Professor Donovan Cohen

February 18, 2011 7:18 PM
It was a little before half past seven in the evening when students started to show up near the entrance of Labyrinth Gardens where Don was standing. He had his acacia wand out and lit up, the bright tip pulsing high above the heads of the younger students so that they knew where he was to make the journey over to him easier. It provided enough light to make everyone a few feet from him able to see despite the falling darkness of the nightly hour, though he still had a few torches around the area set up and lit as well. He knew too much light might scare off the creatures they were waiting for, but not enough and one student who didn’t know any sort of Charms to cast light could stumble into something and hurt themselves. He hoped he had done enough so that he could avoid such a thing from happening.

Don had gone through a lot of work to ensure that everyone in his beginning years knew that class was cancelled that day and to show up at this time, this place instead. While he had made such announcements and reminders throughout his classes during the week, he still had a few students who found him outside that day who let the news slip their minds. It was odd to be holding class this late, so he didn’t hold it against them. Though he wouldn’t really call today’s lesson as a class since it was more-or-less a break from all the tedious work he had been giving them.

After waiting patiently for a few stragglers to race over, the yoga-enthusiast started to speak. “Good evening everyone. Since we have been doing a lot of bookwork over the course of this week about creatures that come out during certain moon cycles, I thought everyone might appreciate a change of pace and some firsthand experience with one of the creature we’ve been getting background information on.” Don didn’t usually have so much text reading, so he was at least glad to go back to getting to work with creatures with his younger years again. “Since our unit happens to be during the full moon cycle and a few of the creatures we’re looking at are already here, this is a good chance for everyone to get to see Mooncalves.”

The class had looked at Mooncalves’ information earlier that week, so they already went over how they burrow underground and only dig to the surface to dance on its back legs in the moonlight. Though the books didn’t have any pictures or good descriptions of the creatures, so the students might not know what to expect. Seeing some clouds brush over the face of the moon, Don urged everyone to back away from the ground near the hedges of the Labyrinth and stay quiet. “There are twelve Mooncalves that should be surfacing in a few minutes, and I’d like everyone to watch their dance without interrupting.” Respecting other creatures was very important to Don, and he could get very stern with immaturity in regards to that. “After they are finished, they will graze for a while before going back into their burrows. The most they’ll be out is about an hour, so you’ll have plenty of time to get back to your dorms before curfew.”

Seeing a spot on the ground stir, Don cleared his throat. “I’ll be dimming the light on my wand until they are done dancing now,” he forewarned before doing just that, eagerly watching to see the gentle creatures come out. The moonlight was shining down brilliantly now, so he didn’t even think he needed to have his wand lit anyways.

Slowly, the Mooncalves dug up, their slate skin covering their scrawny frames. They resembled aliens with their large, bulging eyes and flipper feet, and the elegant dance they somehow all managed to pull off in synchronization made them all the more unworldly. After about ten minutes, the dancing stopped, and the creatures supported themselves on all four of their sticklike legs.

Increasing the intensity of the light on his wand again, Don nodded to his class. “These Mooncalves are sociable enough to approach, feel, and observe up close, so feel free to do so now, but please try not to crowd around them as they are somewhat shy.”

Standing stiffly, Don watched as the students went off to go look at the creatures at a closer range. He made sure to watch the students and creatures to make sure everyone was getting along all right. Hopefully this was a good way to take a break from coursework.

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OOC: Enjoy the lesson, and please post your House name with your Author’s name. Any questions/comments feel free to tag Don. That being said, have fun with it :)
Subthreads:
0 Professor Donovan Cohen When the moon is full… (Years 1/2) 0 Professor Donovan Cohen 1 5


Hope Brockert, Teppenpaw

February 24, 2011 8:21 PM
Hope sighed to herself as she reached the clearing. She wanted to look forward to this class as she did most things. However, she had gotten a letter from her mother earlier in the day saying that Harmony was quite sick and in the hospital again. That made Hope sad, as she'd become close to her cousin's fiance last summer. The first year just wanted her to be okay.

