Well, I'm pretty used to the whole "driving a bus and entertaining people" thing. The summer has gone well so far and I am enjoying my work. I have been on three Copper River tours so far and two of them included a Kenai extension where we stay on the Kenai peninsula for a day with our guests.
One of the poems I have memorized is The Cremation of Sam McGee, by Robert Service. The guests love hearing the poem and are always impressed. The weather in Alaska is cool and cloudy, every once in a while we get a bit of rain.
Work has been pretty much the same for me, you may see it exciting or interesting but it has become routine for me so it isn't quite as worth recounting, since you can get the gist of my work experience from previous blog posts.
Tuesday, July 19, 2011
Monday, June 6, 2011
"Are you old enough to drive this bus?"
Memorial Day
For Memorial Day, we decided to float down the Chena (long E) River. I told mom, and she freaked out, I told her how safe and slow the river was and that calmed her nerves. Then she heard about Nathan’s crazy white water river trip and promptly forgot how safe and slow the river was that I was floating down, and that she had already talked to me since I had floated down the river, so she began praying for me again (thanks mom). Well we floated about two city blocks on the river and it took us two hours. We bought Queen size mattresses from Fred Meyer and Robin (from the singles branch) and I shared a mattress. If we started to get to the outside of the river on a bend, we would have to start paddling to get back to the middle of the river where it actually flows, otherwise we would be stuck in the stagnant water. It was lots of fun, and it gave me a good chance to start my summer tan.
My First Copper Tour
Every Copper River Tour starts in Denali so to get to Denali I did a Denali tour the day before. I took Guests in Fairbanks to do a local excursion and then after that I picked them up and drove them the two and a half hours to Denali. On the way, I gave a good little tour and they thanked me kindly as they got off my coach.
That night I slept in Healy, 15 minutes from Denali, in employee housing. We got to eat in the EDR Employee Dinning Room, and we used the Wi-Fi that they had available in the lodge.
The next morning we drove back into Denali, picked up our Copper River guests, and headed down the Parks Highway, onto the Denali Highway, over to the Richardson Highway, and on to The Copper Princess Lodge. My tour was an escorted tour. When we have tour directors with Princess tours, they are supposed to do all the talking and we just drive. However, my escort, Debora, was new and she did not feel comfortable yet with the material so she just handled logistics and kept the people happy by talking with them. So, I took care of all the narration of tour material. I was happy to, because if didn’t remember something, it wasn’t a big deal be cause everything I was doing was above an beyond their expectations. The first day I just pitched in little things here and there and Debora would keep praising me for all my knowledge and help.
The second day (June 3, my birthday) of the trip was an optional excursion to Valdez. I took guests that were from not only my coach, but also a whole array of guests that were staying at the hotel. It was a two hour trip there and I didn’t say much because there wasn’t much to talk about and I didn’t want to talk about generic things because I didn’t want to repeat other people’s material that the guests would have already heard or were going to here. In Valdez, we all went on a glacial tour. We went to see the Columbia Glacier, but there was so much floating ice in front of it that we couldn’t get very close to it and it was hazy so we couldn’t see it from where we were. However, that’s ok, we saw lots of glacial ice and some sea otters, dolphins, and whales (Humpback and Minky).
On the way back from Valdez I totally ran over a porcupine. Porcupines are very dumb, as it was waddling across the road it almost got hit by a truck coming in the other direction and then it sees me coming and it continues right into my lane. Well, I wasn’t about to swerve a bus with 40 guests on board so I just smoked the guy and the four guests sitting right behind me saw the whole thing just gasped as I ran right over it. However, I’m sure they were glad I didn’t flip the bus trying to avoid it. I didn’t hit it with my 2 front tires but who knows about the back 6, or how he faired with the low hanging transmission casing and oil pan in the back.
On Saturday, I drove my guests across the Glenn Highway and into Anchorage for lunch and I narrated the whole drive and used all my knowledge since I figured my tour director wasn’t going to say anything any way. Latter that day, we dropped our guests at the cruse ship in Whittier and they all tipped me. The way tips work out with escorted princess tours, is that they tip the escort and then she gives me a standard amount based on number of people and days of the trip, but if you get along real well they will let the guests tip you too and she will tip you as well. I suppose all the guests realized how well I did, and who knows if they tipped her but they all tipped me and when I dropped my escort off in Anchorage, she tipped me too. Therefore, I was happy she didn’t talk much because it really paid off for me.
