Thursday, December 9, 2010

Blog 10- Christmas

Christmas is a time of the year where families can be together and just have a good time.  It is by far my favorite time of year.  All the snow, food, and presents are what I live for.  Also, being able to spend time with my whole family, is not only a treat for me, but it is almost always a funny experience that I will remember for a long time.  When Christmas comes around, I start to taste my mom's cooking, hear my uncles telling jokes, and feel the love in the air.  My favorite food on Christmas is my aunt's cheesy potatoes.  They are mouth watering and just absolutly delicious.  I only get them once a year so I always take full advantage of them.  A tradition my family and I always do around Christams time, is to put the tree up around the beginning of December.  On Christmas Eve, each of my brothers and I are allowed to open one present, but I always wait to open mine until Christmas day because to me, there are more presents that way and thats just what I like to do.  On Christmas day, after opening presents and eating a big breakfast, we all get dressed up and go to my Uncle Don's house to have Christmas dinner.  It is a great time to be with my family and I look forward to it every year. 

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Week 9 Blog-First College Semester

With the first semester of my college career comeing to an end, I find myself relieved and glad it's over.  With hte semester ending, it means that we as students are about to go on Christmas break.  To me I couldn't be happier.  Christmas is my favorite time of the year.  Looking back on this semester in school, it has zipped by very fast, but that is definatly a good thing.  I met new people, made new friends, and even enjoyed a few of my classes.  The whole college experience is nice and all, but I truly believe it is over rated and too talked up.  I was told that college is supposed to be the time of your life, but so far it has just been the same old school for me.  Maybe it is because I don't get into the whole drinking thing, or maybe it's because I just simply don't take full advantage of it, but either way, college has not been what I thought it would be.  Hopefully next semester will be easier and flow better.  I almost have a full college semester under my belt, and i'm ready for next semest, but after break of course.  I'm very glad that I got the chance to meet new friends.  Hopefully I will continue to talk to them and keep in touch with them throught the rest of my college life, and in the future when we all have jobs and are living the lifes we hoped for.

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Week 8 Blog- High School


High school is very often over looked and not taken very seriously.  Most kids, including me, wanted or want nothing more than to just graduate and get the heck out of there.  I thought that I would love college way more and that it would be so fun to be on my own but the reality of it was that I never should have taken high school for granted so much.  I’m not saying this is the case for everyone and I’m not totally saying I hate and dislike everything about college, but looking back, I wish I would have used my time more wisely in high school.  Being in college is nice and it’s an achievement.  It is also a privilege and not a right, so take it seriously.  Being able to choose my classes and have fewer classes than high school is defiantly not a bad thing, but there is a catch to it.  Not all my classes are back to back.  Some days I have breaks, which are nice, but most days I just want to get class over and done with for the day.  A positive thing about it is that I don’t have to get up as early as I did in high school, but the classes are longer and harder.  Studying in high school for me pretty much never happened, but in college if you want to be successful and pass, studying is a huge part of college, which isn’t necessarily fun.  The whole college experience for me hasn’t really been what I expected it to be, and I am a bit disappointed.  All in all, I miss high school a lot, and wish I would have used my time there more wisely and had more fun, because you only get one chance at it and you have to make the most of it.

Week 7 Blog- Video Games


Video games are often looked at as a complete waste of time and very bad for one’s health.  What people don’t see when they look at and think about video games is that they can actually help you in more ways than one.  Hand and eye coordination can be improved and increased when playing video games.  Knowing the controls on the controller while looking at the game helps that tremendously.  Video games can also be a great way to relieve stress.  If you are really overwhelmed with homework or work or anything that stresses you out, taking a break from it and playing a video game can be relaxing and fun.  Games can also be a good way to bond and have fun with friends.  In today’s games and game systems, it is easy to talk to one another from your own houses through the game.  This feature is called live.  I’m not saying everything about video games is helpful and good.  Some video games are very violent and can give your gamers the wrong view on certain things.  Video games can also cause kids and adults in some cases to not do what they are supposed to do while they just sit on the gaming system.  
It all depends on what your view is on video games.  To me they are both helpful, and disruptive, but I still enjoy playing them.  Some of my favorite games to play are Madden Football and Halo 3.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Week 6 Blog- SNOW


