Sunday, April 29

Indians and Their Names

I love meeting new people because new names are so interesting to me. After teaching school for near 6 years I've learned to enjoy the creativity of the individual namesake. Never have I enjoyed learning new names as much as I have here in Montana. And there is one reason why.

Montana has quite a few large Indian Reservations. One of these, the Crow Reservation is right outside of Billings. Because of the proximity to the city, we have a large population of Indians in town. Indian names are incredible, they have normal first names, ie: John, Sara, Dorothy, Brian. But their last names are a combination of an adjective and a noun, or they are a phrase of some sort. I have been making mental notes of some of the Indian names that I am hearing around town. My list is partly from the Billings phone directory, as well. Last names only, below.

  • Bad Bear
  • Bad Horse
  • Bearcomesout
  • Bearquiver
  • Big Hair
  • Bigleggins
  • Birdhat
  • Old Elk
  • Oldmouse
  • Left Hand
  • Littlehead
  • Real Bird
  • Runsabove
  • Shoulderblade
  • Spottedelk
  • Stalkingcat
  • Stiffarm
  • Talks Different
  • Hedoesit
  • Headdress
  • Greathouse
  • Good Luck
  • Falls Down
  • Fasthorse

Thursday, April 26

In Case You Thought You Lived in a Small Town


Back in Billings to Catch my Breath


How great is it that for two weeks of this month I tented in the Selway-Bitteroot Wilderness Area, tucked away in wild Idaho, with the rest of the Montana Conservation Corps? Sharing cooking responsibilities, sharing a pit toilet, sharing the fresh mountain air (a far walk from the pit toilet), but most importantly sharing a very unique MCC funded training. Technical Training (the official title) was compilation of three training sessions. Each session was taught by a staff of outdoor professionals for a three day period of time. Two regions of the MCC were paired together for each training session, for example: Billings was paired with the MCC Crew Leaders from Kalispell. We traveled through our three sessions with the Kalispell group. It wasn't long before we began to know their favorite lunch choices, their corny jokes, and their interesting life stories. The three sessions that we completed, in the order that we completed them, were: Trail Work, Chainsaw/Crosscut Saw, Backcountry camping/hiking.

Though there were no shower facilities at the campground where we stayed or at the nearest town, we rarely thought about how dirty we were becoming. Each day was a day of hands-on learning, in addition to the honing of skills we are sure to use over the next couple of months. Most nights we could barely stay awake to enjoy the campfire and occasional s'mores. Our exhausted minds and muscles beckoned us to finish the day tucked cozily into our sleeping bags, listening to the sounds of the night.


We made it back to Billings last weekend, enough time to catch our breaths. On Monday the Youth Crew Leaders are headed to Belgrade, MT to enjoy another couple of training sessions on the MCC dollar. These seven days will be spent learning the all important skills of youth supervision, as well as a few days of Wilderness First Aid. Should be another incredible experience. We even get a recreation day on Friday for a trip into Yellowstone National Park. This organization rocks! Who wouldn't want to be involved with the MCC?






Saturday, April 7

A Contractor's Trash is Now My Treasure

I went dumpster diving yesterday afternoon.

It was Good Friday, I had the day off, I was in need of a footprint (ground cloth) for my tent, and I decided that Tyvek was the material that would best suit my needs. Tyvek is the waterproof wrap that contractors put on houses during the framing stage of construction. It is light weight, water resistant, and free (if I'm willing to dig through construction site dumpsters).

It was cold, windy, and just barely snowing, so I bundled up in my carhart work pants and an old sweatshirt and began the search. I knew the west end of town has a growing residential area, so that was my target spot. As I drove to different sites, I realized I had to find a house in the correct stage of building. If the plumbing and electricity were being installed, I was too late, no extra Tyvek. If the siding was going up, I was too late, no Tyvek. Driving slowly, my eyes searched the developments for the perfect house. Unbelievably, it only took three dumpsters, and a few conversations with contractors, before I came home with a FREE piece of Tyvek that I could cut to the exact size I needed. Project accomplished. Check "dumpster diving" off the list!

It doesn't get much better than that!

Thursday, March 29

A Sniff of Montana


A February snow storm turned the Gallatin National Forest into a winter wonderland. On our cabin retreat, during our orientation week with the MCC, we spent two nights in the Beartooth Mountains.





