(Hopefully that was the case - I haven't found any other ants despite it starting to warm up so I'm especially confused haha.
I do have a nice black-leafed cherry that I didn't get a chance to plant in the yard last fall that I've been keeping indoors over winter and it's starting to bloom now. It smells so nice when I go down there because the smell has just spread through the area and it's quite pleasant! I also have quite a few amaryllis getting ready to bloom so I'm super excited about those as well. Plus the seeds for my summer garden arrived last week so I'm really excited!
Best of luck though with the courses though

If you don't mind me asking how many years of schooling do you have left? Are there any classes you're looking forward to taking (like more History classes)? Is there a specific time period you're really interested in?
Also sorry in advance for Parker's lackluster response - I spent a day trying to come up with something but ultimately came up with that, hopefully his internal monologue/sarcasm gives you a chuckle!)
Rodger Castillo
Rodger stood, momentarily caught off guard by Ollie's flushed face and struggled mentally for a few moments to figure out why his friend seemed so embarrassed. Oh. He made a mental note to check harnesses
while standing, and looked away, using a hand to scratch at the back of his neck. When Ollie felt comfortable enough looking at him again, he mouthed an 'sorry' at him before submitting himself to Ollie's inspection of his harness. He listened to his question, and shrugged.
"You only have to mess things up once for them to not matter anymore. While I do a pretty good job of managing my equipment, the one time I'm moving fast or distracted and don't double check and miss something, then I could die. Tie a knot wrong, leave a harness unsecured, it comes apart when I'm fifty feet up in the air." His mind drifted back to a memory of one time when he'd caught his dad's red tag on his climbing harness showing. His father's reaction, normally relaxed face growing tense, a deep shuddering breath, and then kneeling down to give him a hug. Rodger's father had about twenty years of climbing experience, but the excitement of wanting to get on the rock and show his son the ropes, literally and figuratively, had made him miss a single strap. "I may be good at this, but it doesn't mean I'm immune to making mistakes on occasion." He said with a shrug. His father had taught him from an early age to be mindful of his thinking and how his actions could have consequences. One of the things he'd learned about was different mentalities taken from aviation flight training: anti-authority, impulsivity, invulnerability, macho, and resignation. While they did learn about these at during their training at the Galaxy Garrison, he'd just had a lot more time to recognize and apply them to his thinking than the other cadets. While he usually wasn't prone to the anti-authority mindset, or a belief that he was above the rules, like any other teenage boy he did have streaks of macho - trying to impress others by taking unnecessary risks, and invulnerability - he'd come out of different situations fine before, so why should this time be any different? Rodger thought he was getting better at impulsivity by trying to take a few steps back to evaluate different situations, but if he was being honest at times he definitely needed some work. Thankfully he didn't have to deal with resignation, but that definitely was because he was tenacious in whatever he did, determinedly working through the problem or the challenge set before him.
With his harness checked by Ollie, he reached out and accepted the knot back from Lt. Frost, using a carabiner to fasten it to Ollie's harness. He looped the other end into a belay clip, stringing the line out behind him and clipping the belay device onto his harness. With that done, he walked around the tree, securing himself and scuffing up the ground underneath his feet, kicking away loose stones and making sure he had good footing- he didn't want to fall if Ollie took a tumble. Knowing that Parker would likely want to do the bare minimum, Rodger asked him to sit on a convenient rock and keep an eye out for any loose stones coming down the scree field or if something was looking unstable. He spent a few minutes carefully coiling his rope so it wouldn't get stuck on anything or catch one of his legs, before looking back at Ollie. "We're good to go, just call out if you need more slack or if you're about to take a tumble." He said, bending his knees slightly and starting to feed some rope through his belay.
Parker Curtiss
Sure Parker, just go sit on the rock over there, and look for rocks. Hey, there's a rock, and there's a rock. It's almost like I'm looking at a bunch of rocks. Go figure. At least I'm sitting down and getting a break before climbing across
all of those rocks.