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  • Day 81 – Back to the Routine


    Hillsdale Alumni Walkway

    Time to get back to the daily routine of classes and work. Above is a shot of Sam Branchaw strolling down the Alumni Walkway, the path I take to get “up the hill” each morning. I slept in until 10:30 today, which was wonderful. Then, I noticed that the college changed the shower head in my suite’s shower, so now it actually puts out streams of water rather than mist.

    Saga is closed this evening, so I went to The Udder Side with David to grab a burger and get some ice cream. Then, we went to Wal-Mart and I bought some dried fruit to eat in my dorm in the evenings so I do not eat chips and junk food all the time. I also bought some juice to keep in the fridge.

    I am going to spend the evening reading for American Heritage, outlining my English paper, and updating links on the Seasteading Institute’s wiki. I am looking forward to resuming classes tomorrow and seeing everyone!

    If you are looking for something to read, read Anthony Gregory’s comments on the government witch hunts going on in Missouri.

  • Day 80 – End of Charleston Trip

    We drove back to Hillsdale today. I will miss the sunny, warm weather and the exciting city of Charleston. I took the photo above on Thursday at the beach on the Isle of Palms, right outside of our hotel. Click on it to view it large. I had a wonderful time and really enjoyed the group of people that went. They made the experience even better. It is time, however, to get back to work at Hillsdale. We have only a little over a month left in the semester, but so much to do! I was able to get a decent amount of reading done during the ride there and back, but I still have to spend most of the day Sunday preparing for classes, which resume Monday.

    I know I posted these links throughout the week, but here are the links to my photo galleries from the trip, all in one place:
    Day 1
    Day 2
    Day 3
    Day 4
    Day 6

    If anyone wants a full-size version of any of the photos in these galleries, send me an email: cagrimmett [at] gmail [dot] com

  • Day 79 – Last Day in Charleston

    The above photo is of Sarah and Kahryn climbing a tree at the Pickney site. Click the photo to view it large.

    Today was our last day in Charleston. We are driving back to Hillsdale tomorrow (Saturday) morning. The trip was wonderful! I really liked the group of people that went, and I really liked Charleston.

    We visited the Charles Pickney Historical Site this morning and then went to Patriot’s Point for the afternoon. Patriot’s Point is home to an aircraft carrier, a submarine, a destroyer, and a Coast Guard cutter. We were able to tour everything except the destroyer. You can see my pictures in today’s photo gallery.

    For dinner tonight, we went to Hyman’s Seafood for dinner. I was adventurous again and ordered seafood–part of my campaign to try new things. I ate snapper, oysters, and crabcake. For those of you who don’t know, I have not eaten any kind of fish or seafood since I was little, and the smell of it usually makes me gag. I wanted to give it a chance this trip, so I ate mahi-mahi yesterday and the above-mentioned things today. It turns out that I can tolerate and actually enjoy fish now! (Or at least mahi and snapper.) I think I will leave crabcake and oysters to others, however. I ate them tonight, but did not enjoy them.

    View the gallery of my photos from day six.

  • Day 78 – Desktop Photo


    I took the above photo on Sunday in downtown Charleston. I am currently using it as my desktop background, and I really like it, so I thought I would post a full-quality version for others to download and use as their background. Download a high-quality version of the above photo to use as your desktop background (right-click and select “Save Link As…”.

    No photo gallery for today. A small group went birdwatching until 1 p.m., but the rest of us stayed at the hotel and hung out on the beach. Then, everyone hung out at the beach for the remainder of the afternoon. It was a bright, sunny, and warm day; perfect weather for lounging on the beach. I ended up taking photos for about an hour of people surfing.

    I decided to try some new food today. I ate Mahi-Mahi for lunch and had coleslaw and rice with hash as sides for dinner. The fish was actually good, and I might start eating fish again after refusing to eat it for almost 12 years now. The coleslaw was okay, but not wonderful. The hash was made out of pork, potatoes, red peppers, and various other things. It was more enjoyable than the coleslaw, but not something to call home about (but it merits blogging about it, haha). Tomorrow, we are going to a pretty nice seafood place in Charleston, so I think I will continue my adventurous eating spirit there.

  • Day 77 – Fourth day in South Carolina

    The photo above is the walkway to the beach from the hotel. Click on it to view it large.

    The weather today was beautiful. We spent all morning at the Boone Plantation, and then spent the afternoon on the beach.

    View the gallery of my photos from day four.