The next day we deadheaded back to Fairbanks from Anchorage, that along drive in a motor coach but hey, I got to listen to the radio when I had reception, only like a third of the time. I finished the day off by going and having fun with some of the girls in the ward.
Just a moose I found in the woods
A wicked old snow machine
My living accommodations in Alaska
An ice burg from the Columbia Glacier
A chunk of glacial ice they fished out of the water
Monday, May 30, 2011
Tours
In order to prepare to give tours we have been shadowing tours that more experienced employees are giving. In some cases, I have learned a lot. In other cases, these opportunities were just confidence builders; yea maybe they are a little rusty.
So far, I have been doing a lot of city shuttle runs, airport duty, and museum shuttles. However, yesterday I did do an official tour and my preparation paid off. On all my other duties, I would always give quickie tours so I could practice talking to people and practice my presentations even though it was not required. Yesterday I gave a tour and it all worked out great, I had a lot of fun and it was exciting to find that I’m not too bad at it. Some people asked me how I knew so much of if I was reading from something. Maybe they thought my driving was so bad because I must have been trying to read, or something. Any way I got many tips and it was fun to interact so much with the guests.
On June 1, I will be starting my first highway tour, it is really exciting but I still have plenty of preparing to do. I need to practice handling so many things at a time and remembering all the aspects of logistics.
Alaska has been very warm lately. It seamed like the winter cold lingered and one day I woke up and it was 80-degree summer weather. I thought I would never get to wear my shorts and sandals but at last, summer is here. Weather has forecasted worm temperatures with rain for the next week or so.
Saturday, May 14, 2011
Familiarization trips rock!
Familiarization trips rock!
So lately, we have just been getting paid to drive around in a bus and see the sights. Oh and learn all the logistics, turns, and tour material.
Wednesday
We kicked off our adventure by going to the El Dorado Gold Mine. At the gold mine, the tourists get a little train ride into the permafrost cave that is frosted over all year long. Then they get a sluice box mining demonstration. Then they turn the old folks loose in the gold panning troughs to mine for their own gold. They give them a bag of dirt and guarantee the guests that they can find at least eight flakes of gold and if not they can get another bag of dirt. The dirt they give them naturally has gold in it but they always spice it up a little just to make the guests happy.
After the El Dorado Gold mine we, Copper River guides headed out to the Copper River. Because the Denali highway is still closed, we had to come down the Richardson highway, which is not the way we would normally come with guests. We bordered the Tanana River, then passed through the Rainbow Mountains in the Alaska Mountain range and followed the Alaska Pipeline until we reached the Copper River where we spent the night.
Thursday
The Copper River is so named for the Kennecott Copper Mines near by. There are all kinds of fun things to see in at the Copper River area but we headed down to the port of Valdez the next morning to see where the Alaska Pipeline came into the port and where it fills up the oil tankers. To get to Valdez we went through the Thompson pass in the Chugach Mountain Range, we passed the Worthington Glacier and saw Bridal Veil Falls, and the Horsetail Waterfall. While in Valdez, we saw a bunch of bald eagles; a guy was feeding them fish and they were swooping down and grabbing them and flying off with them. I’m not too sure of the legality of what he was doing but it was supper cool and I got a bunch of pictures.
Friday
That same day we headed back to the Copper River lodge to spend the night again and the next morning we headed off to Kenai. We drove across the Glenn highway paralleling the Chugach mountain range to Anchorage and then we drove through town to get a good idea of what we were supposed to do in Anchorage for the day with our guests.
On the way to Anchorage on the Glenn highway, we passed through Palmer. Palmer is a quaint little town that has rather good weather and looks like Utah. It has up scale houses and a bunch of white people. Palmer was started when the government promised 102 families passage to Alaska, and farms, houses and barns when they got there. When they arrived, there were no such houses or barns and about half of the families turned around and headed for home. The other stuck it out and created the little village of Palmer. In Palmer, the world records for carrots, cabbage, and pumpkins are held. The vegetables grow so well because of the long days of photosynthesis, temperate weather, and rich soil from the glacial silt.
