, etc.
Mental Examples:
  • Learning disability
  • Medical conditions
Spiritual Examples:
  • Struggles with faith, belief, etc.
 Now, why? Why might character complications be useful?
  • To give your character depth as a person/etc.
  • To make your story more interesting
  • To question things in the real world
 Spruce Nogard
*Post actually written September 5th. See here for details. 

Wednesday, August 23, 2017

Creative Complex: Character Constructing: Habits

Hello, Friends!

Today, we are going to be talking about habits. Everyone has habits, bad habits, good habits, random habits. . . etc. Today, we are going to explore some types of habits that will help your character seem more realistic.

Bad Habits:
-Cracking knuckles
-Chewing nails/lips
-Glaring
-Pulling out hair
-Repeating oneself
-Any others you can think of

By adding maybe a bad habit or two to your character, you make them more realistic. You show how they respond to certain situations or emotions, like stress.

Good Habits:
-Saying please and thank you
-Smiling automatically
-Making lists (as long as you don't overdo it)
-Thinking of one thing you're thankful for every day
-Anything else

Good habits make your character more well-rounded.

Word Habits:
These are words you say all the time. In our culture, most people say "like" a lot. I say "in any case" and "wonderful" a lot.

Most people use a few phrases excessively, so, like I said before, adding word habits to your characters make your characters more realistic and more well-rounded.

What habits do you have?

Spruce Nogard
Attributions: https://pixabay.com/en/keywords-letters-scrabble-word-2041816/

Monday, August 21, 2017

On My Mind: Historical Fantasy

Hello, Fantastical Creatures.

First of all, sorry this post is up late.

Today, I am thinking about historical fantasy.

Have you ever heard of Trans-Siberian Orchestra? Trans-Siberian Orchestra is a group that specializes in rock and rock opera, which is, well, a combination of rock and opera. In other words, they tell stories through music. It's amazing, and I love it. Not to mention, the stories are some of the best stories I've ever read.

In any case, they did an album called Beethoven's Last Night. This album is the story of Beethoven's last night on earth. However, it is fantasy. I love this. It's real historical characters, but with a fantasy story.

Have you ever heard of historical fantasy?

Spruce Nogard

Saturday, August 19, 2017

Recipe: (Possibly) The Best Simple Chocolate-Lover's Breakfast

Hello, Cooks!

You don't really need to be able to cook for this recipe. It's the best simple version of a wonderful chocolate breakfast. Have fun! (I think I got this recipe from a magazine or something.)

Ingredients:
  • Chocolate chip toaster waffles
  • Nutella
  • Marshmallows
  • Whipped Cream
Directions:
  1.  Toast two toaster waffles.
  2. Spread Nutella on both toaster waffles.
  3. Put marshmallows on one toaster waffle, then put the other toaster waffle on top to create a marshmallow and nutella sandwich.
  4. Put whipped cream on top.
  5. Eat!
I love this recipe.

Spruce Nogard

Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Monday, August 14, 2017

Dragons: Who is your Favorite Dragon?

Hello, Dragon Riders.

Sorry, this is more a Creative Complex than a dragon post, but it's still fun. :)

Who is your favorite dragon?

a) Smaug (from The Hobbit)
b) Sapphira (from Eragon)
c) Toothless (from the How to Train Your Dragon movie)
d) Samaranth (from Here There Be Dragons)

Spruce Nogard

Saturday, August 12, 2017

Gardening: Cautionary Tales: Unassuming Killers

Hello, Gardeners!

To continue our cautionary posts, we are going to be talking about plants you wouldn't think would take over your garden, but do.

There are two types of plants that can take over a vegetable garden: invasive plants and vining plants.

1) Invasive Plants
The giant green stuff is mint.
Invasive plants simply invade the area they are given and take over, pushing the other plants out in a variety of ways. The invasive plants you've probably heard the most about are weeds. However, we often keep invasive plants in our gardens as well. A few of these are strawberries, chives, mint, and oregano. Plants like these usually send out "runners," or baby plants (sometimes called daughter plants) under the soil. These runners are connected to the main roots. The runners then turn into regular plants, except for one thing: they are still connected to the main plant. (This reminds me of Larryboy and the Rumor Weed, a VeggieTales show. Here's a link to the whole thing. I couldn't find just the part I'm thinking about.) In any case, invasive plants usually do best in pots or somewhere where they are contained. And all the plants I listed are perennials as well, so you can't just start again next year. I should have listened to gardening advice before planting my mint and oregano. Oops.

2) Vining Plants
Vining plants are just that: any plant that vines. This would include members of the squash family, cucumber family, beans, peas, and a few others. (By the way, if beans and peas are labeled as the bush variety, that means they don't vine, so they're fine.) Vining plants always want to hold on to something. They also like holding on tight. Although this doesn't seem like it would be an issue, it becomes a problem when your vining plants begin to wrap around your other plants, or themselves. Beans hold on to other plants, but usually just enough so they'll be secure, but cucumbers will squeeze until they can't squeeze anymore, which can cut off circulation of that part of the vine or plant, causing it to die. (This is based on personal experience, so your plants may act slightly different.) Often, only parts of vines or parts of plants die, so it probably won't kill the whole plant.

Obviously, people still grow these plants, and we don't want to be able to only grow one type of plant for the rest of our lives. So, what do we do?

Answer: Work.

Solutions:

Invasive Plants:
I kind of already mentioned this, but try to grow invasive plants in their own containers. You can also just weed a lot. I don't mean weed the weeds, I mean pull up the daughter plants if they're getting too out of hand.

