Nathan Xavier

May 31, 2021 7:54 PM
Nathan welcomed the students into their Advanced Herbology lesson from well inside Greenhouse Two. It was cold outside and warm in here and he much preferred the later to the former. Greenhouse two was the smaller of the two Sonora greenhouses, and the Advanced class had never been particularly large, so he handed back their assignments as they reached the relatively small central work table that sat under several tropical trees today. The trees hadn't been there the last time these students had been in here last week, but they were growing out of the ground and reached for the upper panels of the greenhouse like they'd been growing there for years and years.

If some of the students eyed them with distrust, Nathan could not really blame them. RATS level herbology could do a lot of harm to a person's trust of unfamiliar vegetation and these were planted disturbingly close to the work table for anything they might be studying in Advanced Herbology.

"I will remind you all that we have finished the flesh eating trees unit for this year," he began by way of reassurance, "as well as the unit on Deadly Defensive Vegetation." The current unit was entitled Plants That Start Fires, Explode, or Otherwise Endanger Innocent Bystanders to Reproduce. It was the first day of this new unit, following the two weeks of review they'd done right after midterm to catch them back up to speed after being away, and also so not all of the tediously boring but necessary RATS review would come at the end of the year. He liked to space it out between each unit so as not to cause brain aneurisms in his seventh years.

Anyway, it was the first day of the new unit, and he wasn't sure how many of them remembered what they'd be studying now and be alarmed despite his reassurances. They were definitely in range of any fire, explosion, or attack these trees might care to make.

"These trees are called Hura Crepitans, and have several common names that non-Herbologists use to talk about them. Among them are: the sandbox tree, possumwood, and jabillo. More colloquially, they have also earned the names: the Monkey No-Climb Tree, and the Dynamite Tree. They're native to North and South America, and particularly in the Amazon rainforest, though they grow elsewhere as well. They have spines as a defensive mechanism," he pointed those out, dark pointed spines poking out of the bark of the trunk, "but that's strictly a non-magical defense, and you don't need to worry about them being shot out at you. They're only a problem if you want to climb the tree, which is how it got its Monkey No Climb moniker."

"The more exciting feature of this tree is its fruit." He pulled what looked like a small yellow pumpkin out of his pocket and placed it gently - very gently, too gently, alarmingly gently - on the table between his advanced students. Anyone who chose to look away from the botanical grenade and instead look at the trees would be relieved to see they had red unpetalled flowers blooming off some of the spikes but no pumpkin-like fruits.

"These fruits can grow to be about one to two inches high and two to three inches in diameter." The example one sat on the large end of that range. "When it is ripe, it explodes, and they can shoot their seeds out at about 156 miles per hour or 70 meters per second. Depending on how thick the forest is around them, they can make it up to about 150 feet away. These trees are known to muggles, and though they have observed this behavior, they do not suspect the tree of being magical."

He wasn't entirely clear on how they thought this was happening if it wasn't magic, but the species was prolific enough that it would be a nightmare to try to restrict muggle access to the trees, so he half believed wizard regulators just said muggles did not suspect magic so they didn't need to deal with the headache of that. And that in turn made it much easier and cheaper for Nathan to get a hold of some examples because they weren't on any restricted lists anywhere, so he wasn't about to shake that boat. Muggles did not suspect a thing.

"Pods do need to be dry to explode." Observant students would see that the one on their table was dripping slightly and already had small puddle under it. "It's very loud, and quite dangerous to be around, given the high speeds and sharp edges they break into, and the seed sap is very toxic. We are not going to watch it explode in class today. What I do have to show you is what one looks like after it explodes." He used his wand to summon over a tray with flat seeds and shattered fruit bits. "These are toxic," he repeated again. "Do not touch them without gloves. One of the uses of this plant is as a poison."

"What you will be doing for your practical today is just looking at the trees, the fruit, and the seeds. You may try your hand at drawing, or just write in words about how they look. You may talk amongst yourselves, sharing your observations and thinking of any questions you would like to ask during discussion. Do wear your gloves if you intend to touch anything, not just the exploded fruit, but nothing here is imminently dangerous at this time if you follow that simple precaution." For good measure he cast a watering charm on the non-exploded fruit, drenching it again, just to be sure. "Also, no drying charms, please." These were advanced students. He did not insult them by telling them not to eat the very toxic plant.