She wanted everyone to be okay. Hope really didn't want to see anyone sick or hurt or sad. It really bothered her to do so. Especially someone she cared about. All the first year would want to do is help them, but sometimes, she couldn't and that upset her too.

Nothing in the world frustrated Hope so much as that. Not even not understanding a lesson, though so far she actually had. Though she had yet to master some of them, such as changing an animate object to an inanimate one. Transfiguration was often thought to be one of the hardest subjects. Hope doubted she would ever be the top of her class but that was okay. It was far more important to her to be kind, helpful and a good person than to beat her classmates in academics.

As Professor Cohen began to speak about Mooncalves, Hope tried to listen but she couldn't focus. What if Harmony died ? Not only would Hope miss her but Marshall would definitely be upset. He'd had a break down years ago, when she was little, and the Teppenpaw was worried that her cousin could have another one if he lost the woman he loved. And he might never recover. That scared Hope terribly. She didn't want Marshall to end up in a locked ward.

She stood there while the Mooncalves danced. To anyone, it would appear that Hope was entranced by the creatures, which she had been expecting to see, as they'd been studying them earlier in the week and the Teppenpaw couldn't see Professor Cohen changing the time if they weren't studying a creature that only came out during the full moon. However, despite that fact that she'd really been looking forward to seeing the Mooncalves, Hope wasn't paying a bit of attention to them.

As they began to graze, Hope walked over and sat down against a tree. It appeared that all they were to do was pet the Mooncalves if they wanted, and Hope didn't really feel like it.
11 Hope Brockert, Teppenpaw ...er, it's really bright? 186 Hope Brockert, Teppenpaw 0 5

Sophie Jamison [Pecari]

February 25, 2011 12:33 PM
Sophie liked Care of Magical Creatures. She liked animals, always had. Muggle creatures were cool and all, like her dog and all of the birds in the aviary at her house, but Magical creatures were just… amazing. Like, some of them could do crazy magic stuff that even witches and wizards couldn’t do. That was just impressive.

Like Mooncalves. They tunneled underground and then danced in the moonlight?! That was amazing. If they were underground, how would they know when to come up? Animal instincts always impressed the twelve year old, and she wished the Mooncalves spoke English--or German, for that matter--so she could ask them her questions.

Professor Cohen told the class to be quiet and not interrupt the Mooncalves’ dance, but Sophie had to struggle to do so. Seeing the creatures come up made her want to squeal in delight. They were so funny looking! The blonde had to suppress a giggle, and that in itself was a struggle for her.

All humor faded away when they began to dance. They were so graceful that their outward appearances hardly mattered anymore. The only noise the Pecari had to suppress was uttering a whoa. Their dance made her want to learn more about them. Sophie reasoned that if she could learn how to be graceful like them, copy their movements, it could possibly help her Quidditch. If she evaded and rushed like they danced, Pecari would no doubt win every match.

After the dance, the twelve year old couldn’t help but applaud a little bit, quietly so she didn’t startle the Mooncalves terribly much. Sophie was then about to go talk to her friend Ryan, who had gone over to pet one, but a sad-looking girl caught her eye. This girl was just sitting against a tree, not doing much of anything.

So instead of petting one of the Mooncalves or talking to Ryan, she went over to the girl. Standing in front of her, the blonde Pecari spoke. “Hey kid, you okay?” she asked with concern in her voice. “Is something wrong?” Sophie couldn’t just let her sit there alone and be sad because that would make her almost as bad as whoever or whatever made the girl that way. Instead, she sat down on the grass beside her.
12 Sophie Jamison [Pecari] Maybe I should've brought sunglasses. 34 Sophie Jamison [Pecari] 0 5


Hope

March 04, 2011 4:43 AM
Hope sat under the tree, lost in thought. She suddenly kind of didn't really want to be at Sonora anymore. She wanted to go home. Hope couldn't help anyone out here. The Teppenpaw was one of the youngest students in school and sometimes, even knowing all that she did about Sonora, still didn't really know how to help people who didn't know quite so much. In Transfiguration, Hope hadn't known really how to help Madeline with exactly what they were expected to do. (Of course, Nina had said that Professor Crosby's actions didn't really make a lot of sense and displeased a lot of students but she also seemed to personally think this was a lot of fun.)

