7.22.2014

Another Courtyard Inventory

3 years after the last inventory; let's see what's changed.

1 bored frosh with a laptop
1 bored senior with a camera
1 Blacker House Ct. street sign, hanging from the north gate
8 wooden pallets
n pieces of wood scavenged from other pallets
Bored frosh is not bored enough to count all this.
1 quick release, hanging from a tree
2 ladders
2 wooden spools
3 carts
2 grills
1 ping pong cannon
1 PVC cannon
1 small semi-functional trebuchet, from Ditch Day

The grill actually works (who would've guessed?). Ping pong and PVC cannon are to the right.
4 pieces of the hot tub
1 large piece of black plastic (for the hot tub)
Hot tub pieces, and one of the couch swings.
2 couch swings
1 "normal" swing, hanging from the tree
2 hanging rings
1 hammock, currently on the ground
1 bench
1 hose
2 workbenches
1 rolley chair
1 table saw
2 miter saws
2 hand carts
One of the hand carts.
1 drill press
4 large red buckets
3 smallish green buckets
1 orange home depot bucket
1 metallic bucket
2 broken red work lights
2 functioning yellow work lights
1 table
1 thing of vegetable oil
1 roll of paper towels
1 part of a hard drive
2 extension cords
1 giant cardboard tube
You can also see 2 carts, 1 spool, and 1 grill.
2 lofts' supplies
8 bags of corn starch
1 mysterious hat, which may or may not have been chucked out the library window


2 full bags of soil
2 open bags of soil
2 watering cans
8 plants each in their own bucket
1 partially deconstructed dome-ish thing
Plants! As well as other things. The dome-ish thing is in the corner.
4 bags of sand
2 face masks
1 pair of safety glasses
1 measuring tape
1 roll of duct tape
1 tennis ball (2 when this list started, but one was relocated to the library)
4 pieces of scrap wood
1 empty flower pot
6 filled flower pots
1 shovel
1 broom
1 bizarre piston thing
A really large paperweight.
2 strands of rope
1 pot on a stick
3 bikes
2 long boards
1 air compressor
1 planter with plants that occasionally disappear
This used to be filled with plants, then one day, was randomly and completely empty. Housing didn't even know why.


That's all that I came across, but by the time you're reading this, there's probably another set of things in the courtyard. And so it goes...

We even cleaned it recently and everything.

7.14.2014

Continuing the tradition of welcoming a new RA in style.


     We had heard that Lucas, the new Blacker RA, was moving in on Friday, and many conversations were held on the topic of pranking him. The ultimate decision was made to remove the door inside the Womb RA apartment that led to the bedroom and bathroom and replace it with a wall. A group of us sprung into action Thursday night to make this happen. A Home Depot trip in the evening provided the necessary drywall and tools, and we got to work around 10pm. Everything in the bedroom was moved into the living room, save a set of drawers and the bedroom door (taken off its hinges and laid against a wall). The living room was to become the bedroom.


Moving things to the living room.
Everything in place to begin.

     The doorway was filled with drywall, which was plastered into place and then painted to match the walls. We moved the couch that was already in the living room in front of the new wall to hide the lack of trim at the bottom. The final effect, after on and off work until 6am, was a nice smooth wall. A final touch was a banner (reading “Welcome to Blacker Hovse”) and a cake in the bedroom, to be discovered by the RA once the wall had been demolished



2x4 frames were used to hold the drywall in place, and plaster was used to cover its edges. 


  

The master of plaster puts some finishing touches in place before it was time to paint. Going to IHOP is the recommended way to kill time while plaster dries. 



The couch was blocking the lack of trim.

What the other side of the wall looked like.
This awaited Lucas in the bedroom.




 When Lucas first arrived, he took a look at the room and thought that Housing had screwed him over and put the wall there themselves. He went straight to the housing office to complain and returned with two employees. While he was finding Housing, we left two sledgehammers and a face mask near the apartment. After a brief discussion in the hallway, both Lucas and Housing realized it was a prank (overheard near the end of the conversation: “Well there are sledgehammers outside this door...”). After talking to a few Moles, Lucas took the sledgehammer and went at the wall. It turned out to be a good thing that we'd put two sledgehammers outside the door, because the first one ended up going through the wall (I quote: “You guys came prepared”). He went from angry at Housing to thoroughly enjoying the prank, and was also happy to find the banner and cake awaiting him in his bedroom. The resulting mess was cleaned up that night.



What are these doing there?
Not even moved in and already tearing the place down!


Success! (For the RA. For us, it was time to clean up.)

A Frosh's account of Hell Ride (and "oh look, we're posting again")


There's no better way to bring back this blog then to talk about Hell Ride. 
Okay, there's probably a lot of better ways. But this is the one you get.

What is Hell Ride, you ask?
     As explained in an earlier post, "This annual tradition, peculiar to Blacker Hovse, is probably the most construction-intensive Blacker event after Interhovse and Ditch Day. In it, the frosh attempt to play Richard Wagner's "The Ride of the Valkyries" (which is strictly banned at Caltech except for 7am during finals week, or if it is played as part as Wagner's entire cycle of four operas: The Ring of the Nibelung) for as long as possible as the upperclassmen attempt to shut it off. This is traditionally done by barricading the speakers in the all-frosh alley Hell (thus the name Hellride). There have been stories of moles going so far to shut off The Ride as destroying walls, breaking down doors, and once even shooting the speakers when they were mounted at the top of a palm tree. "


The Weeks and Months Before:
     Planning for Hell Ride started off in first term. We decided to take an nontraditional route and hold it in the middle of the courtyard during second term (the past few years it's been done in Hell around third term). As the date drew closer, we started amassing a bunch of wood from the local dumpster, and ultimately ended up with plenty of barricade supplies thanks to a number of fruitful dumpster dives. The carpenter's shop actually gave us a slab of their heaviest material for free after a group of female frosh asked them for scraps – apparently they were really excited to see girls building things.