After Anchorage, we drove down the Seward highway to Whittier where the cruise ships are and where we drop off our guests. To get to Whittier we had to go through a single lane tunnel that goes right through the heart of a mountain to get to the bay on the other side where the cruise ships dock. I got the chance to drive through the Whittier tunnel. The tunnel is long and straight and from the moment you enter you can see the light at the other end so of course every time we got through the tunnel the tour director on board or us will make a real cheesy joke about going to the light at the end of the tunnel.
After coming back out of the Whittier tunnel, we continued down the Seward highway on the Kenai Peninsula. The road we traveled down is located in a huge U shaped valley that had been carved out of the mountains by a glacier ten thousand years ago. The Kenai Peninsula is supper beautiful. The spruce trees are much larger, everything is greener, and there are tons of glaciers in the mountains on ether side of the road. After some time driving, we arrived at the Kenai Princess lodge, which is just absolutely beautiful, and the rooms they give us are large and spacious. Of course, these rooms are just for the guests during the season and we will be living in the driver’s housing but they are letting us chill the night in the nice hotel rooms since the season hasn’t started yet.
Tomorrow we will be driving back through Anchorage and all the way up the Parks highway to Denali and grab the train from Denali to Fairbanks so we can get the experience that the guests will be getting on their cruise.
During the trip, we were each assigned topics to talk about for ten minutes minimum. I was assigned Salmon, fishing laws, clear vs. silt water, fish farms, hatcheries, cost recovery fishing, streams and rivers, dip net fishing, native vs. non-native fishing and hunting laws, commercial fishing vessels, and types and cycles of Salmon. I did great researching my topics and talking about them. I ended up going on for a half hour on my subjects, it was great practice, and I have tons more material to learn.
On our trip, so far we have seen moose, caribou, lynx, snow shoe hairs, dale sheep, bald eagles, and all kinds of vegetation and birds. Animal sightings have been good and the days have been supper clear so we had all the visibility we needed to see the distant mountains and glaciers.
Me chillin’ on the bus.
Me in front of the Rainbow Mountains (so named for the many minerals that are
seen along the side of the mountain) in the Alaska Mountain Range.
A distant shot of the Worthington Glacier
The Horsetail falls
The port of Valdez
A huge wooden carving in Valdez
A Bald Eagle swooping down and grabbing a fish, it is not in
it’s normal colors yet because it is still a juvenile.
Eagle just hanging out waiting for a free hand-out
Swooping upward after grabbing a fish
A low pass
Coming in to nab a fish
A closer look at the Worthington Glacier
The ice fields of Mattanuska Glacier
The Huge Cedar cabin at the Kenai Princess Lodge
Travis Chillen’ next to the wood stove
The first hotel room I have ever been in with a couch
Old Man's Beard growing off the spruce trees at the Kenai Lodge
Supper crunchy pine cones at the Kenai Lodge that are
very gratifying to step on, even more so than crisp leaves
Monday, May 9, 2011
The Land of the Mid-night sun
Saturday was a big day for the company; it was called division day. The entire Fairbanks division was out and mobile. We had about eight groups of four coaches each that drove all around town getting us familiarized with routs and duties at each station. I got to drive my own bus by my self and follow our little group around. The exercise was to get us used to the locations with other motor coaches so it would be more like the circumstances during the season with lots of motor coach traffic. It also allowed a crew to get into the “yard” the motor coach parking lot behind our offices and sweep all the gravel out from the winter. The best part of the day was that we worked many hours and got overtime on the clock.
During the week we had lots of tour practice. We were each given parts of the city tour that we had to learn and then present to our co-workers and we gave each other tips on how to improve our manner and style. The most beneficial aspect was the practice we got from actually having to do it.
On a public speaking note, Travis and I were asked to give talks for Mothers day. Our talks went very well and we were very pleased with how the turned out. It gave Travis and I an opportunity to be known in the ward and for people to get to know our names. This was probably the most free time we would have all season so it was the best time for us to give talks. Besides it gave me the opportunity to get some girls’ phone numbers, there does happen to be some BYU girls home for the summer, so we should have lots of fun.