As the weeks go on I find it more and more challenging to find topic to write about.  But this week I am going to write about snow.  As townships and cities prepare themselves for this winter and the snow it will bring, i do too.  I hope and pray for snow to come as soon as possible.  Why do I want snow so bad you may ask?  Well there are a couple of reasons why.  The first reason is because of what is going to take place starting on November 20, 2010, which is the opening day of the 2010 Wisconsin Gun Deer Hunt.  Now this day only comes around once a year and it’s rare for there to be snow on the ground.  Snow is important to deer hunting because it helps increase visibility in the woods tremendously.  It also help when tracking a deer because it makes the color of the blood appear on the snow very well.  Another reason I want snow so bad right now is because I am a huge snowmobile fan and supporter.  I sold my snowmobile at the end of last winter so that I could buy a newer and more powerful snowmobile for this season, and I don’t want it to go to waste.  Snowmobiling is a fun way to enjoy the outdoors with friends and family.  It is also a good way to relax and just have fun.
The temperatures are cold enough and it’s that time of year, so let it snow, let it snow, let it snow!

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Week 5 Blog- Packers


The Green Bay Packers are currently 6-3 overall and are on top the standing in their division rankings.  This is not surprising to me, given the talent they have and possess, but at the beginning of the season, due to injuries and a slow start, I was beginning to think that it could be a long season. The team is finally starting to come around and some key players and starting to become fully healthy again.  A key loss they have had this season had been one of the top ranked corner backs in the NFL, AL Harris.  HE suffered a severe knee injury and still hasn’t fully recovered from it, so the Packers decided to let him go.  Personally I believe they should have kept him around and waited to see how he bounced back from the injury, but then again, it’s hard to keep him on the team and keep paying him if you don’t know if he will be able to play again the same as he used to.  Luckily, the new young corners are starting to play well and take over in his place.  Aaron Rodgers is starting to finally play like the quarterback he can be.  He had a slow start to the season, like the rest of the team, but his last game against the Dallas Cowboys was his best game yet this season.  He threw for 283 yards and had 3 touchdowns.  His quarterback rating was the highest it’s been all year as wee, which was a 131.5.  If the Packers keep this momentum rolling, the rest of the season should be exciting and fun to watch.
-Jeff