The first year felt useless. She hadn't been able to help her roommate and now she couldn't do anything to help Harmony (or Marshall either). Last summer, Hope had been like a nurse for her cousin's fiance. Now she was at Sonora and couldn't help the older girl out anymore. She would write her a letter to cheer her up though. Hope just hoped that would be enough.

Besides, if she was at home rather than Sonora, she would always be useless. Hope needed to learn how to use her magic correctly, like all magical people did. She would hate to not know how. The Teppenpaw had come from a long line of magical people and she would never be able to figure out how to live without it. Hope didn't think it was right to look down on muggles, but magic was what she'd been raised with.

Truthfully, Hope believed that magical people should try to help muggles. Make their lives easier. Wizards sometimes had cures for tdiseases that worked better than what muggles had from what Hope had always been taught. Didn't they have the responsibility to help people who were suffering? Unfortunately, some wizards didn't see it that way.

She looked up at the girl who had approached her and asked if she was okay. "I'm fine, really." Hope said. "Just a bit worried about some stuff at home." She went on, looking at the girl. She had asked if Hope was okay and maybe that meant she cared. The Teppenpaw liked to believe that most people cared about others. Maybe she could talk to this other girl about what was bothering her. Hope would feel better and they could become friends.

The first year was not worried in the least about scaring her classmate away. Hope reasoned that if the girl didn't care and didn't want to hear it, she wouldn't have asked. If the Teppenpaw asked someone what was wrong, she certainly wouldn't have minded them actually telling her. "It's my cousin's fiance. She lives with my family and me and we became close last summer. Anyway, she's in the hospital again because she's really sick. She has a lot of health problems and I'm worried about her. And my cousin too." Hope explained. She really did not know what would happen to Marshall if something happened to Harmony.
11 Hope Or moonglasses. 186 Hope 0 5

Sophie

March 11, 2011 1:19 PM
“I’m fine, really. Just worried about some stuff at home.” Well, that wasn’t good. The younger girl seemed really alone, and if she was alone with her worries, she might have freaked out or something. Sophie decided that wouldn’t do at all and plopped down on the ground beside her, urging her for more details…which came a moment later.

As soon as she knew why the girl was so worried, Sophie felt sympathy. Her own cousins weren’t engaged, but if Liz--her only cousin theoretically old enough to be engaged--had a sick fiancé, she would have been worried too. “Oh,” was what the blonde brilliantly uttered. What else could she say?

Her twelve-year-old mind puzzled quickly as to what to say. I’m sorry would not change the situation, nor probably even make her feel better. Sophie personally disliked when people apologized for bad things in someone else’s life; unless they had caused it, they had no right to apologize.

The only way her brain could imagine to make the younger girl feel better was point out something worse in Sophie’s own life. Maybe realizing someone else’s bad stuff would make her problem seem not so bad. So, without meaning to, the Pecari replied, “I have a dead mother.”

…Why did I just say that?! “Um,” she said out-loud almost instantly thereafter, “so, like, there are worse things? Your cousin’s fiancé could recover, right? You said she’s always has a lot of health problems, so maybe this is just one of them, and it’ll move on eventually?” The English-accented girl felt completely idiotic, but at the same time, she was hoping she was helping.

“Anyway, I’m sure she’ll be okay,” she smiled. “By the way, I’m Sophie. What’s your name?” The second year didn’t really have a lot of friends at Sonora, but that had never gotten her down, nor had she ever cared to change that. Still, maybe this girl could be her friend. Right now, she only really had Ryan and Neal. Maybe this younger girl could be the female friend that Sophie was lacking.
12 Sophie They make those? 34 Sophie 0 5