Today we had mechanical training. We learned how to change tires on a bus, how to work some of the more obscure controls we have on the bus. How to trouble shoot simple items and how to address very detailed items we could find in our daily vehicle inspections. We also learned how to change belts on our engines and how to fuel the coaches in our facilities and what to do incase of leaks and spills.
This evening we had vendor night. All the vendors we work with came and gave presentations of what their company does for the tourists and the gave us all kinds of food, free bees and hand outs. They all encourage us to come on free excursions during the beginning of the summer on trips when they have free room so that we get to know what they do and can help them promote their trips to the guests. The trick now is coordinating our schedules and fitting in an excursion that they will have room for us to do.
Things are really fun and I have my studying cut out for me. It is easy to miss out on sleep since it doesn’t get dark till 12 and it gets light at about 5 right now, and the problem is only getting worse. But in another light, it is always bright out side so you can go to sleep when ever you want because conditions won’t get much better no matter how long you wait.
Fairbanks
Training, Tests, Tours and Trips. Things are finally really picking up. After a few training sessions, Travis and I became familiar with the motor coaches in Fairbanks. All the other guys have come up from Utah as well and we have moved into our apartment.
The first step for Travis and I was to get road tested by our division so that they knew for sure that we could drive a bus and hadn't just gotten our licenses on a fluke. After passing our road tests they gave us keys to the coaches. One key opens all the Princess coaches and another for all the Holland America coaches.
On Monday we took a familiarization trip to the Chena Hot Springs, a tourist destination for many, that we will be taking our guests to in the evenings. The Chena Hot Springs gets its power from a small geothermal power generator and uses its power for their restaurant, hotel facilities, ice museum, and green house. The also have an out-doors hot spring that is supplied by water from the hot spring.
In their green house they grow all the vegetables and herbs they need for their restaurant. During the winter they use a variety of special colored lights to help the plants grow since the sun could on shine for a couple hours of the day. They built the green house because vegetables are so expensive to import from the lower 48. However, even with vegetable cost cutting measures, they still charge an insane amount for a salad in the restaurant, so I decided I wasn't really that hungry since they didn't volunteer to feed us while we were there.
The Ice museum they have is year round. They keep it at 20 degrees but the ice still manages to shrink due to sublimation (the conversion of solid straight to gas). In the ice museum, a husband and wife, world class ice sculpting team, works full time constantly refurbishing their sculptures and making new exhibits. When they aren't working on the museum they are making martini glasses of ice for guests to use to sip their alcohol. In the museum they have a life size sculpture of two knights on horseback jousting, a samurai, venus, an igloo, and a xylophone. The xylophone is located in side of he igloo which provides for some very interesting acoustics when played. The xylophone is made completely of ice and is tuned perfectly to key. Also in the museum, are a couple of themed rooms where guest can spend the night in exchange for the deed to their house. The museum also has a bar and bar stools that are topped with caribou hide (the most insulating fur, with more hairs per square inch than any other animal). After a long hard day in -40 degree weather someone could come into the ice museum to warm up and kick back with a couple of hard ones, anything virgin would just freeze to your glass.
The Chena Hot Springs gets the majority of their guests durning the summer and dead of winter. Only the Japanese tourists come for the winter. The hot springs during the winter produce so much steam that you can only see a couple of feet in front of you, a perfect set up for playing hide-and-go-seek. Girls like to play with their wet hair in the hot springs too, when they lift it out of the water it freezes quickly in the 40 below air and becomes hard instantly. The Japanese tourists love to come during the winter because they believe it good luck to conceive under the northern lights, you don't want to run into a pair of them while playing hide-and-go-seek.
We have also become familiarized with the city tours. We take people downtown and tell the story of Fairbanks and point out and explain historical sites. Around town we take people to the trans-Alaska pipe line, the riverboat discovery, the El Dorado gold mine and the no. 8 gold dredge. We pick up and drop off people at the airport, train station and a variety of hotels around town.
I have to go now but I will try to continue this in the evening.
Stay tuned.
