10-11-2015, 07:06 PM
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#207 (permalink)
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MO Puffskein
Join Date: Jan 2014 Location: Asteroid B-612
Posts: 1,440
Hogwarts RPG Name: Norah Kittredge Seventh Year | Post 3 Lil' gooz | Sarangel | Junior Dweeb Right when Norah was getting ready to write up her explanation card, something.....happened. Was Rooney DYING? ROONEY! Rooney with the hugs and the sweet things to say oh man oh man oh man how could this happen? And Sophie Brown was just TALKING to him? Sophie Brown could do anything, remember? Why wasn't she doing some healer-y stuff and saving him? This was ROONEY they were talking about.
But then it was Ava Burton to the rescue. She wasn't sure if water in the face was really the best way to go about it, but it worked so really Norah wasn't in the place to judge. She gave the little Gryffindor a thumbs up, because it seemed like the right thing to do after she'd done the world a favor and saved cutiepie Rooney, before turning back to her compost. Usually she'd go check to make sure he was okay, offering a few hugs 'n good stuff, but the compost was just CALLING her. That was what she called a good lesson. Herbology more interesting than hugs. Professor Myers really deserved an award.
Double checking her compost to make sure it looked alright, Norah turned to her notes to assess the nutrients in her compost. A few of her materials weren't even on the list, like knarl manure and orange pulp, but it was easy enough to figure out. All the other manures were high in nitrogen, so it made sense that the knarl manure would be too, and so were orange peels so the orange pulp was probably also nitrogen-rich. A little too proud of her deductions, she leaned over her little card and began to write. Quote:
Norah Kittredge
Materials Used:
Straw (carbon)
Pine Needles (carbon)
Orange Pulp (nitrogen)
Potato Peels (nitrogen)
Knarl Manure (nitrogen)
It looks like I used a lot more nitrogen than carbon, but if you pay close attention to my compost you can see that I used pine needles for every other layer, so they were used twice as much as just one of the wet materials. So really it could be on this list twice, except it's not because that'd just be redundant. What I mean to say is that the compost is mostly nitrogen rich, but there's a good amount of carbon too.
Her handwriting had gotten awfully cramped and little at the end, but it was okay. It was her name's fault for being so long, anyways.
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