The trail blazes were hard to follow due to the snow. After deviating from one of the trails, we happened upon an old car. We had fun making up stories about how it came to rest in this remote location.











A Taste of Montana

I've had many requests to post pictures taken in Montana. I've only snapped a few here and there, but I'll gladly post a few. In no particular order:


Entrance to a Montana Ranch

Thawing Ice Bridges




This picture was taken at one of our day project sites. We helped paint the interior of a home for women transitioning out of prison. From left to right: Shannon, Paula, me, Josh, Drew (squating), and Mike. Shannon is the senior crew leader, I am the senior youth crew leader, and the other four are the field crew leaders. The MCC uniform is modeled by Paula, Drew, and myself. Green t-shirt and brown or khaki carhart pants.

The Three Amigos: Shannon, Tauzha (my regional supervisor), me

Wednesday, March 28

A Rising Revelation

I sometimes feel like I've joined the Boy/Girl Scouts of America.

Reasons:
  • required to learn a variety of knots and hitches
  • required to use those knots and hitches in practical situations (ie: bear hangs, kitchen tarps, securing tools to vehicle roof rack)
  • just bought a utility pocket knife with a three inch blade
  • excited about upcoming technical training where I will learn how to use a two person crosscut saw as well as a chainsaw (and a myriad of other tools)
  • wear brown and green uniforms

Even with all of these similarities, the MCC veers away from the scouts in a few areas.

Comparable differences that the MCC has with the Boy/Girl Scouts:

  • no patches earned
  • no sashes (thank goodness)
  • no little boxes of cookies (a huge drawback for the MCC in my opinion)
  • no scarves

At least we don't have to sing silly songs. I would like it if we had boxes of cookies in storage, though. I might even voluntarily wear a sash if we could then have the cookies. Hmmmm?

Monday, March 26

Kickball

Kickball. Better than dodgeball yet still utilizes some dodgeball rules. Soak outs, anyone? Below the head, anything goes.

Saturday, March 17

The Mystery of the Shriners

Is it possible to have a parade without the participation of the 'Shriners'?

The MCC staff spent this morning volunteering before and after the St. Patrick's Day parade here in Billings. We moved barricades and decorated & undecorated the stage. During our down time we watched the passing by of the floats and the other parade entries. Little ponies pulling little carts, llamas with saddle bags, big trucks decked out in clovers and rainbows, clowns on unicycles, green colored dogs with their over-enthusiastic owners - and then, of course, the Shriners. It never fails, every parade I've ever been to, whether in my hometown, in Washington D.C., in Charlotte, NC, or in Billings, MT, there they are - men with their hats, vests, and little motorized vehicles. Stopping and going, spinning in circles, waving and smiling. Who are the Shriners? And what do they do beyond driving makeshift bikes and go carts in parades around the nation?

Is anyone else curious about the Shriners?

Thursday, March 8

A Grave Situation

The earth has a way of absorbing a variety of things. Rain is absorbed by the earth and transported through millions of tiny pores into underground aquifers. Chemicals such as pesticides, oil leaks, and other toxins move in the same way through the pores of the earth.
But liquids aren't the only things that disappear into the earth. Any dead organism, within time, will slowly be broken down into smaller and smaller pieces until it has been separated into tiny molecular compounds. It will no longer be recognizable as the organism it once was, but it's individual elements cycle through the environment, traveling through the earth and into the plants that cover the earth, eventually reaching the innards of the animals that eat the prolific plants. It is strange to think that the food that fuels me today, has a molecular structure made of elements that have been around since the beginning of time. The elements of ancient plants and animals. That's the amazing reality of it.
In a few weeks, the Billings MCC members will be volunteering for a community-wide compassion weekend (sponsored by a local church), where over 2,000 volunteers will come together in an effort to meet the many needs of the people and businesses of our city. There are over twenty projects that one can sign up for, ranging from tearing out old park playground equipment to providing handyman help to mobile home courts. We have chosen the Mountview Cemetery Project. 300 volunteers are needed to counteract the absorbing property of the earth here in Mountview. The graves are sinking slowly and steadily, moving deeper into the earth. Our job will be to cart loads of soil to individual grave plots and level each one using shovels and rakes.
Counteracting the natural processes of the earth has never turned out quite right for the humans that inhabit it. But alas, we shall try once more.