Nathan Xavier

February 19, 2016 10:45 AM
The third challenge, like its predessors, had been preceded with a notice in each common room to inform the students they were to meet in front of the main entrance into the Gardens on Saturday morning and they were advised to wear 'clothing that would not be ruined by a bit of dirt.' No other clues were given as to what the third challenge would entail.

As the groups began to gather at the designated place and time, they found fifteen platforms lined up against the outside hedge of the labyrinth and Nathan Xavier standing on the one in the center, which was marked as belonging to group eight. The platforms were about five foot square, and gave the groundskeeper an extra foot of height so he could be seen easier by those at the back of the growing crowd.

Nathan did not wait much past the advertised 9:30 start time before beginning. "Hello, and welcome to the third and final challenge. As you may have guessed based on the previous themes and the mention of dirt, today will focus on Earth. We will finish off the elements when we announce the winning group at the bonfire at the end of the year. So far, our leaders are Groups Two, Five, and Three, so congratulations to them, and those are the teams to outdo today, if you can."

He took a brief pause, mostly to catch his breath and rub his sweaty palms on his robes (the weather was very nearly perfect today, but Nathan was unused to addressing so many people at once and he felt quite hot under so many gazes). "What we'll be doing is creating an art project using natural materials you find in the Gardens. Construct your sculpture on the platform labeled with your group number. Everyone should help contribute to your team masterpiece. You may use magic to help during material gather or construction if you'd like, but it is not required. I'd appreciate it if you don't cut down whole trees, but pretty much anything you find in the labyrinth is fair game to use in your project as long as it fits on your platform. Points will be awarded by a judging panel of staff members based on creativity and aesthetic quality. No need to rush. You have all day. Find me if you have any questions or concerns. Picnic lunches will be made available at noon. Now, go forth and create!"

Terminating the sonorus charm that had been making his voice easily heard by all, he stepped down off the platform and wiped his brow with his sleeve. He was looking forward to seeing what the students came up with, but he was glad his speaking part was over.

And he hoped the kids didn't tear up his Gardens too horribly.


OOC: As before, this will be Quidditch style posting in no particular order. Each team has a 5x5 platform to build their artistic creation upon. You can use anything in the labyrinth in your project: plants, rocks, dirt, park benches, gnomes if you can get then to stay put... whatever you can get onto your platform. Enjoy!
Subthreads:
1 Nathan Xavier Challenge 3: Earth's Majesty and Nature's Beauty 28 Nathan Xavier 1 5

Angelique Brockert

February 24, 2016 3:35 AM
It was beginning to seem to Angelique that the staff really had it in for her clothing. The past two challenges had involved the potential for them to be ruined and today was apparently to be no different. The Crotalus had just decided to wear her school robes and was resigned to the fact that she wouldn't get to look cute or impressive to the purebloods on her team. At least it's unlikely to be sports again, she thought, trying to take solace in this fact.

Odds were against it being something pleasant though. Being that they were warned about getting dirty and that it was in the gardens, she could only imagine that it was not going to be her kind of thing. Angelique was not at all an outdoorsy sort of person. Being the little lady that she was, she'd always preferred tea parties to climbing trees. Outside was full of dirt, bugs and potentially unpleasant weather conditions. It was not for her. Not one little bit.

Honestly,Angelique was so ready for this to all be done with. The only positive thing about this all was that she'd gotten the opportunity to socialize with some more prominent members of society, something the make up of her own year group did not allow for all that much. So far Sonora was nothing like she'd always been hoping for. Angelique had always hoped that she'd make fabulous friends and connections when she went to school. The whole social whirl she'd dreamed of her entire life. Unfortunately for her, proper classmates were limited to her roommate, her roommate's twin, her own distant cousin Tasha,Daniel Fintoc and a few second years.