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Final Draft-Hunting Paper


Jeff Raasch
Mrs. Allard
September 26, 2010
     Throughout everyone’s life, different things happen that change all of us forever, and make us who they are today. These events may be a death in the family, or even an experience you had with someone at some time that touched them in a way they never thought possible. An event in my life that has changed me as a person and as a hunter is when I became part of my family’s hunting tradition. It was a long and stressful process which took years to fully accomplish, but the start of it was an experience I would never forget.
It was a cold and snowy Saturday morning. The time was 4:30a.m and my alarm was yelping in my ear, which meant one thing… hunting season was only hours from beginning. I was 12 years old and finally ready to start my first year of hunting with my dad and two older brothers, Bobby and Tommy. My twin brother Jason was also 12 and old enough to hunt along me, my brothers and my dad. I had already gotten all of my hunting clothes and belongings ready the night before so that I could get a head start in the morning, and be ready to go on time. It was becoming close to leaving time so I double checked to make sure I had everything that I would need to go hunting. As my family and I made our way out to our hunting land, I couldn’t help but feel a mix of emotions. I was excited, pumped up, happy, and ready to start hunting, but most of all I was nervous and scared. I never knew I could feel such crazy and opposite emotions, but it was uncontrollable and being poured on me all at once. What made me so nervous was that this was the year that I would hopefully become one of the guys. This meant someone who was a man now. To become a man and one of the guys, I would have to shoot my first deer, and preferably a buck, but this was no easy task. I would not only have to overcome what hunters call “buck fever”, but I would also have to steady my nerves and make a clean and deadly shot. Buck fever is when a buck or doe comes walking through the woods towards you and you start shake uncontrollably. You hear nothing but the sounds of the deer, inching its way towards you; and you wait for it to present a shot so that you can shoot it.
The challenge was well-known as I climbed into my tree stand. As I sat down in my chair, which was placed on the wooden platform below me, I took a moment to recognize my surroundings and placed my things down next to me. I propped my gun up against the tree, and my fanny-pack full of snacks and pop on the wooden platform below. After everything was set down and in place, and I was comfortably sitting down in my chair, I took a moment to see what was around me. I was surrounded by woods to my left and right, and an open hay field in front and behind me. There was a fresh scent of cool, wet outdoors in the air. It was almost as if there was no sound anywhere. The wind was calm and cooling, and the temperature was near a shivering 20 degrees. As I sat in my stand, patiently waiting for something to happen, I watched the sun peak out from behind the hills and start to slowly melt away the snow. Then, all of a sudden out of the corner of my eye, I noticed something peeking its way out into the hay field in front of me. My first thought was that I was only seeing things, and that it was nothing. But to my excitement, it was a young doe and hopefully my first deer. I quickly but quietly reached for my gun. The nerves were starting to set in as at this point, and I knew this was my chance to shoot my first deer. Next, I slowly raised my gun to take the shot. I knew that I needed to hit the deer just behind its front shoulder in order to kill it quickly and easily. I steadied my gun and aimed right where I needed to. As the shot went off, and the smoke cleared, I saw the deer drop to the ground, and the rest is history.
That night back at the house, my family and I sat down talked about the day of hunting. I couldn’t explain the feeling that I had at that moment, knowing that I had finally taken the first step in becoming a man and had been a part of my family’s hunting tradition. Traditions can contain many different things and have several different meanings. Some traditions may consist of making a certain food for the holidays, or even singing a certain song during a family members birthday, but one thing in common between all traditions is that they all have a special meaning and are very precious. The only thing left to make me officially part of my family’s tradition was to shoot a buck. That task would be completed a few years later. I hope to one day have a few kids of my own, and I hope that I can teach them how to hunt so they can know the feeling of becoming part of a long and fun hunting tradition. My experience in becoming part of my families hunting tradition was a fun and exciting part of my life, but also a stressful and nervous experience. I continue to hunt every year, and become more and more involved with our family’s ways of doing things, and to me, it never gets old. Hunting is a part of me and my life, and without it, I truly believe that I wouldn’t be the person I am today.
 

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Week 4 Blog- Elections


With the elections only one day away, me as a citizen of the state of Wisconsin and a current college student couldn’t be happier.  You may ask why this is. Well personally, I am beyond tired of hearing about all the political propaganda and stories about it.  Recently, every commercial that comes on the TV is somehow related to this election that is about to happen.  The candidates are all telling lies about each other to try and make themselves look good but in reality, to me as a voter it makes them look just as bad they are trying to make their competition look.  It is also is on the radio, internet, and through phone calls.   I am just really tired of all of it and I can’t wait till this is all over.  This is the first election I am able to be a part of and I intend to vote in it along with many other Wisconsin residents, but hearing all these bad things that each candidate is saying about one another has gotten me questioning who I would like to see win this election.  I know that not everything that is said in the commercials that are seen on TV and heard on the radio are true facts, but they sure do get me as a voter concerned about what the truth really is.  In the end, I will just have to do a little research to find out what each candidate is really all about and what he will try and do to help not only this economy, but this beautiful state of Wisconsin.  When Wednesday, November 3 rolls around on the calendar, I will not only be happy because the election is over, but I will be glad to be able to watch TV without hearing about how bad for this country a certain candidate is, and I won’t be receiving the annoying phone calls that are pre-recorded which tell me who I should vote for. 
-Brought to you and published by Jeff Raasch

