Professor Tallec

November 03, 2014 3:30 AM
Richard was beginning to feel a little swamped with his work. Not just because he was busy teaching 3 classes, but also because he was trying to get study guides together for those students taking the CATS and RATS. Although he knew he wouldn’t have nearly as much stress as the students actually taking said exams. Lucky for him, he still had the beginner COMC class who, unlike the older students, could have a little more fun with their lessons.

Today they would be studying one of his favorite creatures- besides dragons of course- the Hippogriff. In Richard’s opinion, Hippogriffs were like art, something to be respected and admired, while dragons were more like a fine whiskey. Although they weren’t his main field of study, Hippogriffs held a special place in his heart. After all, it was through his encounter with one that he had discovered his passion for studying magical creatures.

“Hello class, please place your homework assignment on my desk, then take out your books and turn to page 582,” he said getting right down to business. The homework assignment hadn’t been a very hard (or exciting assignment as it was on the flobberworm), but it was part of the curriculum for beginning students. After the class had settled into their seats he began the real lesson.

“Taking a turn from the… lets just say ‘less than interesting’ flobberworm, today we will be studying the Hippogriff,” he said as he marked down the page number on the board just in case anyone had forgotten. “This fantastic beast has the front legs, wings, and head of a giant eagle while it’s body, hind legs and tail resemble that of a horse. Hippogriffs have steel-coloured beaks and large, intense orange eyes. The talons on their front legs are half a foot long and very sharp. However despite their appearance,” he said turning back to the class after he marked several important notes on the board, “it’s usually their sense of pride that makes them so dangerous. Which is why for humans, its important to maintain the proper etiquette to avoid danger. For instance, you must bow to them before approaching as a sign of respect, and the Hippogriff must bow back if you are to try and approach it. If it doesn’t, then you might want to get away from it as quickly as possible, lest you find out just how sharp it’s talons are,” he said remembering his first encounter with a particularly moody Hippogriff. “However for the most part, Hippogriffs are very kind and extremely loyal creatures. Going along with this, they are able to be tamed- only by experts I might add- which is why they are merely classified as XXX.”

Now came the bad news, Richard figured that students might be a little disappointed the day’s task, but it was a much needed lesson if he wanted them to actually get a hands on experience with them later in the month. “Today you will practice this bow with a partner,” he announced, “this may seem easy enough, but there are few extra things you need to remember. 1. It should be a low respectful bow,” he said demonstrating to the class. During his first encounter with a Hippogriff he took this rule much too lightly and ended the day with a large scratch on his arm as punishment for his negligence. As a result he wanted to emphasize this point to his students.

“When you practice the bow, your partner should be looking for things like graceful movements, making sure it’s a low bow from the hips, and that there is constant eye contact,” Richard said straitening himself and walking over to the board once more to write down these points. “Which brings me to my second point. Always keep eye contact, and that means no blinking- especially during the bow. If you break the eye contact for even a second, then the Hippogriff may perceive it as rude and attack.”

“Be sure to be critical of your partners actions, as a Hippogriff most defiantly will. If I see that you are goofing off or aren’t taking the assignment seriously then you will not be allowed to participate in the hands-on day next week. Just in case any of you were wondering- yes, it will be a real Hippogriff, but only those who take this week's lessons seriously will be allowed to approach it,” he added in a serious tone. He really wanted all the students to get a chance to interact with the amazing creature, but he had to keep his ground on this. He didn’t want to be sending all the students to Doctor Eir after all.

“Well, get to bowing,” he said with a smile, excusing his class to begin. “Students who think they are ready for an extra challenge can have their partners purposely try and distract or surprise them as a test. Remember practice makes perfect!” Richard added as he began to walk around the class.

OOC:
Creative, realistic posts are worth more points. If Richard is needed, please tag Professor Tallec in the subject line. Posting rules apply. Please add house after name. Have fun!
Subthreads:
0 Professor Tallec Practice for the ball [Beginner Class] 0 Professor Tallec 1 5


Lionel Layne, Pecari

November 06, 2014 11:50 AM
It wasn’t the best piece of work he had ever done, but Lionel was more than happy to put his homework assignment on flobberworms on Professor Tallec’s desk. He had been subjected to more boring things than flobberworms before – at least they moved, and it was kind of neat, at least at first, watching the way they moved, and trying to figure out which end was which, which was an improvement over the arithmetic and grammar drills he’d had to do in a lot of elementary school before he came to Sonora – but they were still not exactly an enthralling topic. Lionel doubted his potioneer uncle would even care much about them, even though their only known use was producing mucus to thicken potions.