The first step for Travis and I was to get road tested by our division so that they knew for sure that we could drive a bus and hadn't just gotten our licenses on a fluke. After passing our road tests they gave us keys to the coaches. One key opens all the Princess coaches and another for all the Holland America coaches.
On Monday we took a familiarization trip to the Chena Hot Springs, a tourist destination for many, that we will be taking our guests to in the evenings. The Chena Hot Springs gets its power from a small geothermal power generator and uses its power for their restaurant, hotel facilities, ice museum, and green house. The also have an out-doors hot spring that is supplied by water from the hot spring.
In their green house they grow all the vegetables and herbs they need for their restaurant. During the winter they use a variety of special colored lights to help the plants grow since the sun could on shine for a couple hours of the day. They built the green house because vegetables are so expensive to import from the lower 48. However, even with vegetable cost cutting measures, they still charge an insane amount for a salad in the restaurant, so I decided I wasn't really that hungry since they didn't volunteer to feed us while we were there.
The Ice museum they have is year round. They keep it at 20 degrees but the ice still manages to shrink due to sublimation (the conversion of solid straight to gas). In the ice museum, a husband and wife, world class ice sculpting team, works full time constantly refurbishing their sculptures and making new exhibits. When they aren't working on the museum they are making martini glasses of ice for guests to use to sip their alcohol. In the museum they have a life size sculpture of two knights on horseback jousting, a samurai, venus, an igloo, and a xylophone. The xylophone is located in side of he igloo which provides for some very interesting acoustics when played. The xylophone is made completely of ice and is tuned perfectly to key. Also in the museum, are a couple of themed rooms where guest can spend the night in exchange for the deed to their house. The museum also has a bar and bar stools that are topped with caribou hide (the most insulating fur, with more hairs per square inch than any other animal). After a long hard day in -40 degree weather someone could come into the ice museum to warm up and kick back with a couple of hard ones, anything virgin would just freeze to your glass.
The Chena Hot Springs gets the majority of their guests durning the summer and dead of winter. Only the Japanese tourists come for the winter. The hot springs during the winter produce so much steam that you can only see a couple of feet in front of you, a perfect set up for playing hide-and-go-seek. Girls like to play with their wet hair in the hot springs too, when they lift it out of the water it freezes quickly in the 40 below air and becomes hard instantly. The Japanese tourists love to come during the winter because they believe it good luck to conceive under the northern lights, you don't want to run into a pair of them while playing hide-and-go-seek.
We have also become familiarized with the city tours. We take people downtown and tell the story of Fairbanks and point out and explain historical sites. Around town we take people to the trans-Alaska pipe line, the riverboat discovery, the El Dorado gold mine and the no. 8 gold dredge. We pick up and drop off people at the airport, train station and a variety of hotels around town.
I have to go now but I will try to continue this in the evening.
Stay tuned.
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Fairbanks Alaska
Friday
As I flew into Fairbanks, I could see the frozen rivers and dead vegetation that covered the flat land. It looked so cold. South of Fairbanks there is 100 miles of marsh and bog that stretches down to the Alaska Mountain range. Most of it is still frozen, but it is beginning to melt. After I got out of the plane, I caught the shuttle to the company hotel. Travis had already checked in that morning and left his stuff to go exploring. The weather really isn’t that cold, it was about 45 degrees and I was able to get away with a light jacket. Travis later showed up with food from Fred Myer, a local grocery store, so we didn’t have to eat at the super expensive hotel restaurant.
Saturday
Travis and I began walking into town, our hotel is on the outskirt of town and we are not very near to many places. We visited UAF, University of Alaska, Fairbanks. It is the oldest largest university in Alaska, I think anyone educated wants to get out of Alaska. We tried finding used bikes for sale on campus but we could hardly find anyone, since they all sleep until 2pm on Saturdays.
We headed to an outdoors store and looked at their bikes but they were super expensive, we also caught the bus to Play it Again Sports, but their bikes were pretty expensive too. We ended up buying bikes at Wal-Mart; they had the best bike for our buck. Now armed with bicycles we were armed for some real adventure, and Travis was no longer subject to my super strong mission walking legs, but I was now at the mercy of Travis’ merciless biking legs.
We putted around town and found the stake center. The missionaries were there, getting ready for a baptism and they told us were to find the institute and what time singles ward met.
