Monday, October 29, 2012

We All Scream for Ice Cream!



We welcome Loren and Mary Ruth Wilkonsin to the Old Convent for God and Nature! How could you not welcome professors who bring you an Amish ice cream maker?! 

This week for our homemaking session, the Wilkinsons offered to show us how to make ice cream. Despite the warm weather we've been having, we finished it all off before it even had a chance to melt. The flavor on the menu: citrus mint!

Left: Melissa (Westmont) helps Mary Ruth prepare the ice cream to be churned.
Right: Jacob (Messiah) holds down the ice cream maker as Matt (Messiah) cranks the handle to churn it.

Brian, Caleb, and Daniel (Staff) enjoying the ice cream we made.

Other highlights this week? 

We celebrated our beloved kitchen manager Emma's birthday, complete with an eel card. Emma's loves eels! Caleb (Staff) and I (Kristen, Staff) took over making lunch, dinner, and dessert to give Emma a well-deserved day off.



We enjoyed a lovely weekend here in Kaikoura. The warm temperature gave the feeling of a summer day, and everyone took the opportunity to get outside! A group of girls decided to spend an hour horseback riding through the bush on Saturday.

Betsy snaps a photo of Sam (Eastern) riding along the Kowhai River

God and Nature will continue next week, and students will delve deeper into what it means for Christians to care for God's Creation.

Monday, October 22, 2012

Term Break

Everyone is back at the Old Convent from their term breaks. As a group, we covered a lot of ground! Most of us explored Aotearoa, while 4 travelled to Australia. Here's an inside look at two amazing trips the students embarked on!

Jacob (Messiah) out for a surf

Team Snorkel!
Tyler Burns, Jacob Reisler, Kris Kline, Betsy Seigendall (All from Messiah College)

"For term break, we first headed south to head north. After a freezing, sleepless night in Christchurch airport, we flew to Auckland and drove way up to the top of the north island to the town of Whangerei. We stayed with the most accommodating, kind family in New Zealand as they housed, fed, shuttled, and gave us plenty of ideas on how to spend our week. After catching up on sleep, we explored the town and did some souvenir shopping. After dropping by the huge Kauri trees, we spent a day learning to surf on homemade boards (by a family friend of our hosts)–we even all stood up by the end of the day! The next day we caught a boat and snorkeled in the Poor Knights Islands, New Zealand's first marine reserve. We also stopped by The Kiwi House where we spotted New Zealand's most famous bird, and took pictures at the beautiful Whangerei Falls. Finally, we started the long trek home, which included a night of card games and way too much Dominos Pizza. It was a great week for sure!"

-Kris Kline, Messiah '13
  

Top Left: Team Snorkel! Jacob, Tyler, Betsy, and Kris (Messiah)
Bottom Left: Betsy and Jacob spend a day at work with their ophthalmologist host
Right: Betsy, Jacob, Tyler, and Kris at Whangerei Falls 
Party wave! The whole gang hangs 10!

Matt (Messiah) and AJ (Messiah) decided to spend their term break in Australia. They headed to Sydney and got to see the sights. From there, they left for Cairns to snorkel at the Great Barrier Reef and zip line through the Daintree Rain Forest.
Top Left: Matt and AJ standing in front of the Sydney harbor bridge.
Top Right: The Sydney Harbor Bridge and Opera house at night.
Bottom Left: Sydney Opera House
Bottom Center: Matt and AJ visit the Opera house at night.
Bottom Right: Matt feeding a kangaroo at the Kola Zoo in Kuranda.
We are happy to have everyone back with us and to hear about all of their memory-making adventures!

Monday, October 8, 2012

Ra Whanau Ki A Koe

We have had wave after wave of birthdays rolling in on the calendar! Since the start of the semester, we have already celebrated 5 brilliant birthdays. Here's a recap of the shenanigans that have ensued.

First up, our beloved Program Director Courtnay! We celebrated her birthday with an evening of world trivia. Students and staff were divided into four teams, representing 4 countries that Courtnay has lived and worked in: Canada, Japan, Belize, and New Zealand. CCSP alum Scott and Robin joined in too. Teams got very creative in dressing according to their country of origin!