  • Day 76 – Entrepreneurship in Charleston/Take 3

    Above is a photo of the downtown waterfront Charleston area from a boat. Click the photo to view it large. Also, check out the link to the photo gallery at the bottom of the first part of this post.
    Today, Tuesday, March 17, was the third full day of being in Charleston. Today we got up early and visited Fort Moultrie and then took a boat into the bay to Fort Sumpter and spent little over an hour there. Both forts have a history relating back to the revolutionary war and are filled with interesting stories. My photos do not do these spectacular structures justice; you really have to be there to experience it fully. Later in the day, we drove back into downtown, yet again, to explore more. We split up and went out separate ways. I was first with Richard and David, but we met up with Barbara, Antonina, and Anna for dinner, then met up with six other people right afterwards. Even though the downtown area is pretty large, it was really strange to me that we ran into the people we knew multiple times around the city.

    Other highlights of the day: At Patriot’s Point, where we caught the boat to Sumpter, the USS Yorktown aircraft carrier is docked. It is a very neat ship. We are touring it on Friday. Also, on King St., there is a wonderful cupcake shop! I went in and bought a Black Forest cupcake that had cherries inside. It was delicious! Check out the photos in the photo gallery (linked below).

    View the gallery of my photos from day three.


    Here is a thought from Sunday: I am very inspired by the entrepreneurial spirit of some of the town’s residents. They make different baskets, flowers, and other decorations from seagrass and palms. What I enjoyed so much was that the ambitious teenagers seemed to follow profit signals to a ‘T’. As you know from your introductory econ studies, profit acts as a signal to entrepreneurs to move resources into that market to move prices towards an equilibrium price. These teenagers were selling flowers made out of palm leaves. They were at different points along the street and pier selling these flowers. If any of them saw an area that was making more sales then theirs, they automatically moved there, even if someone else was standing there. No barriers to entry here. They even interrupted other sellers when they had customers by offering lower prices. They would only go down to a certain level, seemingly the opportunity cost of making the flowers. I witnessed a bidding war between 3 sellers and a buyer and the buyer got them down as low as they would go–$2 a flower. At this price, the customer was happy and the sellers also made money on their handiwork. This little example really shows the benefit of free markets and the importance of the free movement of resources and capital, as well as the importance of entrepreneurship. Markets work.

    View the gallery of my photos from day three.

  • Day 75 – Charleston Day 2


    Click on the photo above to view it large. For the full photo gallery, click the link at the bottom of this post.
    Today, Monday, March 16, we explored Charleston some more. Mortier and I broke off from the group to find the only Apple Store in South Carolina to get his MacBook Pro fixed. The nice people at the Apple Store squeezed him in, even though all of the appointments were filled for the day. Also, I had been taking photos out on the street, so I walked into the store with camera in-hand and a few of the employees immediately came over and started chatting with me about photography–such nice people! Mort and I then ate lunch at a really good deli named Groucho’s and walked around the town taking photos and exploring. We met up with some of the rest of the group and walked around some more. There are so many things to do in the downtown area that we did not get bored at all.

    Later that day, my cousin’s sister-in-law, who lives in Charleston now, came and picked me up and we hung out for a while. We were in my cousin’s wedding together; it was nice to see her again!

    Check out the gallery of my photos from day 2.

  • Day 74 – First Day in Charleston


    Day 1 in Charleston:
    We went to the First Baptist Church in the historic district in Charleston. It is the oldest Baptist church in the south and the fourth in the nation. It is where the Southern Baptist Convention was organized. They let David Wagner play the pipe organ after the services! The photo above is the church. Click on the photo to view it large. Taken with my wide angle lens.

    We then walked around the historic district, ate at a wonderful microbrewery, and took lots of photos. After we spent the entire day there, we came back to the hotel and I walked on the beach for about two hours. We are going back into downtown Charleston tonight for some evening exploration.

    I posted a gallery of my photos from Day 1. There are 116 that I posted. Check them out!
    Photo Gallery of Charleston, South Carolina, Day 1

  • Day 73 – Piano Revisited


    This is a revisiting of the photo I posted on March 7 (day 66). I decided to post one in color.

    We traveled for a long time, but the honors group finally made it to Charleston! We unloaded our bags then took a walk on the beach. It is going to be an exciting week! Photos tomorrow.

  • Day 72 – More Wide Angle Photos


    I decided to experiment today with my wide-angle lens some more. It makes the largest building on campus–Central Hall–look like a shed.

    I am leaving for South Carolina tomorrow morning!

    By the way, this update was posted too late. I was watching Ironman with the other 4 people left in my dorm when Amanda called and wanted to videochat. I then proceeded to videochat with her until after midnight, at which point I noticed that I had not updated my blog. So, I just want everyone to know that I retro-dated this post. I will not apologize for it.

  • Day 71 – Thoughts of Sunsets and Water


    Vermilion, Ohio

    Thoughts of sunsets and vast bodies of water are on my mind as I wrap up my assignments and study for my last exam before spring break. I have to get back to finishing my paper, so this is it for today’s update. Sorry!