"Also, your homework will be about what kind of potions parts of this tree may be used in, so you can start thinking about that, too, if you'd like. We will begin the discussion part of the lesson in twenty minutes. You may begin."


OOC: These are a real thing.
Source: Wikipedia
Subthreads:
1 Nathan Xavier Advanced: Hura crepitans 28 1 5

Johana Leonie Zauberhexen

June 08, 2021 10:21 AM
Johana Leonie had taken herbology largely because of the use of magical plants in healing, and because turning to nature for important things in life was in her blood after the way she'd grown up. She did not like the study of horrible dangerous plants at all. It was scary. She supposed it was helpful to know what sort of wounds people might encounter out in the wild. Wounds from this particular sort of plant, she suspected, would be dreadful.

Satisfied to check her plant out from a safe distance, Johana Leonie retrieved some paper and a graphite from her bag and began making notes and drawings based on what she was seeing. As usual, her notes were primarily in German, with little English notations next to them. These were usually limited to single words that, as best she could, captured the topic of the note. She'd found that this made it possible for non-German speaking students to share her work and ask about specific things based on what they saw in English rather than just having a page of gibberish to them. She still thought they should all just learn German but she was doing a better job at learning English than they were of the opposite so she had mostly stopped complaining and resigned herself to being the bilingual one.

One student seemed to have either noticed her drawings, her notes, or something else on her paper and was peeping at her work. Knowing that this was fine and they were meant to work together most of the time, Johana Leonie offered them a smile. "What have you?" she asked, nodding towards where they might have their own work started (or not - she couldn't see from there). "We compare?"
22 Johana Leonie Zauberhexen This does not heal. 1432 0 5

Sophia Priory

June 30, 2021 9:35 PM
Sophia had never been all that into doing dangerous things. For example, she thought Quidditch was kind of stupid personally, even though she supported Hilda, and she was not inclined to perform stupid stunts or get too close to something that wanted to harm her. However, from a purely academic standpoint, learning about dangerous plants was kind of cool.

And while she'd never been particularly crazy about doing dangerous things, she had to admit reading about them was a different story. Or perhaps, reading about that were sort of...on the dark side was more accurate. Sophia liked to read about cults and dark wizards and true crime. Not only were they interesting, knowing about those things and how they worked meant having the knowledge, in some cases, to avoid them or fight them if you came across them.

This was just another one of the many many differences between Sophia and her sister. Lydia was terrified of everything it seemed. The first year seemed like she wanted to hide away in a tower and never grow up, some weird mixture of Rapunzel and Peter Pan-and the Aladren sometimes thought their parents would let her. After all, it was their parents' fault that Lydia was so....childish. Sophia didn't mean that her sister was, like, bratty-she was probably nicer and more cooperative than the sixth year was- just that she was...immature, child-like, less grown-up that she had been herself at that age.

And her parents seemed to encourage it or at least not be too bothered by it. Dad had anxiety issues of his own, and it might have been at least somewhat accidental on his part. Lydia might have seen his fears and adopted them for herself, even though neither Sophia nor Connor had done so. On the other hand, Mom had babied and fussed over Lydia, who was the youngest and a preemie and it just seemed like her mom didn't want to let her baby grow-up. Never mind the fact that she had an older daughter who might very well be embarrassed if her twelve year old sister acting like she was five.

Sometimes, Sophia really didn't think her feelings mattered in her family, that what she wanted came last to them. It kind of hurt. Even though she knew her parents loved her and were proud of her, she still felt like she was less important to them than her sister was. Even with Connor, he had that whole first child thing going for him.

Professor Xavier started his lecture on Hura Crepitans , the Dynamite tree, which was a very interesting species although she couldn't imagine why anyone would try to get close to one for any reason. It sounded like a good way to lose an eye. Sophia had to wonder how people were able to get near it for study. She guessed it was because there were people dumb enough to risk that.

