Showing posts with label Cullowhee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cullowhee. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 30

Memoir of a Cat Part 2


****
"It was the first night, and Sparta was still nervous and aloof. He missed his companion and his home. He had not yet grown accustomed to my roommates who immediately pounced on him because of his cute face and soft coat. It was the dead of night, but my sub consciousness had been waiting for a sound like the ear-splitting crash that suddenly erupted. Still immersed in darkness, I knew it could mean only one thing: Sparta had knocked over the unstable shelving unit that held my entire collection of snow globes. I flicked on the lights and found glitter, glass, and water all over the ugly carpet of my room. Sparta stood flat against the opposite wall looking scared and not in the least bit sorry. The thought dawned on me that I was in over my head and had never truly been a pet owner before. Was it always going to be like this? With tears in my eyes, my heart ached to have Piddy Paws there and not the Destroyer of Snow Globes as I picked up the large pieces of glass and soaked up the water. Vacuuming the glitter waited until morning.
The dead snow globes
            The next morning, I nearly started packing up Sparta’s belongings to drive him back to my mother’s house. It was not going to work out, I could see that now. He was too rambunctious, and I was feeling guilty for taking him away from his home in the first place. Yet, something stopped me as I watched him sleeping in my beanbag chair. Looking back, if I had taken him home, it would have been the worse decision I would have made.
            Due to the curiosity in his friend’s roommate’s cat, I met my boyfriend Stuart, who increasingly came over to our apartment to play with Sparta. We fell for each other and started dating, thanks to Sparta. Then three months later, Stuart graduated from Western Carolina University and moved to his hometown of Raleigh. We began a painful, lonely one-year long distance relationship. My constant companion and bright star through the entire year was Sparta. He kept me entertained, forced me to get out of bed in the morning, and gave me a living thing to hold at night. Even he knew what it meant when Stuart left, patrolling the apartment and meowing loudly as if looking for him.
Sparta fell in love with Stuart!
            During that time, I also hurt Sparta deeply. In desperation to constantly see Stuart, I often traveled to Raleigh, a five-hour trip from Cullowhee. Because of my few friends and scatter-brained roommates who would most likely kill a fish in a day, I usually dragged Sparta with me. For five hours, Sparta whined and cried down I-40 or settled in my lap between my stomach and the steering wheel wondering when he would never set his foot down on solid ground again. Two nights later, we made the same trip back to Cullowhee with me sobbing at least half an hour of the way after saying good bye to Stuart with Sparta’s pitiful whines in the background.

             After a semester of that, I transferred to UNC-Greensboro to be closer to Stuart. Sparta moved into my new home where there was another male cat and a Labrador retriever. The male cat, Mac, refused to let Sparta out his grasp. Constantly, Mac mounted Sparta and pinned him by biting his neck in his small jaws. It took only a week or two for me to break down in tears over the stress and misery Sparta experienced. I handed him over to Stuart one hour away in Raleigh, heartbroken, promising to bring him back after Mac was neutered. Even then, Mac still abused and tormented my cat. For the rest of the semester, Stuart cared for Sparta, and I spiraled into a deep and deadly bout of depression as I pined away for the cat that had never meant much to me back when Piddy Paws and I were growing up together. Now, I committed so many fouls against my beautiful pet whose personality had started to alter because of the stress of it all."
To be continued...

Thursday, August 30

Life of a Journalist 4: Summer in Cullowhee

As originally published in The Western Carolinian newspaper of Western Carolina University...

