Professor Kijewski

June 30, 2011 9:22 PM
Kiva remembered how much she had enjoyed teaching, but out of all the years that she had taught, the first and second years usually held a special spot for her. This was mainly because they were still young and opened to the idea of Care of Magical Creatures. The older students had already at this point in their educational careers decided on their thoughts and opinions of this class. No matter what Kiva did from their fourth year or on, their minds were formed. It was a bit sad, but she had accepted it a long time ago. But with the first and second years (and maybe even the third years), Kiva still had time to convince them that these creatures could actually be fun and amazing. Sure they had to first learn of the docile creatures before they can learn of the large terrifying ones, but she didn’t find that to be so bad. Sometimes. Well, she’s definitely learned her lesson from past experience. No boring creatures allowed.

She smiled at her students as they made their way down to her clearing. “Hello everyone! Good to see you all, I hope your week is going well.” Kiva greeted. Behind her on the table were two crates, each covered by different blankets. The beginners were a little difficult to select proper animals. She never knew if third years should still be with the beginners or with the intermediates. It was a rough age to be at and really the maturity level varied so greatly between each of them. For now, she’d keep them at the beginner level, but it was possible that in future years (if she was still around since this was only a temporary thing currently) she might decide it was better to move them into intermediate level.

“Today we will be having a practical day instead of just lecture.” Her last time teaching, Kiva had just sort of thrown them into studying the creatures, but this time around, she was having them do research on creatures and then supply the creatures if possible. These two they had already done some reading on, but Kiva wanted them to see them up front so that they can understand that not all magical creatures were totally noticeable.

With a wave of her wand, the blankets were lifted from the crates to reveal a crup in one crate and a kneazle in the other. Neither animal looked at one another, but that was because they were raised together and didn’t give an inkling for each other. Fighting would not occur. “In front of you, you will a crup and a kneazle. These two creatures resemble non-magical creatures so much that often muggles mistake them for non-magical creatures.” Kiva explained to them, releasing the crup first and holding him gently to show him off to the students.

“Crups, like Noedi here, look just like Jack Russell terriers except for one minor little thing…” Kiva turned him so that the students could see his tail. “He has a fork tail. Once witches and wizards obtain a Crup for pets, they must remove the fork tail. This is to protect the Crup as much as it is to protect the secrecy of our society.” Kiva advised them. “Don’t worry, it doesn’t hurt them. Now, a very important fact about Crups is that they hate Muggles. They will attack if they are near any. So, if you ever plan on having one for your pet, you cannot live near muggles.” She wanted to make that very clear to them. Her first spell with a Crup and a student ended terribly, she was not going to let that happen again. “Other than that, Crups are loyal to their owners and eat pretty much anything you give to them.”

Next, she pulled out the kneazle and held it. “Cinder is a pure kneazle, so the variations to a cat are more noticeable, but mixed kneazles are able to blend in perfectly.” Kiva pointed out the ears, “Kneazles have larger ears than normal cats – think of bobcats- spotted fur much like leopards, and tails that look like lion tails.” It was very much like a kneazle might have been creature from mating those three cats together. “But aside from their physical appearance, kneazles are incredible creatures. They are extremely intelligent and can detect suspicious persons. If they do detect someone who is insalubrious, kneazles will react poorly to them. If you see a kneazle reacting, trust them. Also like a crup, if a kneazle takes a liking to a witch or wizard, they are loyal and make excellent pets.”

Now that she had completed the lecture portion of the class, it was time for the students to have some fun. “Okay, everyone now that you know how amazing these creatures are, have some fun with them. They are young and enjoy playing with people. Their crates have toys in them that they favor, so go ahead and grab them.” Before releasing them completely though, Kiva added, “Do not harm these creatures. If any of you poke, pull, or injury them, you will fail this class.” She didn’t think any of them would, but she wanted them to know that she would not stand for cruelty.

OOC: Site rules apply. Please provide at least 200 word posts. Remember that the more detailed and lengthy posts get more posts. Be creative and have fun with the creatures! If you need Kiva, just tag her in the subject line.
Subthreads:
0 Professor Kijewski Beginner's Lesson 1 0 Professor Kijewski 1 5


Cherry Bosko

July 13, 2011 10:01 PM
Cherry Bosko had always wanted a puppy. Specifically, she wanted an Italian Bichon, which was a cross between an Italian Greyhound and a Bichon Frise. A small, energetic dog with long legs and fluffy coat.

Cherry wanted. Mom denied.

Mom thought Cherry wouldn't like walking the dog all the time and wouldn't remember to feed the dog and would be totally grossed out by picking up after the dog. Mom also thought that this mixed breed dog was rather rare and therefore rather expensive. Even Cherry had to admit that Mom had some good points, but the best point of all against dog ownership was that Cherry was at Sonora and dogs were not on the permitted pet list. But apparently, dogs were on the Care of Magical Creatures curriculum. Why crups made that list but not the more important pets one, Cherry had no idea, but there they'd been in the assigned textbook reading and so she had read about them. Crups were different than dogs, but not all that different other than the muggle-hating. There weren't any Italian Frise versions though.

Cherry arrived to this particular CoMC lesson in a clump of other first years coming from Cascade Hall. It was a good day to be outside and Cherry wished they were headed to more flying lessons instead of the class. She'd had a slow start in her first flying class, but she was eager to get back on the school broom some former student had labeled The Enterprise--the significance of which was not entirely lost on Cherry, even if it was a near thing. She'd seen a Star Trek lunchbox or two.