We headed home and picked up our backpacks and rode down to the Fred Myer so we could stock up on non-perishable food that we could eat without heating, mostly sandwich stuff. We keep a little refrigerator going with the hotel ice machine, it’s great, ice is unlimited.
People in Alaska are mostly the trucker type that you would see in the mid west. Most are white and many have tattoos. We often see Indian type people who look like Samoans or Asians.
The snow is still melting and since the ground is still quite frozen, the water doesn’t go into the ground very easily and there are lots of little lakes and ponds and puddles. Only about the top 6 feet of permafrost ground melts, which also inhibits the trees from sinking roots very deep, so non of the trees are as big as they could be like in south east Alaska and Washington.
Sunday
We rode our bikes to church; it was only about 15 minutes away. Elder Gledhill from the Placentia Stake is in the singles branch as a missionary. He was very happy to see me, he says he hasn’t seen anyone from Orange County during his entire mission. The singles branch is relatively small; there were only about 50 people. Guys already out number girls and as more drivers show up for the summer, the problem will only worsen.
The First Counselor’s daughter, Kiana, invited us to her house for Easter Dinner. We were very glad we had a place to eat real food, instead of hotel sandwiches for Easter Dinner. The Maines family is way cool, the are related to like half the stake and in their family they have many cousins and friends that are single and our age, so it was fun getting to know everyone and socializing.
Monday
We rode to work to check the place out and get a little tour of where we will be working. The seasonal training is starting off slow and doesn’t really pick up until next week so we will have plenty of time to study manuals and books about Alaska and it’s history. Travis and I visited the information center and went through the museum and its informational kiosks and booths that talked about the history of Fairbanks, the gold rush and the Indian that occupy the area.
We also visited the start/finish line for the Yukon Quest dog sled race in downtown Fairbanks. We talked to the lady at the counter in the gift shop and pestered her with all our dog sled questions. She being a musher herself, with no other customers to attend gladly entertained our queries, and told us all she knew about being a musher and building a dog sled team. Travis related everything she would tell us about training her dogs to his triathlon experience and she fed off his sports enthusiasm and went on to tell us more and more about the proper feeding and training of sled dogs.
After Travis quenched his sports/exercise passion, we visited Pioneer Park where many of the original pioneer cabins have been relocated to create a little tourist park with activities to do in each cabin. Each cabin has a little gift shop or restaurant to sell their overpriced tourist nick knacks that the golden generation loves to spend their 401K plans on. One of the cabins has a 40 degree below freezer where people can dress up in Eskimo pants and jackets and go into and have their picture taken. The old people just love stuff like that.
After our full day of tourism, we went to FHE with some of the people in the ward. Our FHE activity was a picture scavenger hunt at UAF. After FHE we had root beer floats and talked. One of the girls at FHE is from Nome, Alaska, and she was telling us how it never gets above 50 or 60 degrees in the summer and their houses are built on stilts so that they don’t melt the permafrost and destroy the foundation for their own homes.
(For economists only)
I was trying to ask about what they export to be able to be able to pay for all their imported food. She didn’t know much about economics and was convinced that they all make money for food by working at the gas station, hospital and things like that. I was trying to help her understand that you could just all work serving each other and still import food without getting money from exports to pay for the imports. She wasn’t really getting what I was talking about, but after a bit more of talking about her city Nome, it became clear that they got all their money from the government to pay for the food. The Indians in the near by villages have their allotment of money and they quickly spend it on food and alcohol, thus propelling the little economy of Nome. Other Government facilities, the hospital, jail and safe house also pump government money into the population’s pockets so that they can continue servicing the drunk Indians and buy their food. (All quite interesting from my view point)
Tuesday
Today we went into work, visited with some more people, and found out our schedule for team driving to get to know some of the different coaches we will be driving here in Fairbanks. Also to day we spent a good amount of time going over tour material and reading up on Alaska history. Tonight we have a guest speaker that will be talking on the Alaska pipeline. It should be lots of fun.
I’ll keep you all posted on our going-ons here in Fairbanks. If you have any questions about Alaska and such, feel free to ask and I will address them in my next update.
