Thursday, May 30, 2019

Snow Writing :: Writing Nature Writers Essays

Snow Writing When this project first came to my attention, I thought long and hard about what I would occasion to write and write on. I was sure I could come up with something creative and different. After a half hour of deep, deep thought, I came to the purpose that I was going to take the easy way out and just write in snow with my finger. I was ashamed, but it needed to be done. Its hard to imagine walking up to a large open field in the bitter cold to write or read the up-to-the-minute Hunter S. Thompson book, an issue of The Onion, or this very paper. In fact, it would be downright stupid. Yet, this was the technology that I choose to use. After writing the lengthy demonstration morsel (I wrote Demo), it became abundantly clear that the process which writing technology has undergone has been nothing short of spectacular. The first partition of the process is to understand that not only do you need to make a writing tool, but somethin g to use the tool on. There are two things that someone needs to take into account when doing this 1) permanency and 2) portability. Each rival each other in importance and both are vital to the process. We must first look at the pros and cons of each part of the equation the snow and the finger. Starting with what was written on - the snow - you must look at what it does offer to you. First of all, snow is abundant in authorized areas. From about Ohio and up the United States is covered in the stuff for a good few months a year. However, the drawback is that the snow is far from permanent. With the onset of warmer weather, the nobleman works of the season would be lost forever. Snow has a natural fluidity to it which makes it easier to write in. It is also this fluidity of the snow that also causes the major puzzle in snow writing the bunching of snow.

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