Top Left: Team Japan, including sumo wrestlers, bonsai, sushi, and a Japanese tourist.
Top Right: Team Canada! Lumberjacks, mounties, hockey players, and bears! Oh my!
Bottom Left: Team New Zealand, complete with a birder, rugby player, sheep farmer, Legolas, and sheep.
Bottom Right: Team Belize contestants dressed as an orange, jaguar, tourist, and toucan, proudly displaying their flag.

The following day, we celebrated Kris's 21st birthday. Kris (Messiah) loves The Princess Bride, so we planned a party accordingly. After ice cream pie, 21 shots of milk (Kris LOVES milk), and a short game, we watched The Princess Bride...audience involvement style! Everyone got a list of things to do when prompted by the movie, like yelling, "Aaaaaaas youuuuu wiiiiiiish!" whenever Westley says it, booing Prince Humperdinck as he enters a scene, and throwing paper "boulders" at one another when Fezzik throws them at Westley.
Kris conquers her 21 shots of milk
Next up, Toni! Toni (Westmont) absolutely adores the color pink. We threw her a dance party, where everyone had to dress in as much pink as possible. We started off with a game of limbo and then danced the night away with DJ Scott. Caleb even taught us all to Dougie.
Toni and her 3 delicious cheesecakes

We all donned our cloaks, wizard hats, wings, other wear in celebration of Melissa's Lord of the Rings themed birthday. Melissa (Westmont) is a big Lord of the Rings fan. Split into two teams, students and staff competed for the glory of victory...and ginger beer! Teams versed one other in battles of wit and athleticism. The first challenge was a series of riddles from The Hobbit. Sam (Eastern), with her extensive Lord of the Rings knowledge, posed some tough competition for Melissa's team. Allie (staff) put up a good fight, and it ended up being pretty close! Melissa's team was victorious overall, winning the next two challenges. The second challenge was archery. Each team member had one shot to land their arrow in one of three rings of varying points. Last, teams had to embark on a quest to find and destroy the Ring of Power. They were given Lord of the Rings themed clues to go from station to station, find the "ring," and burn it in the flames of Mount Doom (a fire in the yard). Following the games were a pretty sweet as photo shoot, some hobbit dancing, and making a Middle Earth themed commercial for Bundaberg.
Top Left: Hobbitses Sarah (Biola), Matt (Messiah), and Kristen (Staff)
Bottom Left: Shelob (Kris, Messiah) attacks Frodo (Matt, Messiah)!
Right: Our birthday girl, dressed as her favorite character Legolas

A good-looking bunch if I ever saw one! 
Members of the Fellowship traveled far and wide especially for Melissa's birthday!
Jacob (Messiah), Melissa (Westmont), Matt (Messiah), and Tyler (Messiah)

Jacob's birthday was next (Messiah). We had carrot cake and played "pin the skis on the Jacob" before he and the other men headed off for a weekend hiking trip; All favorites of this Vermonter!
Jacob (Messiah) poses with "himself" after our game of "pin the skis on the Jacob." Jacob's hand-decorated birthday cakes, made by Caleb.

All of the men at Kevin Topps' hut during their hiking trip

Interested in learning how to sing "Happy Birthday to You" in Maori? Listen here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R3p9vhe_Xbo

"Enter the Duckness"


We enjoyed having John Dennison with us this past week for Environmental Literature. He encouraged us to try to interpret nature, rather than to simply describe it. Students worked in groups to write poems, focusing on this goal. Rather than coming across as a human trapped in a chicken's body, Melissa (Westmont), Betsy (Messiah), and Sarah (Biola) wrote the following poem to embrace and convey the chickenness of the chicken:

The Convent Chickens

The warm light ball is here
We sit and wait
Done
head….foot…head…foot
head, he, heaaaaad. foot.
Here come the freedom stealers
Like a tree, with naked wings, and the inner beat.
head. foot. head. foot!
What will it be?
Nibbles or taking my shelled chicks?
Peck, Peck. Head…foot. oh! a squirmy…peck. mmm. peck
We'll give the odd one a bad time
Peck…Peck…peck, peck, peck.
head…foot…head…foot…head…foot


For homemaking this week, Courtnay taught us some crocheting techniques. Some (including myself) were learning for the first time, while others took on the challenge of learning more advanced "granny squares." You will find a flurry of yarn and hooks at the Old Convent if you take a look around.