Cherry ended up more or less in the middle of the clump of students and couldn't see much of the crup or kneazle while Professor Kijewski was talking. Cherry was shorter than the other kids, but she wasn't taller either, so mostly she saw a lot of heads and when she tried to look between them she saw more heads. If she hadn't been in the middle, she might have arced to the side for a better view, but as it was she was stuck. It didn't matter. She'd seen a crup before and a kneazle too. Besides, when it was over Cherry joined the other kids in waiting for a turn to pet and play with the creatures.

"I wanted a dog," Cherry commented to her neighbor. "Mom wouldn't let me get one. She thought they were too much work."
0 Cherry Bosko Not the puppy I wanted. 0 Cherry Bosko 0 5


Linus Macaulay

July 15, 2011 12:38 PM
It was difficult to know what to make of this class just from the subject title alone. Linus didn't even know anything about magical creatures - unless dragons were counted, because he'd discovered in his short time at Sonora that dragons were real, but he doubted they would be studying them in a first year class - aside from what he'd read in his textbook. It hadn't been one that he'd read in detail, but it was well illustrated, so he'd seen glimpses of the sort of thing they might study in class. Though, as he hadn't read about them in any detail, he didn't have any idea what they would be like. Besides, the class title indicated that they wouldn't just be taught about the animals generally, but more specifically how to care for them. Linus didn't think he was all that interested in caring for animals, magical or otherwise. He'd shared a couple of hamsters with his siblings, but there had always been arguments about whose turn it was to clean out the cage, and inevitable tears and distress when the poor thing died before its time. In short, he didn't see the point of domesticated animals. If the animals weren't domestictaed, then why should they need to care for them? Consequently, Linus was finding it difficult to summon up excitement for this class.

Nevertheless, he attended on time with the rest of his yeargroup, and was even pleasantly surprised upon discovering in their first class that these lessons would be taught outside. He didn't consider himself to be particularly outdoorsy, or indoorsy for that matter, but it was exhilerating to have a change in scenery every once in a while; learnin from textbooks in a classroom could become dull with repetition, regardless of his interest in the topic. As for today's class, his interest was limited, as they seemed to be studying what was essentially a dog. Dogs didn't need to be studied - Linus saw them all the time. people were always out walking dogs. Okay, so this one had a forked tail and didn't like Muggles, but Linus had seen plenty of dogs who didn't like Muggles, and that didn't make them magic dogs. It just made them vicious.

As other students began to pet the creature, one of Linus' yearmates spoke to him. He recognized the girl, Cherry - Cherry - from the Opening Feast. He struggled to remember he real name, but all he could think of was her ridiculous shortened name that was, in all fact, a piece of fruit. "I think all pets are too much work," Linus commented idly, "but especially dogs. You have to feed them, bathe them, clean up after them, walk them, train them - and most people can't even manage to do all that. Why would you even want a dog, anyway?" The notion baffled him.
0 Linus Macaulay Take what you can get 205 Linus Macaulay 0 5


Cherry Bosko

August 04, 2011 10:01 PM
Cherry resisted the urge to stick her tongue out at Linus Lines up the Ladies, her fellow Crotalus. She'd had limited encounters with him since the opening feast and standing next to him in line... well, she thought maybe he'd loosened up a bit now that it wasn't the first night. But no. He still seemed to be a bit of a party pooper.

"You sound like my mom," she accused him, making a face. She wouldn't have said that at the Opening Feast because it was her first day then, too. But Cherry was a little more comfortable now than before and it just sort of slipped out.

"Dogs can be fun," she told Linus as they moved forward a space or two in the line. "They play fetch and they're almost always happy. Look at him," Cherry motioned to the Crup whose tail wagged wildly, as though he couldn't contain his excitement at so much attention, "you can't help but smile, right?"

Cherry looked to see if Linus was affected by the crup's charms. She doubted it, or at least, she doubted he would show it if he was.
0 Cherry Bosko I will 0 Cherry Bosko 0 5


Linus

August 07, 2011 3:17 PM
Linus was not in the least offended that he apparently sounded like Cherry's mother (unless the nickname had been her idea); being likened to an adult was actually a compliment for the eleven-year-old, who liked to believe he was mature for his years. "I don't deny that dogs can be fun," he replied to her comment levelly. "I just claimed they are a lot of work for relatively little compensation. You can have fun lots of ways that require no work at all." He thought his argument was reasonable and well formed, not to mention delivered with adequate elegance.

He could, in opposition to Cherry's assertions, help smiling when he looked at the crup. It looked friendly, but sometimes dogs looked friendly when they weren't. "I don't see the appeal," he told her. "It's not ugly to look at, but it's hardly exquisite. Anyway, dogs drool and shed on the furniture and eat a lot and need walking and playing with, then there are vets bills, and cleaning up after it," he reeled off ad verbatim his mother's reply to Daphne, who sometimes thought it was the most important thing in the world to have a dog. She naturally would have changed her mind by the following week.

"I just don't understand why people would want pets," he said bluntly. "Cats are cleaner and need less work, but then they don't really do anything, do they? You might as well get a hamster." Then you could keep it in a cage and at least know where it was all the time, unless your little brother left the hatch open and had you all crawling on your hands and knees peering under all the furniture. "I had a hamster once," he told Cherry, so she would know how he'd become such an expert on pets. "They're fairly pointless. Sometimes they'd rather bite you than stroke you, so all they do is run in a wheel, eat, sleep, and make the cage smell bad."
0 Linus As will I 0 Linus 0 5