"This was my first full summer in Cullowhee and Sylva since coming to Western Carolina University in the fall of 2009.
Soon after exams were over, I moved into a two-bedroom mobile home near the heart of Sylva and began working on the summer issues of The Western Carolinian in my new home.
Never before had I experienced the mountains in the summer. I always spent my summers at my childhood home or in a big city like Raleigh. I must say that staying in the mountains was better.
For the first month, we avoided the nasty, oppressing heat and enjoyed cool mornings with heavy fog. For the first time in my life, I wore long-sleeved shirts and fuzzy pajama pants with bleating sheep across the fabric around the house until mid-June. My confused body shivered and formed small goose bumps until late into the summer. By the time I started wearing sundresses and shorts, half of the summer had disappeared.
Stuart playing in Bridge Park
The activities available here in the summer are more enticing than those in the city. There was river rafting, hiking, Fourth of July fireworks at Lake Junaluska, the Farmer's Market and all sorts of free concerts every week. Western Carolina University offered belly dancing instruction, the Sylva library had free movies and the Great Smokey Mountain Railroad celebrated Pioneer Weekend.
Meanwhile, work continued at The Western Carolinian offices with only two writers, one photographer, Ryan Alexander and myself. We were a small bunch, but we tackled whatever came our way. We didn't see each other as much as during the school year from scrambling around trying to pull a 12-page paper together with only four writers and little advertising. Still, it was enjoyable and somewhat relaxing because of how well we all worked together.
One of the biggest events we covered this summer was the public meeting about the future construction of Old Cullowhee Bridge. As a reporter, I presented the information through this newspaper as factual. As a resident of Jackson County, I was caught up in the emotion that flew around that room as several citizens came forward to passionately defend the Cullowhee Auto Service, which may or may not have to be demolished.
The whole idea of the construction caused a great stir in the community and will continue to cause one until construction is complete. Whether or not you use the bridge to get from one place to another, you will know someone who does. Old Cullowhee Road is a major artery of our little towns, and that bridge will cause strife whether or not it also causes the removal of a few local businesses. Right now, we wait and hold our breaths to hear the latest news of which alternate the NCDOT will chose as their preferred construction method (NOTE: After this was written, the NCDOT announced their decision. Cullowhee Auto Service has been saved!).
Right before school began, Co-Editor Alexander and I were going through Seminar Week, a week of staff bonding, team-building and training for staff members and ourselves. On the schedule, we had seminars like Media Law, Journalism Photography, Article Critique and Investigative Reporting.
Our speakers included former Editor-in-Chief and current Journalism Adviser Justin Caudell and Kelly Donaldson, a former writer for The Western Carolinian and current editor of the Crossroads Chronicle. Also during the week, the staff came together for movie nights, a welcome back party and hiking trips.
The week ended with Valley Ballyhoo on Aug. 18, where we united at a table to encourage new students to join our team in reporting Western Carolina University news. It was a busy, action-packed week in preparation for another amazing year at The Western Carolinian."
Painting at Claymate's in Dillsboro

