It is difficult to wake up in the morning when the sun has not peaked out from behind the trees and the boardwalk becomes an ice skating rink with frost. Yet, something changes when the sun turns the trees into silhouettes and the clouds are tinted pink and orange. It is much easier to go for a run or do yoga at seven in the morning when your footsteps and eyes are following parallel to Mount Massive. The snow blankets the peaks of the fourteeners that live outside our doorstep and that faint, pink light paints color onto the snow covering the peaks. At night, when we walk back to our cabins, that same frost creeps back, covering the boardwalk and a sea of stars fills the sky. We hunt for shooting stars and find where the big dipper is hiding in the black night sky. We can see our breath and enjoy the feeling of breathing the cold air before we pile into our cabins to build a fire and talk with our cabin mates, until we climb into our beds and one by one, distinguish the light of our headlamps. It is amazing that every day we get to wake up to a quiet sunrise in the wilderness and fall asleep under a blanket of clear stars each night.
We’ve begun to get into the swing of things in terms of life on campus. We are beginning to develop a knack for preparing meals for 60+ mouths in cook crew, and we are becoming attuned to morning exercise—three-mile runs transitioned from a daunting task to a mere part of our morning routine. Each day it becomes less and less difficult to find a table to sit at during lunch. We, as a community, are getting increasingly close, as groups of strangers have evolved into families, and cabins and classes are becoming more a more comfortable environment where we can speak freely and at ease. With the weather changing and temperatures dropping we are learning how to thrive, not survive, in our cabins by utilizing our wood-burning stoves to keep us toasty throughout the night. We spend a portion of our weekend chopping and delivering wood to each cabin in preparation for coming winter months. We are learning how to build and maintain a warm fire; occasionally, you can even hear the cheers of encouragement from other cabins at night, as we all develop our own unique ways of building a fire. Though we have been at HMI for nearly a month now, we have only spent two weeks on campus, and it is finally starting to feel like home.
Our first full week of classes started with a bang! The first science lab of the semester was an exciting outing to the Arkansas River and
This weekend was our first “typical” (not sure if one would call it that) weekend on the campus, in the sense we had our half-day of class on Saturday, followed by activities in the afternoon and throughout the evening. After class let out, we split into four groups for the afternoon activities. We rotated between chopping wood to fuel our stoves in preparation for the pending winter cold; it already began snowing daily on