Friday, April 22, 2011
The Adventure Begins
This semester has been rough, I had some econ classes that kicked my trash but they are over now and I have learned my lesson to avoid an econ major. My real estate development class, however, was very fun. We had final presentations on Tuesday night. Our group of four, doing an evaluation on The Edgemont Plaza, (Canyon road, a couple blocks from where the Shumways live) was voted the best project and presentation. Our teacher concurred and openly admitted to the class that we not only blew them all out of the water but we did better than any group to do an evaluation on the Edgemont Plaza in the last five years.
Travis and I packed our things and finished finals on Wednesday in order to leave that evening at six O’clock. We got a ride from the ride board to Seattle where we will be flying to Fairbanks, Alaska for the summer. We rode with Lindsay and Adam in her Mazda Tribute, a crossover. They are dating and are in the same major and all the same classes so they know each other very well and talked and listened to music the entire way while Travis and I tried to make ourselves somewhat comfortable and sleep a little. We drove through the night and arrived in Seattle at about 8 AM Pacific time.
During the entire ride it rained, and through the Snoqualmie Pass and the Blue Mountains it snowed, and for a bit in the Blue Mountains we hit some very thick fog.
They dropped us off at the airport and from there we got a shuttle to a near-by inn and dropped our things of and then we caught the light rail to downtown Seattle to go exploring. We went to the Klondike Gold Rush Museum, visited Pioneer Square, and walked along the wharf on the harbor. We walked through pikes market where we got a sample of smoked salmon, and saw many other exciting shops. We passed by Nordstrom’s, where Mr. Nordstrom started his company as a shoe business. We visited the Space Needle and saw the International fountain and the key arena where Seattle’s basketball team used to play. Basically, we ran all around downtown trying to see any thing interesting or cool.
For lunch, we were passing a restaurant that said Chinese buffet $8, so we decided to check it out. The buffet hours were almost over so there was not much left so they said they would charge us half price and it was a done deal. Travis and I cleaned out the rest of the buffet until we were stuffed and not even we could finish it all off. Their sweet and sour sauce was supper good, it was totally natural, not the nasty orange-red stuff that comes with Panda Express. We could actually taste the honey that they put in their sauce to make it sweet - it was so good.
The Seattle space needle
Monday, February 14, 2011
My Semester < Poke in Eye with Sharp Stick
This semester is really getting crazy now, group projects, essays, midterms, homework, mock interviews, job training, snowboarding and social life are all keeping me very busy. On the bright side I can't say my life is boring.
Classes
- Real Estate Development - very fun, no textbook, no tests, killer group projects and insanely educational. Right now we are working on an apartment complex acquisition seeing if it could be profitable and how much we could theoretically make on the deal. The class is very financially oriented and touches on a lot of the due diligence aspects and the creative options we have in real estate.
- Macro Econ - The class lectures are fun, but I'm not looking forward to the midterm this weekend, I've heard it's a killer. There are only three questions so it'll be kind of like The Mouse who Roared.
- Micro Econ - The lectures are death on a stick, I copy down all the math that our teacher puts up on the board and hope to make sense out of it later. The midterm I took last weekend for the class didn't seem too bad, but of course that's probably because I haven't gotten my score back yet.
- Management Communications (business english on steroids) - Class is all right, the essays are a pain, especially because I still haven't gotten any back yet so I don't know how to improve yet. Today we had mock interviews so that made sure my day would be a tad more stressful than usual, but I don't think I did too bad.
- Entrepreneur lecture series - It's pretty fun but the assignments are small and I often for get about them till the last minute so they become, not hard to do but hard to keep track of.
- Career Preparation - Same problem with the assignment as the lecture series class except the lectures really are boring.
- Mentor Program - "What? Oh man! I almost forgot I was signed up for that class." We never have class, there is an assignment to do once a month and I have to meet with my mentor periodically to talk to him and find out more about the industry he works in. My mentor is Jim Hill, he graduated in econ, got a MBA and works with East West Partners doing real estate development projects in Park City, Utah for the ski resorts.
- New Testament - It isn't really not bad, I just have to keep up with the reading in the scriptures and the manual. The midterm was small potatoes, and the teacher does a good job teaching, he is a bit dry but he makes an effort at being funny and the effort is funnier than his humor.