He grinned when even Professor Tallec agreed that flobberworms had not been very interesting, but the expression faded into a more impressed expression as the professor continued his lesson. Plenty of their lessons had been more interesting than flobberworms before, but this one sounded like it was going to be actually dangerous, which was…new.

All magic was, of course, dangerous, and there was always the chance that a Really Bad Person would come along to demonstrate. Even first years learned a few simple hexes and jinxes that they could, in an absolute pinch, use to defend themselves until better help arrived, and bungling a potion too badly could kill anybody at any age. Transfiguration also had the potential to get really wacky if someone did the wrong things with it, or did them in the wrong way; the warning portion of his book was full of stuff about how people who didn’t know what they were doing who attempted human transfigurations could end up deformed and stuff. Even simple Charms could be dangerous, since the textbook said levitation could be used to great effect in a duel. For beginners, though, at least, classes were usually safe as long as they followed procedures to the letter. Hippogriffs went right past that and into a whole different category, at least from the way Professor Tallec made it sound.

For him and his classmates, Lionel thought this was going to be cool, a good introduction to the more interesting material that awaited them in intermediate classes next year. He worried, though, a little about the first years. Habit, he guessed; he was enough older than his sister that he had always been allowed to do things while Grandmother had always told Amelia, who wanted to do them, too, that she was too little and then told him to make sure she didn’t try behind Grandmother and Granddad’s backs. Younger people, now that there were some around, just seemed like they should be more like Amelia than like he had been this time last year.

In actuality, though, he thought some of the first years might have an edge on him in the assignment today. There were some people who were taught bowing gracefully from the time they could walk, but Lionel was not one of the people who had received such instruction. Bowing just wasn’t something people where he was from did very often. Even Isaac, his pureblood cousin who had money, didn’t do it much. Getting it right might not be as easy as it sounded.

He looked for a classmate and made eye contact with one. “Do you want to work together?” he asked. “I’ve never done this before, but it can’t be that hard, right?” Which was the opposite of what he’d just thought, but he thought it was better to sound positive than too cautious.
16 Lionel Layne, Pecari Getting the party started. 283 Lionel Layne, Pecari 0 5

Joella Curtis, Pecari

November 16, 2014 6:22 AM
Joella had spent the previous night completing a last minute assignment on what she considered to be the most boring creatures in the world. It shouldn't have been particularly difficult but concentrating on flobberworms for long enough to actually write about them wasn't exactly something that came easily to someone like Joella. She was happy to hand in the assignment which marked the end of such a boring topic and could only hope that the next creature they studied would be far more interesting.

Joella didn't dislike the class. She accepted that first years were beginners and therefore studied simpler creatures at first. There were so many creatures in the world and it made sense that the school would teach about whatever magical crearures they could get their hands on. Practical lessons were always miles better than theory in Joella's opinion.

Nevertheless, the young Pecari turned to page 582 in her book with some reluctance. She was then pleasantly surprised by the contents of the page and had to double check the number on her page with that Professor Tallec was now writing on the board.

Hippogriffs. Joella adored these creatures. In fact, she had a particular love for any beast that flew or had features of a horse. Hippogriffs met both of these categories.

Growing up on a farm she had a fondness for animals and a benign confidence with that. Whilst she couldn't recall the Curtis farm ever having homed Hippogriffs, Joella had come into contact with such beasts numerous times at the home of one her best friends, Audrey Montague, whose parents bred Abraxan horses in Virginia. In addition to their main business of Abraxans, Mr and Mrs Montague homed several Aethonans and Granians as well as other supposedly "non-magical" unwinged horses and other animals such as Hippogriffs.

And so Joella, who had ample experience with what was required in the presence of such beasts and who had even gotten the chance to ride a couple of Hippogriffs in her eleven years, was confident that for once she may actually be top of the class - even if it was just for the one topic.