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Week 3 Blog-Halloween


With Halloween becoming closer and closer with everyday passing, I can’t help but worry about my friends and what they do this weekend. Everyone knows that college students dress up on Halloween in their favorite costumes and go out to parties and celebrate by drinking and “having a good time.” But there is a price to pay usually with these celebrations. After every weekend, I usually hear from my friends about what fights happened on that weekend, or who got busted and got an underage, and I just hope it wasn’t one of my close friends. Now some people may not care or think its not a big deal to be caught by the cops, but really it is. It can affect your in so many ways that you never thought possible. One example is that if you are trying to get a new job and the person who is hiring you sees you have a dinking record, it is more likely that they will not even waste their time hiring you. Another thing I worry about is one of my friends getting hurt or in fights because of stupid things and drinking. Don’t get me wrong, I like to celebrate Halloween too, but not necessarily in the way that puts me in such a high risk of being caught or injured. Halloween is supposed to be a time of spooky nights and candy, and not one of underage drinking tickets and pointless drunk fights. So I hope that while my friends may go out and party and make dumb decisions this weekend, I hope they still have fun and can return home safe and not in trouble.
-Jeff

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Week 2 blog- Hunting


In the 2009 Wisconsin Deer Hunt, the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (WDNR) over estimated the number of deer in our state. You may think this isn’t too big of a deal, but to hunters like me, it is more than a big deal. It affects which hunts I am allowed to hunt in and how many deer I can shoot in those hunts. For example, in my hunting zone which is 74A, there was no T-Zone hunt this season. It was supposed to start on the 14th of October and go through the 17th but It was not allowed in the zone I hunt in because the WDNR over estimated the population of deer in our area. The T-Zone hunt is a hunt where u can only shoot does. Because of the WDNR over estimating the number of deer in our state, it has also affected me as a hunter in 74A during the regular deer hunting season because if I want to shoot a doe, I have to go and but a separate $12 doe tag. Never before in my hunting life have I had to go and buy separate tags for doe. Normally, when I buy my license, it comes with at least two doe tags, and it did this year, but they are no good and can’t be used. Which to me isn’t fair that I have to pay money for deer tags that I can’t use, to me that doesn’t make much sense. I guess I can do much about the whole situation but deal with it and continue to hunt as much as I can.
-Jeff Raasch