Maybe it would have been different had she had anything in common with the rest of her classmates. When it came down to it, Angelique would take a Muggleborn girly-girl-someone she had more in common with-than a pureblood tomboy any day. Unfortunately for her, this didn't seem to be a possibility either. From what Angelique could tell, Muggles did not value what was feminine at all, raising their daughters to be into sports every bit as much as their sons. That it wasn't okay to be girly. To her this seemed just as sexist as anyone said the pureblood world was.

She was terrified she'd become an outcast. And to Angelique, that was a fate worse than death. Or ruined clothing.

The first year sighed to herself as she waited with her team. She listened to Mr. Xavier's instructions. Okay, art wasn't her hobby but it was a perfectly respectable thing to do. Even if the medium was dirt. "We should add lots of flowers to make it pretty." Angelique suggested. "Maybe like flowers in the shape of something else, I mean, that would be so much prettier than mud."
11 Angelique Brockert Team 11 332 Angelique Brockert 0 5


Ginger Pierce

February 25, 2016 10:39 AM
Ginger was pretty pleased with her team. They weren't super competitive, which was a nice change from Quidditch, but they weren't losing either, which nobody liked doing. No, team eleven was seated comfortably smack dab in the middle of the pack. If they didn't too far down from there after today, she planned to consider her challenge career an unqualified success.

Her head of house was running this one, and as he explained what they were doing, she began grinning. Art! They'd be making art! She had felt useful during the maze challenge thanks to her broom skills, but this one actually sounded fun. Plus the younger years weren't at any more of a disadvantage than anyone else, which was really great, too.

In fact, their team's first year made the first suggestion on what they might do with their display. "Flowers are good," Ginger approved, "And Mr. Xavier said being pretty was definitely a factor for winning. And he's a gardener, so he must like flowers, too, right? Oh!"

Ginger bounced a little on her feet as a brilliant idea hit her. "Have any of you seen those horticulture and herbology displays at fairs?" She'd seen them at both magical and muggle fairs, so she hoped everyone knew what she was taking about. "You know, like we set up a mini garden and label each type of plant in it? I bet we'd get bonus points for that from Mr. Xavier, and maybe Professor O'Malley, too, if they're potion ingredients!"

The possible drawback to that plan occurred to her belatedly. "Um, do we know the names of many flowers growing in the Gardens?" Her eyes widened suddenly as another thought came to her, "Or does Mr. Xavier already have some labelled anywhere in the Gardens? Has anyone seen anything like that out here?"
1 Ginger Pierce Flowers are good, I like flowers! 302 Ginger Pierce 0 5

Jake Manger

February 26, 2016 3:34 PM
Jake woke up with a heavy heart. The finality of the last challenge had struck him, and subsequent “lasts” had also found their way to him. Yes, he would be sad to see the challenges go as they were a great chance to do things with Ginger and Diana,plus he had gotten to meet some new people as well, and he liked the overarching theme of inter-House unity they promoted. But mostly, he was sad to see them conclude because he realized abruptly that this was basically the last thing he and his brother would get to do together at Sonora. Arnold was leaving.

He supposed he should have known it was coming. It was inevitable. His brother was two years his senior (how they’d gotten to be this old already simply baffled Jake), and with his fifth year at its end, he should have known that Arnold would fast be departing. And then who knew where he would be going? College was his path, as far as the Teppenpaw knew, but he didn’t know where. Heck, Arnold didn’t even know where yet, and it was getting late; soon he would be out of time, and then what would become of him?

As much as he loved his sister, Sally’s graduation and even disappearance had not left as much of an impact as he knew this would. She had been quite a bit older than him, graduating the year before he even arrived at Sonora, so the last time they had ever really been home together much, he had been about three years old. They were close, but not like this. Arnold was his everything. Through all the ups and downs, even the ones Jake hadn’t known about at the time, Arnold was there for him. He protected him, kept his best interests in mind. They were both so very young when their parents divorced, but Arnold was his rock even then. He didn’t know what he would do without him.