It was a relief when Lionel Layne asked her if she wished to partner up. Finding a partner herself in classes was a faff she didn't particularly enjoy so it was always nice when classmates came to her. She had spoken with Lionel at the Returning Feast and he had seemed very nice so Joella was of course in no ways reluctant to reply with a "sure" and then "oh, I've done it a few times and no, it's not that hard." She hoped she didn't come across as bragging with her casual "I've done it a few times" but it was true, she had - it was rare that Joella got the opportunity to be one of the more knowledgeable students in class situations, especially when the first years shared their classes with second years, so she wasn't going to pretend otherwise. She wasnt entirely truthful in her response to Lionel's assumption, however, as her first encounter with a Hippogriff wasn't something she would define as "easy". It had been a success but it couldn't be denied that the idea of keeping eye contact at all times had been a struggle for a girl who was so used to handling animals that felt uncomfortable when it was held for too long.

Maybe Lionel wouldn't find it difficult but at least the class got to practise before it actually mattered whether they got it right or not. Joella grinned. "OK, so let's do this." She gave a low and graceful bow, not dropping eye contact with her partner. Even though she had done it before, she still listened to Professor Tallec's instructions and was quite pleased with how smooth her movements were.
8 Joella Curtis, Pecari Joining the party. 295 Joella Curtis, Pecari 0 5


Lionel Layne

November 17, 2014 8:15 AM
Lionel raised his eyebrows slightly, impressed, when Joella said she had done this a few times before. He knew a lot of backgrounds involved a lot more interaction with magical creatures than his own did, but he couldn’t imagine Grandmother letting him near something with claws that big before school. Granddad might, though, if Grandmother were somewhere else and he was convinced that Lionel could be trusted not to tell about it later. “That’s good to hear,” he said.

She bowed and kept eye contact at the same time, which was even more impressive. He was sure that he would have forgotten the part about eye contact if he had gone first, which would have been disastrous if he had been dealing with a real hippogriff. Maybe the reasons would have been different – nerves instead of just thinking about the bowing part more because it was unusual and he thought of it as something that involved looking at the floor – but he didn’t think the hippogriff would have really cared all that much about his reasoning. The downside of interacting with animals was that it was usually impossible to talk one’s way out of a situation, even for those who were blessed with a talent for doing so. Lionel thought he was no more than an intermediate in that arena and was so glad that he hadn’t needed to try it recently.

“Good,” he complimented Joella, despite not being sure how much his opinion counted since he had just admitted that he didn’t have a clue what he was doing a minute earlier. “Okay, my turn.”

He remembered to keep eye contact, though it felt strange to bend his back and raise his head at the same time to do so. His movements were not smooth, though, and his feet tried to wander beneath him as he tried to coordinate his movements, making him feel for a moment as though his feet were about to go out from under him altogether and make him fall down. He straightened back up, extending one arm to balance himself, quickly and grinned sheepishly, a little embarrassed, at his much more graceful partner.

“I guess that could use a little work,” he said. “Do you have any tips on how it works or anything?” He knew there were different kinds of bowing and curtsying, which meant it was a thing that people were taught, which meant there might be...steps, helpful hints, something.
16 Lionel Layne Did you bring a dish? 283 Lionel Layne 0 5

Joella Curtis, Pecari

November 17, 2014 12:33 PM
After straightening up, Joella watched Lionel take his turn at the bow. Even though he had told her that he had never come into contact with a Hippogriff before, the young Pecari had high expectations of her classmate. He was, after all, a boy and she made the ignorant assumption that he would have a great deal more experience in bowing than she herself. Joella could only recall ever having performed such a greeting in front of a Hippogriff, under the impression from the few etiquette classes she failed to escape as a younger child that a girl was to curtsey (something she tried to avoid doing as much as possible but found was inevitable in her social circle) and a boy was to bow.

Despite her apparently misjudged presumptions, Joella didn't appear surprised by Lionel's inadequacy. It was, in all fairness, a low bow that was required and when partnered with prolonged eye contact it could perhaps prove difficult.

"That was good," Joella offered in a phrase that she hoped didn't sound too generous yet by no means devoid of positivity. She thought it had been good for a first try, just perhaps not quite what a Hippogriff was looking for. Lionel's question was rather pleasing to her ears and she rather liked the idea of a second year asking her for tips for once rather than it being the other way around. Still, she wasn't entirely sure how to answer it. Maybe it was just because she was naturally quite flexible but the first year had always found the "no blinking" to be the hardest part of all, yet she didn't think this was the area that Lionel flawed in.