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Revised Draft-Hunting


Jeff Raasch
Mrs. Allard
September 26, 2010
Throughout everyone’s life, different things happen that change them forever, and make them who they are today.  These events may be a death in the family, or even an experience they had with someone at some time that touched them in a way they never thought possible.  An event in my life that has changed me as a person and as a hunter is when I became part of my families hunting tradition.  It was a long and stressful process which took years to fully accomplish, but the start of it was an experience I would never forget.
It was a cold and snowy Saturday morning.  The time was 4:30a.m and my alarm was yelping in my ear, which meant one thing… hunting season was only hours from beginning.  I was finally 12 years old and ready to start my first year of hunting with my dad and two older brothers Bobby and Tommy.  My twin brother Jason was also 12 and old enough to hunt along me, my brothers and my dad.  I had already gotten all of my hunting close and belongings ready the night before so that I could get a head start in the morning, and be ready to go on time.  It was becoming close to leaving time so I double checked to make sure I had everything that I would need to go hunting.  As my family and I made our way out to our hunting land, I couldn’t help but feel a mix of emotions.  I was excited, pumped up, happy, and ready to start hunting, but most of all I was nervous and scared.  What made me so nervous was that this was the year that I would hopefully become one of the guys.  Which meant someone who was a man now.  To become a man and one of the guys, I would have to shoot my first deer, and preferably a buck.  But this was no easy task.  I would not only have to overcome what hunters call “buck fever”, but I would also have to steady my nerves and make a clean and deadly shot.  Buck fever is when a buck or doe comes walking through the woods towards you and you start shake uncontrollably.  You hear nothing but the sounds of the deer, inching its way towards you; and you wait for it to present a shot so that you can shoot it.
The challenge was set as I climbed into my tree stand.  As I sat down in my chair, which was placed on the wooden platform below me, I took a moment to recognize my surroundings and set my things down next to me.  I set my gun up against the tree, and my fanny-pack full of snacks and pop on the wooden platform below.  After everything was set down and in place, and I was comfortably sitting down in my chair, I took a moment to see what was around me.  I was surrounded by woods to my left and right, and an open hay field in front and behind me.  There was a fresh scent of cool, wet outdoors in the air.  It was almost as if there was no sound anywhere.  The wind was calm and cooling, and the temperature was near a shivering 20 degrees.  As I sat in my stand, patiently waiting for something to happen, I watched the sun peak out from behind the hills and start to slowly melt away the snow.  Then, all of a sudden out of the corner of my eye, I noticed something peeking its way out into the hay field in front of me.  My first thought was that I was only seeing things, and that it was nothing.  But to my excitement, it was a young doe and hopefully my first deer.  I quickly but quietly reached for my gun.  The nerves were starting to set in as at this point, and I knew this was my chance to shoot my first deer.  Next, I slowly raised my gun to take the shot.  I knew that I needed to hit the deer just behind its front shoulder in order to kill it quickly and easily.  I steadied my gun and aimed right where I needed to.  As the shot went off, and the smoke cleared, I saw the deer drop to the ground, and the rest is history.
That night back at the house, my family and I sat down talked about the day of hunting.  I couldn’t explain the feeling that I had at that moment, knowing that I had finally taken the first step in becoming a man and part of my families hunting tradition.  The only thing left to make me officially part of the tradition was to shoot a buck.  That task would be completed a few years later.  I hope to one day have a few kids of my own, and I hope that I can teach them how to hunt so they can know the feeling of becoming part of a long and fun hunting tradition.  My experience in becoming part of my families hunting tradition was a fun and exciting part of my life, but also a stressful and nervous experience.  I continue to hunt every year, and become more and more involved with our family’s ways of doing things, and to me, it never gets old.  Hunting is a part of me and my life, and without it, I truly believe that I wouldn’t be the person I am today.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Hunting-My First Draft