Friday, July 20

Freshman Fifteen, Pound 12

Here's an article I wrote back when I was a freshman for The Western Carolinian. Every issue, I wrote a column on what it was like to be a freshman at Western Carolina. I talked about the rain, getting bronchitis, and traveling home. This one, or "pound," touches on the ever controversial subject of the campus dining hall!
Cullowhee Creek
"It was only a matter of time before the Freshman Fifteen touched upon the infamous courtyard dining hall. College food has been a topic of mass discussions from its conception. Is it good? Is it bad? Is it tipped with laxatives? Where does it all come from? Well, this is not an expose on Western’s breakfast, lunch, and dinner; it is an opinion on and of all sorts.
First there is breakfast. Breakfast is one of two meals that students are allowed to eat by themselves and not get the “why are you all alone” stares. On weekdays, breakfast is a quiet experience with your typical breakfast foods of eggs, bagels, donuts, bacon, etc. On the weekends, however, breakfast time is a party and begins when the dining hall opens two hours later than usual and ends at 1 p.m. that afternoon. Personally, I am not a partier or a late nighter. So, walking into breakfast twice on both Saturday and Sunday once at 9 a.m. and again at 12 p.m. does not make my weekend very enjoyable. I am a picky eater, but I like variety to my meals. Apparently, that makes me a bad college student and I must accept the fate of eating my breakfast in the afternoon hours after sleeping away half the day.
"The Freshman 15" logo in the paper... it never got a 15
Lunch is a free-for-all of French fries, any kind of sandwich you could possibly desire, pizza, or one of the many cultural dishes one can try at the Home Zone. If none of these appeals to you, there is the 24/7 cereal canisters and salad bar. On hot days, lunch is the perfect way to hit the rare sunshine with a cake cone topped with soft serve ice cream and sprinkles without using half of your DB points at Freshens downstairs. Lunch, like breakfast, is also a possible eat alone meal because all of your friends could be in the middle of class or you yourself are making a pit stop to refuel before shipping back off to Psychology 150 or Global Issues.
Let me take a moment to praise the kitchen staff for their amazing hamburgers, which are usually served at lunch! Let me say to the cooks at the Grill, your burgers are awesome! I do not know how you cook them or what is in them (probably better not to tell me the latter or else I might enjoy them less), but never have I ever stumbled upon a restaurant, fast food joint, or neighbor’s grill that matched the awesomeness of my mother’s burgers until I came to Western, so you rock!
Really, really NASTY mashed potatoes
Dinner is family time. The group of friends you have found to be in your extended family scream at each other over everyone else’s screams to decide which table to head for then break off into pairs to the particular station with the best food. One can always tell who has the best food because that is the longest line. It makes me wonder whether the cooks have popularity contests on who can get the longest lines based on what they are cooking. If you have a big group, you are lucky to find a table for all as the Hall packs up fast, especially on special dinner nights. Then like you would with your family back at home, eating begins at the selected table with chatter about the day, getting to know one another better, and drink mixing. Yes, drink mixing! Suddenly, the Dr. Pepper you were drinking becomes Dr. Pepper/2% milk/Mountain Dew/orange juice with a touch of salt and pepper. Well, back to the drink dispenser.
On special nights with themed dinners like Seafood Night, the dining hall staircase is overflowing with students. With Steak and Shrimp Night comes a real treat: real knives! What could be seen as a possible weapon and is usually locked up in a hidden drawer in the kitchen is now readily available for the usually overcooked and over seasoned steak with a side of shrimp. A man in a monkey suit, a suit I might add that has nothing to do with steak, shrimp, or the school’s mascot, walks around and… well, yeah, he walks around. Oh look dinner and a show! 
Steak & Shrimp Night
Mardi Gras was interesting and fun with coin-shaped bubble gum, Mardi Gras beads, and colorful decorations. Dinner’s main course was cooked crawdads, which my friends enjoyed hiding in my food so I nearly fell backwards out of my chair as the lifeless eyes stared me down. A fun dining experience though not my favorite meal!
The dining hall is like a second dorm. You live there, why? Because there is mountains of food, and there are two things every college student lives on: sleep and food. Maybe the dining hall’s menu is not everything we students wish it was. You can never replicate Ma’s home cooking, but at the end of the day, the dining hall is a good place to get a hot meal and congregate with friends after too many hours of school work. Whether or not there are laxatives in the food, well, that is for the Rumor column! 

Saturday, June 30

Kodak Moment: Around Western Carolina

Here are some photos I've been taking for the daily weather forecast I post on The Western Carolinian's Facebook page!! I love posting the photos. One photo got shared by the WCU Alumni - Greater Knoxville Chapter and commented on by the Hampton Inn & Suites in Cashiers/Sapphire Valley. I thought that was pretty nifty!

Alumni clock tower

A very interestingly decorated elevator

Outside of McKee
Outside the UC


Cata-fount

Coulter info board

Thursday, June 28

Movie Minute: An Investigating Kitty

Here's a great video of Sparta showing off his mousing skills in the first Cullowhee apartment back in 2010. I'm missing my kitty right now, but I know Stuart's taking good care of him. According to Stuart, "Your kitty is loud in the morning! He knocked my glasses off on purpose and was batting at that thing hanging from your door knob! He also barfed at 5 a.m. And then was coughing after that!"