She pulled a face for a second as she contemplated what it was that had caused Lionel's movement to be so inelegant. "You need to bend from the hips," she told him confidently then gave an uncertain smile, "at least, that's where I think you're going wrong." Joella hoped this advice would make some difference as she didn't really know what else she could give him. All she could remember being told was to bow low and keep eye contact and everything had been fine. Then again, memories weren't always one hundred percent reliable. Perhaps past experience wasn't really that helpful, for this practise lesson anyway.
8 Joella Curtis, Pecari Yes, a dish of unhelpful experience. 295 Joella Curtis, Pecari 0 5


Lionel Layne

November 18, 2014 10:54 AM
Lionel grinned when Joella responded to his performance. “Come on, now,” he said teasingly. “You got to work harder to lie to somebody who knows the truth.”

He was not sure that sentence made sense, but didn’t think it mattered much. The fact was that he was not a very graceful bow-er (or whatever the word was; he thought a ‘bower’ was either a room or something in a garden, couldn’t remember which, but it didn’t usually refer to a person who was bowing) and he was aware of it. Grace and stumbling didn’t usually go together so well. The definitions of the words didn’t match up well enough for them to describe the action…or at least, he thought not….

He shook his head before he could start trying to figure out if there was such a thing as a graceful stumble and got back to the matter at hand.

“You might be right,” he said when Joella offered advice, trying to remember his own movement and thinking it had been more from the middle of his back than from his hips. He felt like he’d fall over if he bent at the hips too much, but that was the right way to do it, so he’d have to work on it. “Might be my feet, too – might be a little steadier if they weren’t right next to each other?” He had seen his cousin Alicia working on her fancy curtsies a few times when they were all little, and it had been a complicated sort of thing she’d done with her feet – one of them had started out extended in front of her and been extended behind her when she came up – but her feet hadn’t just been together the whole time. He tried putting his out of line, extending the right one further ahead of the left, and did feel a little steadier as he leaned forward, concentrating on not bending his back and forgetting to keep his head up at the same time.

"I think I'm gonna need a lot of practice to get this right," he said, smiling ruefully, "but I'll get it together sooner or later. How'd you come to do it before?" he asked, still curious about that. He couldn't help imagining Joella living on a gigantic ranch, learning to play Quidditch on giant flying horses and finding the Sonora iteration of the game boring after that, but he suspected the last part, at least, was pure fancy. The first part might, though, be true.
16 Lionel Layne Hey, it's better than what I'm bringing to the table. 283 Lionel Layne 0 5

Joella Curtis

November 20, 2014 4:26 AM
Joella wasn't bad at lying on the whole but in some areas of the subject she was better than others and when it came to telling others what she thought of something she was terrible. Hence it was no surprise that Lionel sussed her out. However, she had been completely lying - having no experience with rookies to greeting Hippogriffs other than herself, she assumed that Lionel hadn't been too bad for a first try. Perhaps it took several attempts to perfect.

She grinned at her partner, "Well, I guess it needs some work but for a first attempt..."

The eleven year old was rather pleased when Lionel agreed with her advice, not caring to consider that it may just be out of politeness but instead fancying that it had actually been a rather sound piece of advice.

He made a good point about his feet and now that Joella actually thought about it she was pretty sure that she brought her right leg back a little. Her classmate, however, chose to bring his right leg forward. Accompanied with her own instruction this seemed to be an improvement on his previous attempt.

Joella smiled, "That was better - maybe you should try bringing one leg back slightly rather than forward." She wasn't sure if it would make a difference as she had never experimented such a thing but it couldn't hurt to test it.

"Oh I have a friend in Virginia whose parents breed all sorts of horses," she told Lionel. "So I've gotten the chance to ride a few Hippogriffs there - they aren't their main line of business but they have a few." She had often wished that she had one of her own but it would be rather pointless considering that she spent much of the year at Sonora now. The Curtis farm had more than enough variety of animals to keep her happy as it was.
8 Joella Curtis I wouldn't count on it. 295 Joella Curtis 0 5


Lionel Layne

November 25, 2014 9:43 AM
“That’s fair enough,” said Lionel amiably to the amended statement. A first attempt at anything that didn’t involve landing face-first on the ground was not too bad for most people. He was still upright, so it could have been worse.