  • Day 70 – Anticipation and Excitement


    I have been looking forward to the end of this week for a while now. I only have a few days left to get through, then I will have a much-awaited break! Above is a photo that I took the last time I was in South Carolina a few years ago. I hope to have many nice pictures from this trip. Check my blog daily for updates! Also, click on the photo to view it large.

    Another future reason for excitement is that I finalized three things for the summer in the last two days. I lined up a photography job for a wedding in August and I signed up for two week-long FEE seminars. The first seminar is on Austrian Economics and runs June 10-14 at FEE’s headquarters in NY. The second seminar is the Young Scholars Colloquium and runs July 13-17 at Northwood University in Midland, MI. If you are interested in attending any FEE seminars, visit their website to see what they are offering.

  • Day 69 – ARRA, Papers, and Photo Assignments


    First, good news! The photo of blueberries I posted yesterday is being printed in a student literary publication on campus called The Tower Light. I will post a photo of it when it gets printed.

    Tonight I went to a talk tonight that two econ professors gave about the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, commonly known as the stimulus bill. Here are the main points: its economics effects are likely small, it adds to national debt, it does not address the underlying causes of the financial problem and sidesteps the underlying causes at a cost of almost $1 trillion, it is full of pork, waste, and malinvestment, it was passed within 14 hours of the final version being distributed, it expands size and power of government, which will hurt productive output, individual liberty, and the federalist system. I can explain these points in more detail if you ask me. I just wanted to give the outline of the talk here.

    The rest of my week is going to be taken up by filling photo assignments for the newspaper and lots of reading and writing to finish classwork before spring break. It is so close, yet I have so much to do! By the way, I finally did all of my laundry today that I have been putting off for a few weeks. Everything is washed and ready for spring break!

  • Day 68 – Spring is on its way!

    Spring is on its way! It has been relatively warm here for the past week and it is wonderful. Spring break is also coming up next week. I am going to Charleston, SC for the week. It should be lots of fun!

    I of course did not take this photo during the spring, because blueberries ripen in the late summer. I took it towards the end of the summer a few years ago, but I posted it because it had bright, cheerful colors.

    My parents, grandma, aunt, and uncle paid me a surprise visit at college today on their way back from Chicago. I showed them around campus and they took me out to dinner. Our visit was short, but it was nice to see them! For the rest of the evening I have been working on a paper for Dr. Birzer, due on Friday.

  • Day 67 – A Blast From the Past

    Do you recognize this screenshot?

    SkiFree

    Yes, this is SkiFree. I remember playing it on Windows 95 and 98 when I was younger. When we upgraded to XP, it was gone and I forgot about it until I was working at ITS and the guys there were talking about old computer games. I remember having a lot of fun with this game, so I did some searching for it. Come to find out, the designer recompiled it in 2005 to work on XP! We run Vista machines at ITS, but I decided to download and try it anyway. It worked! I was pleasantly surprised. I converted to Mac OS X a few years ago, but my parents still have a Windows machine at home. I am going to install it when I come home in the summer.

    Does anyone know how far one can actually get in that game? It seems like as soon as you get to a certain point, the abominable snowman eats you and there is no way to escape it. It runs super fast!

    If you have a Windows machine running XP or Vista, download SkiFree at http://ski.ihoc.net/ and have some fond memories of the past!

  • Day 66 – More Ultra-Wide Tests, Seasteading Presentation

    I had a wonderful day today. Amanda come up to Hillsdale for a music scholarship competition, so I got to spend most of the day with her. It was very nice to see her!

    I did get a chance to get a little work done, so I got some good ideas down for my history paper on “the rise and attenuation of democratic and nationalist sentiment between 1829-1836”, and I put my seasteading presentation into a suitable format to read.

    Download my seasteading presentation and notes in PDF format.

    Please let me know what you think if you read it. Also, if you have any questions about it, leave a comment or email me.

  • Day 65 – Seasteading, Ultra-Wide Lens, and Watchmen

    My Tokina 11-16 f/2.8 came in today! I only had between 10 and 15 minutes to try it out, but I am very impressed with it from the first 30 shots I have taken. Above is how a hallway looks through an ultra-wide lens. Click the photo to view larger.

    My presentation on seasteading went well. There was a pretty good turnout (20 people not including me). Though I think some people casted off the ideas, and me, as crazy, the rest of us had a great discussion after the presentation. I will post my presentation and notes tomorrow because I have to put them in a presentable fashion.

    I went to see Watchmen tonight. At points I was disturbed and at points it was very tormenting to my mind. I really liked the movie, it just bothered me a lot while watching it, and it still bothers me right now. Perhaps I will collect those thoughts and explain exactly why it bothers me, but not tonight. I am off to bed so I can get up and start on a paper before Amanda comes to visit!

    For those of you signed up to my email updates, I apologize that they are coming over a day late. I do not know what the issue is, but lately I have been posting twice before one email goes out.

