what_the_shock: (Default)
Miguel O'Hara ([personal profile] what_the_shock) wrote in [community profile] fandomhigh2019-02-05 09:11 am
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Problem Solving through Science! | Tuesday, 3rd period

When the students stepped into the Danger Shop today, it was less of a shop and more of a...farm? Fields of wheat on the edge of an ocean. Work with him.

Miguel greeted them in his usual sunglasses, but also a hat this time, because it was really sunny out. (It was a baseball cap. It said "Richmond Spiders". Somewhere, Morph thought he was hysterical.) "Welcome to the sort-of-outside. Each of you gets one section of farm." He waved vaguely at the sections they were in. "Water your crops. In such a way that they won't die. Figure out how to get that water any way you like. As usual, use the shop to give you any equipment you want, but you can't just reprogram it to rain." Because he knew some of you would absolutely try that, yes.
white_oleander: (just hanging out in a tub nbd)

Re: Sign in!

[personal profile] white_oleander 2019-02-05 02:44 pm (UTC)(link)
Astrid Magnussen
onefootoutthedoor: (Hmm (Wide Angle))

Re: Sign in!

[personal profile] onefootoutthedoor 2019-02-06 08:45 am (UTC)(link)
Peebee
white_oleander: (sunglasses)

Re: Listen to the lecture

[personal profile] white_oleander 2019-02-05 02:46 pm (UTC)(link)
Astrid had to admit, the warmth of the scene helped her mood just a little, so did the idea that they'd be working 'outside' in a setting she found somewhat comforting. It definitely made her feel glad she hadn't just skipped out on class, at the very least, and she looked forward to maybe just focusing on doing something for plants, even if they were fake ones, to help her forget about everything else going on with her at the moment.
white_oleander: (cooking!)

Re: Class activity

[personal profile] white_oleander 2019-02-05 03:02 pm (UTC)(link)
And it also helped that this was a fairly easy problem for Astrid to tackle right now, nothing too complicated or new for her to get frustrated at. The problem was clearly that the saltwater available wasn't good for the plants, but it was easy enough to seperate salt from water by boiling it and distilling, even she knew that.

So she soon had a large burner, a large pot, a large glass, and a lid. Set the glass in the pot, fill the pot with just enough water from the ocean, set it on the burner, turn the lid over upside down so the condesation from the boiling water dripped down the slope of the lid to gather in the cup, and, ta-da, the salt was left behind, she had some water to give to her crops, and she'd actually done a Science.

Thank you, vague recollections of doing something like this in grade school and a faint memory of one of her mother's boyfriends being big on teaching her little survivalist tidbits as they travelled up and down the coasts.