He didn’t see that moving one foot backward would really change the overall position of his feet more than moving one forward, but it was worth a try. There were a lot of things, after all, that only worked by communal agreement. “You could be right again,” he said. “I’ve seen one of my cousins do something kind of like that – ‘course, she had her toes pointed, I think it was a dancing thing, what she was doing, but it’s all related, isn’t it?” He grinned. “I’m glad I don’t have to know all this in, you know, just daily life,” he said. “There’d be a good, old-fashioned lost cause for you….”

Probably it wouldn’t really be – Uncle Jeremy had practically raised Alicia since she was a baby, but her sisters had both been older when he and Aunt Emily got married, and Lionel thought Rachel and Kate had both learned this stuff, too. Aunt Emily and Aunt Helena and to a lesser extent Uncle Geoff had all learned it, he thought, as full adults - Granddad said sometimes that he was proud of them for not showing, as far as Granddad could tell, where they were from at all. He wasn’t the most brilliant apple ever to fall off the family tree, but if they could all pull it off, he was sure he could, too. He didn’t, however, have any desire to do so, which might be a factor in his success if he ever had to try….

He raised his eyebrows a little, impressed, at her statement about her friends in Virginia. “That’s cool,” he said. “Most of my people are from the suburbs, so I guess that explains some of it.” Aunt Helena lived, Grandmother and Granddad had always said, in a lovely house in the countryside with Uncle Orville and his other set of cousins, but he didn’t think she kept horses or anything, and his family didn't really have friends - just Aunt Anne, and Lionel was pretty sure she didn't have any hippogriffs, either, though he did think they might be her kind of thing.
16 Lionel Layne We'll scrape together some kind of meal eventually. 283 Lionel Layne 0 5

Joella Curtis

December 04, 2014 5:13 AM
Joella wasn't sure as to whether or not Lionel's words surprised her. She had vaguely recognised the name Layne and so given him the benefit of the doubt in assuming he must in some way be part of respectable society. His talk of his cousin gave suggestion that he was at least linked with such people but the young Pecari had already begun to doubt that Lionel himself was. He looked unpractised in the art of bowing for starters. And so when he admitted to the fact that such routine was never part of his daily life, Joella found her suspicions confirmed. But she wasn't about to get her snob on. There was a time and a place and a person for everything and right now she didn't really think it was appropriate to question the second year's background. She liked Lionel and thought he would make a good friend. Even if he was to be in a different class than her next year, there was no reason why he couldn't make amiable company for her this year. She was, after all, with a lack of classmates to pair up with and whilst no one seemed to be picky about who they chose, Joella had come to see Lionel as a familiar and friendly face

"Oh that's lucky for you," she smiled, unsure as to whether she was referring to his lack of success in the greeting or to her own hatred of society's formalities. Joella often felt a little indifferent to her own world and being the youngest in her family by so much seemed to have allowed her some slack. She could still recall the first day of Sonora where she had failed to curtsey in front of her roommates. Away from the prying eyes of adults and in the comfort of what was to be her bedroom for the next seven years, she had allowed herself to relax even more and was therefore surprised at the way most pureblood parents drilled etiquette into their children so much that it became automatic and not something more like a chore. Joella only did such things because she had to, not because she thought it polite.

Despite her evident lack of knowledge on all the pureblood families in attendance at Sonora, she was pleased to be able to benefit from her family's closest connections. Lionel seemed impressed which was to Joella always a good thing. She didn't live to impress and liked to think she cared little for the opinions of others but it really couldn't be denied that the eleven year old liked to be envied or admired or held in high esteem.

Although the young Pecari had grown up on a farm in Tennessee, she was by no means oblivious to the urban world. The family farm wasn't a great distance from Franklin and she had even journeyed to Nashville on numerous occasions. In addition to this, the Curtises owned a L.A residence largely due to Ivan's work as an Auror which he had long been debating whether or not to retire from. The suburbs she could imagine. "Whereabouts are you from?" she asked Lionel, although she was pretty certain she knew from his accent.
8 Joella Curtis Here's to hoping it will be good enough. 295 Joella Curtis 0 5