Allie (Wheaton) volunteered to cook us an amazing Moroccan stew for dinner on Wednesday. Everyone, including the Chirnsides, Allie's homestay family and guests of the evening, enjoyed the meal.

John has had a part in helping to organize a Christian environmental conference called "Lament, Hope, Action" held in Wellington this past weekend. Courtnay was able to attend the conference, hosted by A Rocha, the Otago University Centre for Theology and Public Issues, and Caritas Aotearoa New Zealand (the Catholic social justice agency). Towards the end of the week, John organized a service of lament for us to take part in. It was a time to reflect on the harm we've caused the environment, realizing the consequences of our actions, and inviting God to work in restoring the creation.

On Friday afternoon, the CureKids challenge stopped in Kaikoura. Sam (Eastern), the Tui, and I (Kristen, Staff), the kiwi, welcomed and assisted 35 teams of competitors dressed as such ridiculous things as smurfs, inmates, Shrek, cows, and superheroes. The participants were all part of a three-day contest to raise money for children with life-threatening illnesses, traveling from Auckland to Queenstown on $10 and completing challenges along the way. Sam and I instructed the teams how to complete the craft challenge and ended up judging who the winners were. It was a lot of fun and heartening to see those involved to support the cause.  The Flight of the Conchords conducted interviews with children about how we can raise money for the sick children, and arranged their responses into a kiwi star-studded fund-raising song. Check it out!
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ca4ty7tz9x0


Kristen (Staff) and Sam (Eastern) pose with competitors in the CureKids challenge dressed as nuns. The closest we've seen to real nuns since we started living in an old convent!

We ended the week with a night of poetry and prose readings and charades! The room was filled with an air of mirth as we watched one another act out the mannerisms of scorpions and snails. John put on a good show for everyone, including a particularly exquisite impersonation of a prairie dog.

We welcome Pauline Stevick to Kaikoura for next week's Environmental Lit II course. While we muse about Dickinson, Wordsworth, and Thoreau, we'll also be getting ready for to depart for our adventures during the close and coming Term Break!

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Baking and Breaking Bread


If thou tastest a crust of bread, thou tastest all the stars and all the heavens.
                
-Robert Browning


This week's homemaking session: Breads and Spreads. The kitchen was filled to the brim with bakers. Emma supplied everyone with ingredients and recipes for cornbread, pretzels, cheesy garlic bread, and any other carbohydrate-filled dream our hearts desired. Compensating for a portion of the calorie intake, we shook up some cream into butter. Courtnay also whipped up a sweet and delicious lemon curd. There was more than enough to go around at dinner!

The bustling kitchen during our "Breads & Spreads" homemaking session

Top Left: Courtnay (Staff) and Allie (Wheaton) present their completed loaf of bread. Top Right: Mieke (Calvin) and Sylvia (Calvin) present their finished batch of butter. Bottom Left: Tyler (Messiah) and Kris (Messiah) with their cheesy garlic bread fresh out of the oven. Bottom Right: Betsy (Messiah) with her finished cornbread, perfect to accompany our chili at dinner.


We had Mick Duncan back this week for the second half of Sustainable Communitiy Development. Mick focused more on application and "take home strategies" for students as they return to their school and home communities in December. Students found his message convicting and empowering. 

Matt Hui (Messiah, '13) described his experience as follows:

“Mick was an inspiring professor. His stories challenged, but also encouraged, me in my walk with God. He taught me that sustainable community development is a lifestyle that anyone can and should participate in. After taking his class, I am more aware of Jesus' heart for the poor and inclined to come alongside those who need love most.”