Sunday, May 27

5th Time's a Charm

 Well... I find it ironic how much I hate change and have the lifetime desire to find my perfect home, but I keep moving. This will be the fifth time I've moved in two years! Thankfully, I'm not moving across half the state this time. It's just from Cullowhee to Sylva.
Welcome to Sylva, North Carolina
As much as I'd love to divulge why I'm moving again, I'm going to wait until I get my deposit back before I spill the illegal secrets of my landlady and her so-called "business." I always had a twinge of worry in the back of my mind since I never saw the place or met her before I moved into the single wide, two-bedroom trailer up on a mountain covered in tall trees, llamas, and mini horses. Still, even if I had gone over the trailer with a comb... there would have been no way Justin or I could have seen the kind of trap we were moving into!
Right now, I am pet sitting three large and friendly dogs in Greensboro. The day I get back... WE ARE MOVING OUT AS FAST AS WE POSSIBLY CAN!!! Already, Stuart and I have taken box after box over to the new place in Sylva in an effort to just get out of that trailer!! Believe me, I want to get as far away as possible as fast as I can!
The new place!!! <3
The new place is a longer drive from Western Carolina than I would have liked... but it's so beautiful and CLEAN!!! Like you don't think of a trailer as being clean... that's not anywhere close to the stigma that goes hand-in-hand with a trailer. But this... is only two years old, custom ordered with extra insulation, and was kept very neat by the woman who used to live there. The trailer has two bedroom, carpet everywhere except the kitchen, and comes with a beautiful tan leather couch that could double as a bed. No puke green walls or stained carpet!!! It sits on a small property with view and access to Scotts Creek, a small-sized, fast-moving river. There's a yard in the back and on the sides where we will plant a garden and have a screened awning in the back overlooking the creek. The bubbling creek cancels out the noise of the traffic on Main Street, which is across the creek. It's a short walk to the library, the Farmers' Market, downtown restaurants, and the City Lights bookstore from our new place. Sadly, Jack the Dipper ice cream parlor isn't downtown, too. That would be ideal!!
Jack the Dipper ice cream parlor... not in downtown
It will also be the first time since the summer in Raleigh that I will have both of my pets, Sparta and Nutmeg, in my house on a full-time basis. I am so excited to get Nutmeg back. I've missed that crazy hamster, and after reading a hamster care book, Stuart and I found out that we've been caring for her all wrong this entire time!!! And somehow, she never died!! Yesterday, I purchased a wire cage high rise, which attaches to her glass cage in order to give her three extra levels for more fun, more exercise, and more air flow as compared to the stuffiness she has experienced in her glass cage. At the same time, the high rise is easily detachable so we don't have to worry about Sparta trying to pry apart the wire top when we're gone or can't watch them. Stuart and I also plan on feeding her more fruits, a spoonful of fruit yogurt now and then, a pinch of meat once a week (yes, meat!!!), and provide nature's own joys like branches from a willow tree or washed grass. Apparently, hamsters LOVE this stuff!
Now, as to my roommate... well, I'll announce that later on, but I can't wait to tell you all (my four devoted readers, I adore you all). In the meantime, I'm chilling in Greensboro, waiting... waiting... waiting........... I JUST WANT TO MOVE... RIGHT NOW!!!!!!

Wednesday, January 4

Photo of the Day January 4

I'm all moved in at my new home in the thick of the mountains of Cullowhee, North Carolina. I have no cell phone service whatsoever, wild critters all around me, and there's just a smidgen of snow left on the ground from Monday night's snowfall! It's already been a culture shock compared to my warm Greensboro home!
Sparta is adjusting well! He's fallen in love with a large, overstuffed recliner chair that was left by the previous owners. He's going to be heartbroken when he realizes I'm having it moved out next week.
Here's a portion of my living room. It still needs a bit of work, but I'm most excited about the new cat tree that belongs to Sparta. Kate and Ma worked hard building it, and Sparta's still learning that the tower actually belongs to him. He's never seen anything like it before, and it's taking a bit of time for him to warm up to it.
Well, better head out into the cold. I have to walk down the mountain to the mailbox and say hello to the neighbors - a handful of stray dogs, a barn-ful of alpacas and llamas, and the cluster of mini horses that never leave their spread of hay!

