
My rising limb has taken a long time to get there, slightly less than 2 years. I hope that my peak discharge spans from the 2nd of November till the 16th and there is a high discharge. And I can picture my receding limb being a steep drop. At the end of it all, I don’t suppose my base flow would increase that much. Heh.
Studying reminds me of infiltration. Reach your saturation point just before your exams but be careful about how you reach there. If you study too hard, you suffer from Hortonian Overland Flow which means that you’ve been studying more than your infiltration capacity, resulting in a great amount of erosion (i.e. a burnout). On the other hand, if you study too much, you’ll suffer from Saturation Overland Flow which means that you’ll end up getting mixed up with the knowledge you have (especially since quite a bit would be unnecessary).
Of course, some of our brains are suited for rain. Note that if you’re like sandstone, mug just before your exams and it’ll be very effective. If you are a bit like clay, just mug slowly and consistently. If you are granite, then you really got no hope one… Heh. This brings life to the word “stoner”.
Whoever said that Geog is a subject that should be scrapped, should be scrapped himself.
Sorry, feeling grumpy, been attempting to classify the policies of Mao Ze Dong for the entire evening. Trying to dichotomise Mao’s rule into my table for effective IB History studying is madness, his rule is the hardest out of all the dictators. BAH.
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October 18, 2007 at 11:19 pm
brendan
geog! so mad! lol!
October 21, 2007 at 4:16 pm
Anonymous
haha brendan commented!
Geog can be extended as a metaphor in many different ways…if all your surface runoffs (IAs) reach your stream at the same time, you get flooded with work. If the work coming in exceeds our infiltration capacity, we get owned by Hortonian overland flow. And the greatest disasters occur when we’re complacent in our methods of flood prevention.