Vining Plants:
Untangle. Every few days, go out and gently untangle the vines. If the vines don't seem to be impeding a plant's space or squeezing too tight, sometimes it's easier just to leave it. For example, last year, I had beans growing near garlic, and the beans wrapped around the garlic leaves. Because the
beans were just loosely wrapped around, and the garlic still grew fine, I just left it. However, if you notice a vining plant is squeezing, you need to gently untangle that vine, otherwise it'll end up killing the part of the plant it's squeezing. Depending on the type of vining plant, you may need a trellis or something it can climb. This will help direct the plant's growth. You should still check the vining plant regularly and redirect its tendrils if need be.

Have you ever had problems with these types of plants
?

Spruce Nogard

Wednesday, August 9, 2017

Creative Complex: [No Title]

Warning: If you do not like scary things, do not read this post. This was the only way I would let Dragomir write such a creepy post. When he first sent this post to me to be published, I told him I wouldn't publish it. But he finally convinced me to post it because he explained people, especially writers, need to be familiar with a variety of scenarios, even Gothic ones. He said they might help stretch your brains. (I think he just really wanted to write a Gothic Creative Complex and that was his excuse.)

The dread of what you have done fills you. It consumes every inch of your writhing body. The sole thought of your mind is unending, twisted anguish, leaving no room for the slightest glimpse of hope. This dread has taken all desire from you, never to return. Not even the humblest of acts can undo this wretched thing you have done. There is only one thing left to do, horrendous though it is.

Dear Readers, I have not included a title because no title can convey the story's emotional impact in the way it is meant to. If you have not come to the logical conclusion that, this being what Spruce entitles a "Creative Complex," and this post being a section of a story, the object is to continue and embellish upon the story provided, I will tell you this is what you are meant to do.

Dragomir Volkov
Spruce Nogard

Monday, August 7, 2017

Reviews: The Night Gardener

Hello, Friends!

It seems like this month is just the month of caution.

The Night Gardener, by Jonathon Auxier is about Molly and Kip, two siblings who go to work in a
freaky old mansion everyone claims is haunted. At first, besides the run-down mansion in the middle of nowhere and the tree that is almost a part of it, everything goes fine. The pair finally have a roof over their heads, and food. Although their position isn't the best, and the family is sometimes hard to please, it's much better than traveling, not knowing when their next meal will be. But then, footprints start appearing, footprints that could not belong to anyone living in the house, and the Windsor family keeps getting sicker and sicker--something that could not be, just could not be, "just a touch of the fever," as the doctor keeps saying. Could the mansion be haunted, just as the villagers say it is? And if so, what is haunting it?

If anyone has ever heard of this book, you'll know it's often described as a cautionary tale. This is very true. I gave The Night Gardener four stars, because I loved Molly and Kip, and their relationship, and that, even though Molly is only fourteen and Kip is only nine, they don't do stupid things most kids their age in books would do. Their ages do not impede upon the story for the reader, or only include a certain age group. In other words, the book did not read younger, despite the young characters. I also loved the Windsor family (their employers).

I love this book. You should just go read it. Then you'll know what I mean. (But beware, it is a haunting tale, so if that will freak you out, then maybe don't read it.)

The book also contains many good questions to think about, turn over in your head again and again. . .Questions that will come up a while later while you're walking home from school, or doing art in your room. . .

And, after all, it is a cautionary tale, so it examines why humans do what they do, and what is actually good for us. . .

Spruce Nogard

Saturday, August 5, 2017

Fairy Tales: Illustrators

Good Day, Friends!

Today, we are going to talk about fairy tale illustrators. Or, rather, different pictures for the same fairy tale.

Here are all fairy tale books I own. I have included links to the illustrations inside the books because I am not allowed to actually post them on my blog.

1) A Treasury of Children's Literature by


breathtakingly gorgeous illustrations. Here are some of them:






















Treasury of Fairy Tales by












Grimm's Complete Fairy Tales by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, Arthur Rackham

This version doesn't have colored pictures, but still Arthur Rackham is an amazing illustrator. He is a very well known fairy tale illustrator, and his pictures possess a sort of magic. It's hard to explain. Here's one of his pictures.













Friday, August 4, 2017

On My Mind: The Hidden Meaning Answers

So, did anyone figure out yesterday's codes? (Without cheating?)

Well, here are the answers:

1) Pig Latin
You can look up pig Latin to find out how it works.

When the dark comes rising,
Six shall turn it back.
Three from the circle,
Three from the track. 

2) Letters--Z = 1, Y = 2, etc.

Wood, bronze, iron,
Water, fire, stone.
Five shall return,
And one go alone.

3) Backwards--Unfortunately, I couldn't make all the letters backwards as well, but oh well. Just write out each line, but start at the last letter in the line and go right to left.

Iron for the birthday,
Bronze carried long.
Wood from the burning,
Stone out of song.

4) Before dash: actual letters, after dash, a = z, b = y, etc.This one I did try to trip you up. So, to figure out what Fi-iv means, before the dash are just the normal letters, but after the dash you follow the code, with a = z, b = y, etc.

Fire from the candle-ring, 
Water from the thaw.
Six signs the circle,
And the Grail gone before.

5) This one seems complicated at first, but it's really quite simple. All the letters of the alphabet correspond to an animal that starts with that letter. So, a = aardvark, b = bat, etc. All you really need to do is rewrite the text with only the first letter of every animal.
Fire from the mountain,
Shall find the harp of gold.
Played to wake the Sleepers,
Oldest of the Old.

6) This is just a word scramble, but with a rule: The first and last letter of the original word stay the same. So, "letter," once scrambled, would still have to start with "l" and end with "r."
Power from the Greenwitch,
Lost beneath the sea.
All shall find the Light at last,
Silver on the tree.

Hurrah! You have discovered the hidden meaning! And doesn't this remind you of something? It should. . . It's the poem from The Dark is Rising series, by Susan Cooper!
Spruce Nogard

Wednesday, August 2, 2017