Jeff Raasch
Mrs. Allard
September 26, 2010
Throughout everyone’s life, different things happen that change them forever, and make them who they are today.  These events may be a death in the family, or even an experience they had with someone at some time that touched them in a way they never thought possible.  An event in my life that has changed me as a person and as a hunter is when I became part of my families hunting tradition.  It was a long and stressful process which took years to fully accomplish, but the start of it was an experience I would never forget.
It was a cold and snowy Saturday morning.  The time was 4:30a.m and my alarm was yelping in my ear, which meant one thing… hunting season was only hours from beginning.  I was finally 12 years old and ready to start my first year of hunting with my dad and two older brothers Bobby and Tommy.  My twin brother Jason was also 12 and old enough to hunt along me, my brothers and my dad.  I had already gotten all of my hunting close and belongings ready the night before so that I could get a head start in the morning, so I would be ready to go.  It was becoming close to leaving time so I double checked to make sure I had everything that I would need to go hunting.  As my family and I made our way out to our hunting land, I couldn’t help but feel a mix of emotions.  I was excited, pumped up, happy, and ready to starts hunting, but most of all I was nervous and scared.  What made me so nervous was that this was the year that I would become one of the guys, someone who was a man now.  To become a man and one of the guys, I would have to shoot my first deer, and preferably a buck.  But this was no easy task.  I would have to overcome what hunters call “buck fever.”  This is when a buck or doe comes walking through the woods towards you and you start shake uncontrollably.  You hear nothing but the sounds of the deer, inching its way towards you; and you wait for it to present a shot so that you can shoot it.
The challenge was set as I climbed into my tree stand.  As I sat down in my chair, which was places on the wooden platform below me, I took a moment to recognize my surroundings and set my things down next to me.  I set my gun up against the tree, and my fanny-pack full of snacks and pop on the wooden platform below.  After everything was set down and in place, and I was comfortably sitting down in my chair, I took a moment to see what was around me.  I was surrounded by woods to my left and right, and an open hay field in front and behind me.  There was a fresh scent of cool, wet outdoors in the air.  It was almost as if there was no sound anywhere.  The wind was calm and cooling, and the temperature was near a shivering 20 degrees.  As I sat in my stand, patiently waiting for something to happen, I watched the sun peak out from behind the hills and start to slowly melt away the snow.  Then, all of a sudden out of the corner of my eye, I noticed something peeking its way out into the hay field in front of me.  My first thought was that I was only seeing things, and that it was nothing.  But to my excitement, it was a young doe and hopefully my first deer.  I quickly reached for my gun.  The nerves were starting to set in as at this point, and I knew this was my chance to shoot my first deer.  Next, I slowly raised my gun to take the shot.  I knew that I needed to hit the deer just behind its front shoulder in order to kill it quickly and easily.  I steadied my gun and aimed right where I needed to.  As the shot went off, and the smoke cleared, I saw the deer drop to the ground, and the rest is history.
That night back at the house, my family and I sat down talked about the day of hunting.  I couldn’t explain the feeling that I had at that moment, knowing that I had finally taken the first step in becoming a man and part of my families hunting tradition.  The only thing left to make me officially part of the tradition was to shoot a buck.  That task would be completed a few years later.  I hope to one day have a few kids of my own, and I hope that I can teach them how to hunt so they can know the feeling of becoming part of a long and fun hunting tradition.  My experience in becoming part of my families hunting tradition was a fun and exciting part of my life.  I continue to hunt every year, and become more and more involved with our family’s ways of doing things, and to me, it never gets old.
Jeff Raasch

Brett Favre Allegations

According to fanhouse.com and the NFL, Brett Favre has recently been under an investigation into his recent scandal on the "fast track," according to multiple outlets. Favre allegedly sent inappropriate messages and pictures -- including a reported set of nude photos -- to former Jets employee Jenn Sterger while Favre was playing in New York. On Sunday, ESPN's Chris Mortensen reported that, in addition to Sterger, the NFL wants to possibly interview a pair of massage therapists who are contracted by the Jets and allegedly received explicit text messages from Favre.  These recent allegations against Favre make his already cloudy image even worse.  I’m not saying what Favre is being accused of really happened or is true at all, but it makes me wonder how this rumor could just start up?  I am a huge Favre fan.  And even though he has tarnished his reputation by coming in and out of retirement, I still love the guy and believe he is one of the top quarterbacks in the NFL.  Even though I have a lot of respect for Brett, I can’t help but wonder why he did what he is being blamed for?  Why risk what he has left of his reputation on something that could potentially ruin his career, life, and marriage?  Is it because he feels he has the right to do anything because of his career and job?  Or does he feel that he can get away with anything because he has the money to buy his way out of problems?  I guess I will never know what he was thinking when he was doing all these things, but I hope it all turns out to be just a rumor and nothing else.  Hearing about this story has made me think about how another sports celebrity did a similar thing.  We all know him as Tiger Woods.  Woods ended up losing his marriage and tons of fan support.  He also lost major sponsors and worst of all, he lost the respect of many people all over the world.  I don’t believe that he intended for  any of those things to happen, but when the wrong people find out about these things, nothing but bad news and publicity come from these situations.  If Brett Favre really did do what he is being investigated for, then I will have lost even more respect for him.  I will continue to watch him play and I will still hope he does well in football, but I will never agree with what he chose to do to his wife, fans, and self. 
Jeff Raasch

Monday, September 20, 2010

http://blackboard.westerntc.edu/webapps/portal/frameset.jsp
  • What are your thoughts about the video and about Gever Tulley's approach to learning?