Friday (T-3 days):
     The building of Hell ride really got into the swing of things after dinner on Friday February 28th, despite the day's rain and the evening's drizzle. After the sound system was placed in the drain (thankfully we had thought ahead to put it in a waterproof container), concrete started getting mixed and poured to form the centerpiece of our barrier – a cube of solid concrete on top of the drain. A good bulk of the evening was spent making the concrete, and a large part of the night was spent cleaning it up. 

Saturday (T-2):
     It was pouring rain the whole day, leaving Kit to run around and make sure the Courtyard didn't flood. As it turns out, the drain we blocked was pretty important for, well, drainage. Not much work was done since rain and power tools don't really mix.

Sunday (the day before):
     Concrete was poured again in the early (and thankfully sunny) afternoon. We made our last batch, finishing the central 2-ton cube of concrete over the drain. We then started on the innermost ring of defense – the best and strongest wood we had was placed to encompass the concrete cube. The best piece (the one we got from the carpenter's shop) went directly on top of the cube. Cutting it to fit led to some really sad (but sort of hilarious) noises from the circ saw, and after screwing the board in Mary went around and stripped the screws. We added metal grates around the sides, which left gaps in the corners, so we filled them with trollsy stuff – one corner had stuff from e-waste, one had scrap wood and tennis balls, one had our empty concrete bags and an extra tire, and one had a drawer with two shirts folded in it that had been on the free table for about two weeks. One of the barriers on top of the cube was a large rectangular crate that we filled with cinderblocks and screwed shut. The screwing shut of this crate at 5 am resulting in a noise complaint from the RA, so we had to stop using tools for the night. A bit disappointing, as we wanted to finish the inner barrier before Monday morning. A few of us had worked on it almost nonstop from about noon to 6am, with a break for an interhovse meeting and another later to do the math set due the next day. After sunrise, we covered what we had finished and got some much-needed sleep.
How Hell Ride looked from the outside Sunday night.

How Hell Ride looked from the inside Sunday night. Note the boards and cinder blocks on the ground - everything was added on the next day.

Trash can or barricade defense? You decide. 


Monday (Hell Ride is tonight!):
     I was up at noon and joined Kit, Harrison, and Emily already working in the courtyard. We worked straight until dinner, getting all of our non-pallet things screwed in around the sides. We left random messages amongst the various layers, like targets with “smash here” written by them, random gdbgs, a few YOLOs, some "Frosh power"s and at least one “smashy smashy.” We finished doing this a little before dinner, then covered our now very interesting structure with black plastic to prevent upperclassmen seeing and planning for the destruction of any layers. As we were working in the afternoon, we started to see upperclassmen walking around and making plans of their own. We caught wind of one – Yurko was going to attach a line from his car to around the concrete and try to pull it off the drain. I was intrigued If this worked, it was going to be really impressive. If it didn't, it was going to be really hilarious. Either way, it was going to be awesome. 
     After dinner we affixed the pallets around and on top of our barricade, taking a break to blast Les Mis music and sing along at the top of our lungs from the top of our barricade. To our sleep deprived minds, this was pretty entertaining. After we had everything either attached or just thrown on, we rolled out the Hell carpet (literally). Earlier this month they had replaced the carpet in hell, we had gotten our hands on the rolls of old carpet and decided to incorporate them. It was Hell Ride, after all. So a bit of Hell was brought to Hell Ride, since we didn't bring Hell Ride to Hell. We rolled the carpet out by the steps, and rolled one as a path from the courtyard steps to Hell Ride. On the carpet by the steps, we put out all the various instruments of destruction – saws, sledgehammers, drivers, drills, ect. Some of the smores even added things – crowbars they had just bought and saws of their own. And email was sent out – Hell Ride is happening between 11 and 11:30. At 11:10, another one saying Hell Ride is within the next 10 minutes. And at 11:17, the ride started playing from the drains.

Monday afternoon building.

Frosh class picture on top of the almost-finished Hell Ride. 


The finished Hell Ride, with carpet and instruments of destruction in place.

HELL RIDE:
     We had a total time of 15 minutes and 44 seconds, better than the Hell Rides of recent memory. The sound system was rather soft, given that our speaker was inside of a tupperware container, but it was audible and that's what mattered. Laying out all the weapons ahead of time made things start off really well. While the ten minute warning was in effect, upperclassmen were grabbing things and surrounding the structure at the “Frosh Only Past Here” line we had drawn, waiting for the ride to start. It went really smoothly. The ride started, they all converged, and the destruction commenced. The pallets we had placed around took a good 10 seconds to take off, and I stopped counting after that. In a cacophony of sawing noises, hammering, and the sound of boards getting yanked apart, Hell Ride was getting peeled apart like an onion. I really enjoyed it when someone shouted “It would be faster to unscrew it!”, referencing a particularly hard board to break. However, this was at the layer in which we had already stripped the screws. 
     Once the main cube of concrete was reached, the Yurko Car plan went into effect. Everyone cleared the courtyard while a few wrapped the line around the block and got in the car, which was right outside the east gate. With a lot of screeching, it didn't budge. After a reconversion on it and some smashing, a few layers of wood on the top were taken off and they decided to try it again, with more people in the car for weight. This time, they succeeded and the cube slid off the drain (but not without putting up a bit of a fight). There was a dash to the drain, a confiscation of the tupperware, and a breaking of the sound system. Hell Ride was over, but the showering had just begun.



The destruction of Hell Ride.

What ultimately was our defeat.