Job
- Cody, Travis, and I will be working in Fairbanks, Ak from April 25 to August 25.
- Two weeks ago we had an all day training session to start things off and since then we have one on one trainings with our trainers and the busses at 7 Peaks parking lot.
- By this week I will need to have gotten my CDL permit so I can continue the training. That translates into another test I need to study for and take.
- The bus training is pretty fun, I learned to parallel park a bus, no small feat, and I have learned all about the pre-trip inspection I will have to be doing every day this summer, (note to self, test not that tomorrow, do some more study).
Snowboarding
- Every time I think of something that might be fun to do with my time, I compare it to snowboarding. The slopes somehow always win my mental debate.
- It is pretty time consuming and rewarding. I have lots of fun and am a lot better.
- I don't think I'll be able to do it next year because classes are really ramping up and then there is that other desire of getting married that becomes more and more prominent as my college transcript's credit hours keep rising.
Girls
- Oh Yea! Girls! I almost for got about them, it seems like my plate isn't big enough. As I keep piling things on top stuff keeps falling off the sides.
- I have gone on a couple of dates recently but I'm not nearly as good about going on dates as I was last semester.
- I definitely need to turn this around.
Well, I hope I haven't bored my audience. Since my M comm teacher says I always need to know my audience I have included some picture below and a video I made of Cody, myself and friends snowboarding. Look in the still photos to recognize our faces so you can tell who we are when we are in the air and can't see our faces. All of the footage is a few weeks old so we don't really land many if any of our jumps yet. I put the video to come cool music so turn your speakers on as well.
On a date we went to the nickel-kade and we got these
fake mustaches so we had to take picture afterward.
Cody, Travis and I gouged our selves on tacos at
Del Taco on taco night tuesday.
David: 18, Cody: 21, Travis: 30
I finally took the time to learn how to use my
mac's video editing software now that I had some
footage to edit. It wasn't hard at all to learn and it's fun.
Saturday, January 15, 2011
New Semester and Tons of Fun
This semester is going to plan out pretty nicely. I have a Real Estate Development class that's going to very fun and educational. My Business writing class is going to be challenging, writing really isn't my thing that's why I'm going to need to work hard at it and learn. My Macro Econ and my Micro Econ classes are very fun and challenging, they both have a lot of calculous, and I haven't done that since 2007, and now it's like 2011, that's 4 years ago! My New Testament class will be fun, the teacher seems pretty reserved but then he goes out of his way to make a dumb joke and that livens things up. Unfortunately this semester won't be a breeze but it'll be good.

Now onto the main attraction, Cody and I are tearing it up on the slopes of The Canyons! We have been doing jumps and hitting the powder in the trees. We go once, and sometimes twice a week if we get a chance and don't have too much home work. There are a few girls and another guy in our ward that has a pass to the canyons. We meet it up with then and have a bunch of fun together.
Sometimes we bring our lunches with us so that we don't have to go back down to the car to get them and loose time boarding. It usually works out all right but often times our sandwiches get all smashed up but they're good any ways.
Cody, Travis and I are still planning on working this summer in Alaska as tour bus drivers. Our trainings start in late January, and everything seems to be on track as planned. We still don't know too much about lodging while we are up there but we aren't too worried.
College is great and I'm definitely enjoying the my studies and the freedom I have to go snowboarding all the time.
-David Hatch

Now onto the main attraction, Cody and I are tearing it up on the slopes of The Canyons! We have been doing jumps and hitting the powder in the trees. We go once, and sometimes twice a week if we get a chance and don't have too much home work. There are a few girls and another guy in our ward that has a pass to the canyons. We meet it up with then and have a bunch of fun together.
Sometimes we bring our lunches with us so that we don't have to go back down to the car to get them and loose time boarding. It usually works out all right but often times our sandwiches get all smashed up but they're good any ways.
Cody, Travis and I are still planning on working this summer in Alaska as tour bus drivers. Our trainings start in late January, and everything seems to be on track as planned. We still don't know too much about lodging while we are up there but we aren't too worried.
College is great and I'm definitely enjoying the my studies and the freedom I have to go snowboarding all the time.
-David Hatch
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