  • My thoughts about about Tulley's learing stlye and approach to learing are that I pretty much agree with everything he says, and his ways of teching are very helpful.  This video shows that working directly with kids and letting them explore new ways of learning helps them understand things without the help of an adult.  His approach to learing is different than most ways but I believe it is affective and works well. 
  • Did this video make you think of potential changes to our current system of education?

  • This video kind of changed my current way of learning and made me wish that more of my learning way more hands on instead of in the books and lecture.
  • What is Tulley saying about the learning process?

  • I believe Tully is saying that each child learns in different ways and that his teaching method is helpful and could potentially help children leard better in some areas rather then the traditional learning method. 
  • What have been your experiences as a student in school?

  • My experiences in school related to leaning have been the traditional type of learning.  By studying out of the book and by having the teaher lecture tothe class.  Most of my classes haven't been hands on learning, which I also think would be a better way of learning in some ways.
  • What have been your experiences learning things outside of school?

  • My outside of school learing experiences have been more hands on and learn it yourself.  I tend to like that style of learing because it helps me learn things quicker and easier.
  • Would you want to attend a school which approached learning this way?

  • Yes I think I would like to attend a school that has that type of teaching method.  I believe it would help me learn better and faster. 
  • In what type of learning environment would you thrive?

  • I would trive in a hands on environment where I could learn things by doing them myself instead of being told how to do it.
  • Can you think of a time when you approached learning something new in a new way?  What was the result? 

  • Yes, when I was told to learn something by watching someone else do it the wrong way, then I had to do it the right way.  The result was that I knew not what to do, so I did it right on the first try. 
  • What are your thoughts about how our society responds to failure?

  • My thought on how society responds to failure is that I believe that society feels failure is a good way of learing, as long as there isn't too much failure. 
  • Did anything else in particular really strike you?

  • Nothing else in this video really struck me. 
    -Jeff

    Tuesday, September 7, 2010

    Labor Day Weekend- Goose Hunt

    This labor day weekend I went early season goose hunting with my brother and his friend Derrick. It all started on Sunday morning at around 4:30am when we woke up. It was a cool, foggy moring full of excitemnent and antisipation When we got to the field we were hunting at, we all began to set up decoys and prepare ourselves for a day of hunting. We didn’t know exactly what this early season would have instore for us, but we were excited and ready for whatever happened. As the fog lifted, and the sun peaked out behind the clouds, our first chance at a goose presented itself. We all knew this early season was a hit or miss type of hunt, so we were not going to pass up this oppourtunity to tag a goose, and we did just that. At the end of the day, we ended up with only one goose, but we all had a great time and were very greatful that we even had the chance to get a goose. This weekend was full of excitement and fun, and I hope to keep having this fun with my brother for many more hunts to come.

    Wednesday, September 1, 2010

    About ME

    Hi, my name is Jeff Raasch.  I am 18 years old.  I was born and raised in Coon Valley, WI.  My hometown is very small but it's a great community!  It has a population of only 700.  My hobbies include pretty much all sports.  I am in the Criminal Justice program at TC and i hope to become a police officer when I graduate.  My dad use to be the chief of police in Coon Valley when I was younger, but he is now retired.  My brother Bobby just graduated from Viterbo.  He went to school to be a police officer, and is now a jailor in Monroe County.  My favorite thing to do is play baseball.  I don't have any pets, but I love dogs.  In ten years I see myself married with two kids, hopefully working as a police officer somewhere. 

    Monday, August 30, 2010

    Baseball

    This is my first blog and i chose to write about baseball. Baseball is by far my favorite sport!!! i love everything about it. The way its played, the smell, just the atmostphere around the ball park makes me happy. Ever since I was young, I have played baseball. I have made many new friends and many of the friends i made first starting out playing baseball, will be life long friends. When I play baseball, nothing else mattersat that time. Not school, homework, money, or my job. It's just my team and I out there on the field working together to win that game! I believe baseball has helped shape who I am today as a person, and without it in my life, i would be lost.