Wednesday, November 23

Finding a Winner

In preparation for my transferring back to Western, I traveled to Cullowhee last weekend to look at houses, apartments, and mobile homes for my new residence. It was stressful and frustrating: I had one weekend to do it in! This time, my criteria for housing was very different than my Greensboro home.
1. I was looking for one-bedroom and two-bedroom homes. Yes, I said two-bedrooms. And, not because Stuart has suddenly had a major change of heart and wants to come back to Cullowhee with me. Nope, I have a new roommate!! I know what you're thinking... "WHAT ARE YOU THINKING?" I've been burned by roommates since I first attended college. My freshman dorm experience wasn't superb, probably because neither my roommate nor I had ever shared a room before, certainly not a room that small. Then, there was my Cullowhee apartment, which was strange but stressful many times. Then, there's my current home with a peeing cat and other issues.
Honestly when I first looked for places to live in Cullowhee again, I was strictly looking at studio layouts and one-bedroom apartments only. Then, something changed. My boss at The Western Carolinian newspaper, JC, decided that his one-hour commute to campus cost too much, and it was time for a change. Jokingly, I told him he should move in with me! He actually agreed, and the more I thought about it, the more I liked the idea. Let's be honest... I'm not in the best health to live by myself! In fact, it'd be quite dangerous for me to live alone and off campus. Who would spoon feed me peanut butter if my blood sugar dropped? Who would be able to get me off the ground and into the house when my energy was zapped? I'm sure JC hasn't thought about these implications and may he never have to deal with them, but they are consequences of my life, consequences that I have to think about and put first whether I want to live with someone or not. I am excited to live with JC though. He and I have had two years of working experience together, and if you can't work together, you probably shouldn't live together. I have never had but minor issues with JC, and I've always been proud to be his employee and admired his work ethic. This weekend, we even had a trial roommate scenario as we shared a room on campus to sleep. His personality is relaxed where mine is high strung. He worries easily about the types of things that I typically sit back and relax about. I'm learning to see him not just as a boss but as a loyal friend. And best of all is that even though he's a guy, he has been Stuart-approved to live with!!
2. Everywhere we looked, the places were high up on a hill, slope, or the side of a mountain. That's what you get when you live in the mountains!! However, it was crucial that JC and I find somewhere close enough to campus, but also that wasn't so far up a mountain or ridiculous terrain that we couldn't get out for food or classes when it snowed a few inches! That's a major thing I never had to think about when looking for places in Greensboro. SNOW and ICE!! It's become a major concern, especially after the horrible winter in 2010-2011. I had to reschedule one of my exams, and the first week of classes for the spring 2011 semester were cancelled due to snow and that students couldn't get back from their homes because Balsalm Gap was closed. There were quite a few places we looked at that it just wouldn't have worked. The slightest possibility of ice, and our cars would have not only spun out but we would have pitched over the side of the mountain and crashed landed at the bottom after hitting every tree, rock, and shrub on the way down!!
January 2011, Cullowhee
3. As always, Sparta is an issue, but this time there's Nutmeg, too. Any place that would take too much money to heat - even if we didn't heat the place as well as we could to cut down costs - would have been too cold for the fragile body of a small hamster. Over the summer, she nearly died from hammie heatstroke when Stuart's air conditioner was broken. For me to pop open the cage lid and find a frozen Nutmeg inside would leave me scarred for life!! Many places in Cullowhee don't allow pets under any circumstances. JC and I passed up a lot of great places just because of Sparta. I don't believe Nutmeg would have been an issue since she's in a cage, but people are scared of what damage a pet can do. Even the apartment complex I lived in last time I was in Cullowhee - they no longer allow any pets! Cats can claw, pee, break window screens, and cause noise problems... and those are only the bad behaviors of Mac! Even though Sparta has lived in three rental places with no damage (if you don't count the flea fiasco, which I fixed!!!), it isn't enough. Pets are just not allowed in Cullowhee.
After a weekend of searching (an adventure that deserves a post of its own), JC and I believe we've found our place! The ironic thing about it is that we actually didn't find it the weekend I was up there! I haven't seen the place, but based on JC's descriptions and photos, I think it'll be perfect!!!
  • It's a good location to campus
  • It has special parking at the base of the mountain in case of snow and ice
  • It has large-ish bedrooms
  • The landlady seems nice, friendly, and not nearly as scary as some other people we met
  • It's the perfect price, and includes water, sewer, and trash pick-up
  • Sparta is only $75!!
WIN!