At the challenge, Jake did his best to be positive (as he always did, although overall it had been considerably harder this year, his summer revelation still very present in his mind, resurfacing every so often with a faint memory he had excused at the time, accepting the rhetoric spat by their father). He didn’t want to alert his friends to his sadness, if nothing else than because there was really nothing to be done about it. Nobody could fix this. Nobody could make Arnold stay here. So concerning them would have been a waste of everybody’s time.

He listened closely to the instructions, although even those deflating him slightly. Arnold loved art, and he was good at it, too, although the Aladren would insist he wasn’t good enough for art school. Maybe he was right, since the few art school applications he put in had come back negative, but to Jake, his big brother’s work was flawless.

Angelique said something about flowers to make their sculpture pretty, and Ginger ran with it, contributing her own ideas as well. Jake didn’t really catch what exactly her ideas were, too caught up in the sound of her voice. It was...nice. And he found himself feeling a bit lighter, as often he did when Ginger Pierce graced him with her presence. She, too, was flawless--her own work of art.

“Yeah,” he said dumbly. “I mean, uh, I think that sounds good.” Having missed most of her speech, Jake was unaware he completely missed questions that required specific responses. He felt a slight blush tinge his cheeks, embarrassed by his semi-secret lack of attentiveness (and by the cause for it), and gave a sheepish grin.
12 Jake Manger I like what you like 280 Jake Manger 0 5


Diana Carey

February 26, 2016 9:43 PM
Her improvised outfit for the second challenge had not failed her, not even when she fell off her borrowed broom one time while trying to dodge an extra-tricky obstacle, but for the third, Diana had resolved to obtain real pants. In the interests of not completely destroying her reputation, though, she had adjusted them until she thought they would have no longer looked like a guy’s even if she hadn’t turned all the stitching lavender, lightened the color of the main fabric a few shades, and turned the belt buckle into a flower matching those around the neckline of her blouse. The groundskeeper had said they would get dirty, but even if she for some reason – what reason that might be, Diana couldn’t imagine; she assumed the groundskeeper just assumed the Muggleborns would forget they could do magic and that maybe the first years wouldn’t be good enough at it yet – had to stay that for the whole challenge with no opportunity to clean herself up, Diana thought she should still try to look her best for as long as she could.

To further that aim in the long term, she had also worn sunscreen and a hat. She had had to shrink the brim of her sunhat down to make it remotely practical, but it still shaded her face from the glare of the sun, that ever-present threat to the skin of any woman who didn’t want to look like a hag before she was even eighty. Smiling to excess was also frowned on in those pursuing good complexions, but Diana thought she could be allowed one bad habit, at least at the third challenge. Team spirit was, after all, an important component of success, plus she kind of liked most of her teammates for real, which made it easier.

The description of the challenge didn’t exactly give her anything to feel unhappy about, either. True, she was no kind of artist – Brandon was far better at drawing than she was, though they had sometimes passed his drawings off as hers when they were younger because their mother thought that was more of a young lady’s skill than a boy’s – but she was sure Jake or Ginger would have ideas and that the rest of them could figure out how to make them realities.

…If Jake could keep his mind on the task, that was. Diana might have teased him about it had Ginger not been right there, but since she was, he earned a reprieve. She decided to try to distract attention from his blatant lack of attention to what Ginger had actually said so he didn't look quite so...distracted.

“Yes, it does," she said, then addressed Ginger's question. "Now. I haven’t seen many labels on plants out here,” she said, “but I’ve never gone looking, either. I might be able to identify some of them, though. My aunts all love to garden - flowers and herbs - and I’ve been with Aunt Lorraine a lot.” She had had to have something to do between awful etiquette classes after Brandon went away to start school and digging with Aunt Lorraine had been more entertaining than taking care of then-baby Cecilia. Uncle Anthony and Aunt Lorraine’s house was so much nicer than hers that it hadn’t been a burden, either. She was not in line to become one of America’s greatest horticulturists, but she thought she knew a few things. “And the potion ingredients I’d know really well, the herbs,” she added. “Even fresh – still alive, I mean. That’s no problem.”
0 Diana Carey I'd exploit that if I were you, Ginger 294 Diana Carey 0 5