I guess being on the hot seat in a rap did actually seem to have advantages since I was taken off of the two man saw to make room for the members of my peer group whom were just arriving. They wore the same confused and betrayed expression I had worn. I felt sorry for everyone but most of all myself. These kids were generally within a thousand miles of their homes. Now I was on ?Sledge and Wedge?. I arrived at the wood corral after my bitter coffee and my morning purge, to find that I was moving up. I was given a three foot sledgehammer and a set of wedges. These shims were made from solid iron and when pounded into a fissure or crack in the rounds I was given, they would split it open a little, it was here the second wedge was placed and hammered in to widen it further. Repeat until log is split. I had to wear these gay goggles, but I enjoyed the task more than any other down at the wood corral because I was left on my own to do as much as possible and I didn?t have to interact with the inane conversation makers of my group. There was nothing to talk about. We couldn?t talk about music, sex, or drugs, so frankly, I had nothing in common yet, I knew of.
Soon after my second week we had Paul Bunyan day. There was whistling contest. It was a rainy day and we spent all of it outside running obstacle courses, and watched the older students race to cut full rounds in half with axes. There were log rolling contests, log balancing at the pond, log flipping, and log art, log walking, log loving, and lots of carrying. There was sawing and sledging and tree felling contests, as well. Well, in all it was a good day and I relayed in my journal that ?it could have been better?. It didn?t go unnoticed by me when at the end of our ?fun? day every pellet container and woodbin on the entire campus is overloaded in preparation for fall and winter. The sacks of pellets ns were heavy, but my competitiveness outweighed my laziness.