Once he finished, they were released, seemingly, to do what they wanted. Sophia had to wonder if any of her classmates would be stupid enough to try and make the pods explode, regardless of Professor Xavier telling them not to use drying charms or if everyone here was above that sort of behavior now. The Aladren hoped it was the latter.Part of her thought that people who tried stupid dangerous things,especially after specifically being told not to, kind of got what they deserved, but at the same time there were innocent bystanders here, herself included.
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Sophia began taking notes on what she saw and tried to sketch the tree, her eyes occasionally wandering to Johana Leonie's paper next to her. "Oh sure." She replied to her friend."I'm just wondering what sorts of things can be done to combat this tree's...invasivness. It doesn't seem to have much use other than poisons and explosives and it's sort of prevalent and incredibly dangerous. Also, how much information we can really write down when all we're doing is looking at it. It might be better to look it up in a book."
11 Sophia Priory No, no it does not. 1447 0 5

Johana Leonie Zauberhexen

July 07, 2021 11:45 PM
Johana Leonie stifled a sigh. Sophia was kind and sweet and very smart but her vocabulary left a lot of headaches in Johana Leonie's brain and Advanced classes were exactly the sort of place she hoped to avoid headaches. Of course, they were also precisely where she got most of the ones that came from working with English, so perhaps that wasn't fair. She distinctly remembered Heinrich being better at English by this point in his Sonora career and it bothered her a lot to think that she was behind in her language acquisition, but she didn't try as hard as he did to fit in, and didn't have the advantage of a caregiver who worked on it over the summer either. At least, that's what she'd keep telling herself. Instead of sighing, she smiled a bit apologetically - it was her go-to smile when someone used too many words she wasn't very familiar with - and began the process of unwrapping English sentences.

"It is good for house defense, no?" she suggested, adding to Sophia's shortlist of uses for the plant. "Only if you do not forget it is there," she decided after a moment though, smiling with a bit more amusement despite the fact that it was a bit of a horrific notion if she thought too much about it. Sophia's suggestion that a book might be better than observation made Johana Leonie consider a bit harder though and she turned mentally, as she usually did, to her medical learning. Looking at the plant was a bit like looking at a wound; you made observations, took notes, formed hypotheses, and worked with what you already knew to get yourself started. It was only when you were satisfied you'd seen everything there was to see that you began consulting outside sources, because then you knew for sure that you were going to be consulting the right ones and getting the right detail. Of course, perhaps the difference here was that the plant likely had a single entry, whereas a wound might have an entry for the abrasion, for the bone break, for the poison or injury that caused it, for the pain management, and for any number of other facets of what happened. Plants and wounds were fundamentally different in more ways than they were similar and Johana Leonie's headache only worsened as she realized she was probably wasting brainwork in even trying to draw connections. She pinched the bridge of her nose between two fingers.

"I want to see like professor. To know what expert sees when they see plant. All I see is plant." And she frowned a little as she looked at her notes which emphasized just how little she really saw.
22 Johana Leonie Zauberhexen We agree! 1432 0 5

Sophia Priory

July 10, 2021 11:52 PM
Mentally, Sophia kicked herself. Sort of. She knew she should have at least used some German when talking to Johana Leonie. Even though she knew the Teppenpaw's first language some, her instinctual habit was still to use English because it was her first language. And she didn't know some of the words she had said German. Like she wasn't sure of the German word for invasiveness . Maybe Sophia should have used a simpler word, but truth be told, sometimes there wasn't a way to express certain concepts with easier words. Or there was, but it was harder to figure those out.

Plus, she really didn't want to insult her friend's intelligence by dumbing down her language. Still, was it being more sensitive to others to do it that way? Honestly, where was the line between sensitivity and being condescending? Sometimes, things like that were complicated and Sophia really wished she was the sort of person who didn't care at all. Trying to do the right thing was exhausting when you didn't know what the right thing was.

Actually, it was probably figuring out what the right thing was that really was difficult. There were some people who thought they had it all figured it out-but their version of the right thing was to make people like the Aladren out to be the problem or have them be the ones treated worse than to have everyone genuinely treated equally. Which was inherently hypocritical, because that's what people claimed that they wanted and claimed that they did.

Sophia nodded. " I suppose so ". She replied. Of course, when you lived in the city, even a small one like she did, using such a plant for protection might not be the best idea either because of the sheer amount of people that were around. Also, she was pretty sure that if they had such a tree, neither her sister nor father would ever leave their house for fear of being injured or killed. Not that they needed that sort of defense anyway, but Sophia could see how it would be useful if you lived in a place with lots of dangerous animals.

Thinking of how Dad and Lydia would react to such a tree gave the sixth year another idea for it's use though" It could also be used to keep people inside, like in a prison." Sophia added. " And if it makes you feel better, all I see is plant too."An obnoxious plant that caused more harm than good really. " It takes more training than we've had to see anything more. She reassured her friend.


OOC: Italics are speaking in German
11 Sophia Priory Great 1447 0 5