    I will post more photos tomorrow from my ultra-wide!

  • Day 64 – Live on Twitter!

    Today I decided to join the Twitter revolution. I admit, this could get addicting. I am really enjoying it so far. Don’t know what Twitter is? Read this article in the Hillsdale Collegian.

    Follow me on Twitter if you are already on there, or make your own account if you don’t have one, then follow me.

    Or, if you do not want to join, but just want to keep up with what I am doing, I put a feed on my About Me page.

    By the way, my lens is somewhere between Illinois and Michigan. My anticipation grows with the square of the decrease in distance.

  • Day 63 – Almost Here!

    The Tokina 11-16mm f/2.8 wide angle lens I ordered is on its way! I am excited for it to get here! It should be here before spring break so I can take it to South Carolina with me. I am looking forward to taking lots of photos with it. This XKCD comic pretty much explains how I will be until the lens gets here. Click above to view the tracking as it was when I posted this. You can also see the Safari 4 beta in action in that screenshot. I was doing research on seasteading and listening to Pandora, so you can see all of those tabs open.

  • Day 62 – Geothermal Area and Clouds B&W

    This photo was taken inside Yellowstone National Park. Click the photo to view large.

    Today was a beautiful day here at Hillsdale. Still a little cold, but the sun was out and the skies were clear today. It was excellent! I have been reading about seasteading all evening to prepare for my presentation on Friday. The more I read about it, the more I think it will happen in the very near future. I will post my presentation and notes on Friday night after my talk, given that I have them typed up. If not, it will be a few more days. I will definitely post some links on Friday for those wanting to learn more about seasteading, though.

  • Day 61 – Rise of the Martyr

    I pulled this photo out of the file for today’s post. This is Mike Ramirez from Rise of the Martyr, a band I photographed in Lorain, Ohio, for a battle of the bands. This was one of the first times I shot in B&W instead of converting to B&W in post-processing. Click the photo to view it larger.

    Tonight I saw Paul Cantor, an Austrian school economist, literary critic, and Shakespeare scholar, speak about the demise of the western film, or lack thereof. He is an excellent speaker. He even managed to tie Hayek into western films!

    By the way, I am giving a presentation on Seasteading to the Classical Liberal Organization and Economics Honorary at Hillsdale on Friday. It is only an introduction, but if you are at all interested in Seasteading, stop by Lane 126 at 7:00 p.m. on Friday, March 6. My presentation should go for around a half-hour, then I will answer questions and a group discussion will follow.

  • Day 60 – More Filming

    My friends did some more filming of Roland today. I was able to sneak in and take some photos. Above are a few samples. I apologize that the photos are slightly morbid. Click the photos to view them larger.

    My parents had to go back home last night. I enjoyed my weekend with them; it was nice to see them and spend some time with them around Hillsdale. Today I went to see SynergiaArchived Link, a joint performance of the Hillsdale Tower Dancers and Percussion Ensemble. It was a great show and I have a new respect for and interest in the marimba. It sounds so great! I am spending the rest of the evening reading for American Heritage, reading part one of Faust, and doing some math practice.

  • Day 59 – Coffeehouse, Calvin Stockdale


    This is my friend Calvin Stockdale playing guitar at the Parents’ Weekend Coffeehouse. Calvin is very good on guitar, but his speciality is banjo, which he plays in his band, The Hilltop Moonshiners, and his family’s bluegrass band, the Stockdale Family Band. He is an excellent musician and entertaining to watch. Click the photo to view it larger.

  • Day 58 – Birthday Wishes from Home


    For the past 5 or 6 years, my Dad has sent my cousins a photo of him holding a sign somewhere with their birthday present. This year, since I am away at college, I got one in my email! Here, Dad just finished snow-blowing the driveway  after a big snow and is covered with snow and ice in the backyard. (By the way, the sign says “Aaron” because my family calls me by my middle name.)

  • Day 57 – Art on the Great Plains (Not Necessarily Great Plains Art)


    While driving over the Great Plains with my parents a few years ago, I encountered a plot of land that had many large pieces of art like this. The only one I can distinctly remember is a large yellow hammer. To get an idea of the size of these all-metal objects, look at the tip of the bull’s horn. The little dot on top is a hawk sitting there. These objects were massive. I tried to find the artist who makes these creations, but my search efforts, though short-lived, were fruitless. Click on the photo to view it larger.

    I turned my paper in today! I also listened to a speaker from the Koch foundation talk about applying market-based management to your person and career. He gave an interesting talk that made me think. In very-near future events in my life, my parents are coming up to Hillsdale tomorrow evening for Parents’ Weekend. I am excited to see them!

    Time to get back to studying the Constitution and working on improper integrals (not necessarily at the same time…).