Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Over the weekend...

Today: Homework, work, study.

Tomorrow: Statistics test, Biochem quiz, religion homework, laundry.

Thursday-Sunday: Fly to big island, temple on Friday, hiking, exploring, and well-needed relaxation for a few days.

Monday: Back to reality.

Have a great Thanksgiving!

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Phone services

Seth and I have been T-Mobile customers forever.


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...and they have been absolutely TERRIBLE.

So here's the deal: we have our bills on automatic pay, so that we pay our bill on time every month. T-Mobile mixed up our credit card information, and put another random credit card in its place for 4 different incidences! And then that random credit card (of some totally random person!) didn't go through, and they NEVER told us that our bill was overdue....so when we finally called and asked about it, they had charged us a ton in late fees.
And the funny thing was that they tried to actually make us pay these fees when it was their fault in the first place!

Mixing up people's credit card information is pretty serious in my book. What if they put our card info onto someone else's account? Or someone else's on ours? Scary.

And lets not forget that this incident has happened FOUR times. And their customer service employees gave us so much attitude and were so difficult to work with to correct the problems.....and they always tried to make it seem like it was OUR fault for THEM mixing up our credit card information.

Crazy. Just Crazy.

Oh and I get terrible service out here. I drop almost every other call that I make.

Anyway, to make an incredibly long story short, they won't let us get out of our contract. So we have to miserably wait it out, which isn't too long.

Sooo...in the meantime I am scoping out other service providers.

What cell phone company are you with? Do you like it? Why/why not?

Anthropologie

My heart belongs to a place called Anthropologie.

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I feel like this store just screams my personality! I absolutely love all of the things that are in there (with the exception of their prices though). In fact, whenever I show Seth something from Anthro online, he usually says "That is definitely a Lacey shirt!"

One of my favorite things to do when I go home to the main land is hit up all of the Anthropologie stores and look at all of their amazing stuff! And the countdown has begun until I get to visit my beloved store. Some of my favorite things from this season:

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Garnet Glow Dress. This one is my absolute favorite! Isn't it just perfect for the holiday season?
It would look so adorable with a cardi and some tights! This is on my Christmas list for sure.

I wish Anthro would lower their prices so I could buy everything! For now everything will just
have to sit on my wish list.

I love you Anthropologie!

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Volcano National Park: Day 3

I think the last day we were there it rained the hardest. I was so hard to get up that morning in the freezing cold, rainy weather and put on our dirty wet clothes! Though you have to admit, I looked pretty hot in that dirty yellow raincoat that I had to wear...


Ok, actually the tourists probably thought I was homeless because I was so disgusting.

Anyway, we left the cabins at 7am and drove off to Mauna Kea. It was so rainy, our professor couldn't find his way around the roads, so we ended up just driving in one big circle.

Soooo....we headed off to Rainbow Falls in the meantime. The waterfall was pretty big because of all of the rain Hilo had gotten that weekend.

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Like I said......homeless!

So after spending some time over there we headed to another lava tube. This one was a real lava tube--no pavement, railing, or lights.

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It was pretty scary actually because we all had dinky flashlights and couldn't see anything. Of course our professors each had a hard core headlamps on, but that didn't help the rest of us! This tube went 7 miles, and eventually went underneath the ocean. We didn't go more than a half-mile because it was pretty rainy and wet, and we (students) couldn't see anything. Plus we were tripping on everything and it was only a matter of time before someone got really hurt (which probably would have been me anyway).

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Our next stop was Mauna Kea. We finally found our way over there, and drove up to about 5,000 feet elevation. The weather was a bit more clear up there, but it was still freeeeeezing!
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We didn't end up going up to the 14,000 feet elevation level because our professors were afraid someone would get altitude sickness, which apparently had happened before. So, instead we went up to 9,000 feet. We went up to the hunting areas on the side of Mauna Kea to see if we could find the Palila bird around some Mamane trees, which were abundant in that area.

I like this picture because you can see Mauna Loa in the background:
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The trip ended with one big, awesome TEST. We had to be able to identify various plants and flowers seen on the trip and its status (endemic, indigenous, introduced...), as well as the geological formations and volcanos, and how they were formed....blah blah blah. It was really hard. I know I did well on the biota section with all of the plants and conservation issues, but the geology portion was ridiculously hard. We were all grumbling about that afterwards. Eh, I guess I'll find out what I got next week! I'm just glad its over.

We took the test at a local drive in called Blaines. Once again, I had the most delicious sandwich of my life. Unfortunately I inhaled it before I could take a picture.

And lastly, here's a picture of the hard-core professors that took us:

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They could probably have their own survivor-man show.

We flew back into Honolulu at about 9pm that night. Seth came and picked me up so I didn't have to ride back to Laie in the junk bus! I was SO EXCITED to see him! We went straight to Jack in the Box and grabbed me some food, and then went home. It was so nice to be with my love and go to sleep in a warm bed with clean, dry clothes!

Overall, the trip was quite the experience. It was rough, but I learned a lot and got to see some things that I probably wouldn't have had the chance to if I didn't go. Even though the weather was terrible, I'm glad I went and I'm glad I had some good friends to go with me. :)

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Volcano National Park: Day 2

This day was my favorite day. We went on our longest hike but we saw some pretty awesome things.

We got up at 6am in the freezing and pouring rain to hike up to Pu'u huluhulu, Mauna Ulu and Mauna loa volcano craters.
We started out hiking to Pu'u huluhulu. I actually didn't get a picture of that crater because by the time we got to it, it was raining so hard that I was too afraid that my camera would get wet.
But the actual hike there had some really cool volcanic structures and formations from pahoehoe lava flows that erupted from Mauna Ulu.
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Cupcake?
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I'll have you know Jen and I became experts at building these things. Experts.
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Today was tree mold day. We saw tons and tons of tree molds. This happens when the lava forms around the tree, killing the tree but leaving a deep hole etched with bark patterns. Whenever our professor pointed to a lava formation and asked us what it was, you had an 80% chance of getting it right if you said a tree mold or lava tree.
Tree molds:
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Kari at the end of a tree mold:
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Lava trees:
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This incredibly awkward picture makes me laugh. I was standing on a tiny lava bridge that was really unstable to see if it would hold me. Someone was taking a picture of me when I made a random last minute decision to jump off of it. As I was jumping off, the bridge collapsed under me and I fell and did a crazy tuck-and-roll sort of move right into the sharp volcanic rock. It was actually pretty hilarious--and I have the giant cuts on my legs to prove it! This picture just reminds me that I'm an idiot.
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The hike to Mauna Ulu was just straight over volcanic rock. It was pretty freaky because you could feel the hollow tubes underneath. We were all freaked out that it would crack and we would fall in because some parts were so thin!
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The top of the Mauna Ulu crater was sweet. It was kind of scary....the top seemed so unstable. One wrong step and you were plummeting to the bottom of a hot volcano. Lots of steam and sulfuric gas was coming up---it was SO hot up there!
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After we finished this hike, we drove straight to another volcano: Mauna loa.
I only took one picture of this hike because at this point, I was on the verge of hypothermia and my hands and fingers couldn't move to get out my camera.
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Who knew our longest and coldest day would end up being my favorite?
Once again, we spent the night laughing and talking about how offensive it is to people when you cut someone off and then throw your arms up in the air...and then just laughing because we were too tired to make any sense. And then we almost died laughing because one of our professors accidently brought his wife's sweatshirt that said "Number one Grandma" and was too cold to care.
I finally fell asleep watching Wall-E on Kari's iTouch, and then seriously felt like I woke up 2 hours later for day #3.
Day #3 hikes will be posted tomorrow!