INTENSE and INTENSIVE
Intensive
Part of speech: Adjective
Definition: Forceful, severe, passionate
Synonyms: Acute, agonizing, all-consuming, ardent, biting, bitter, burning, close, concentrated, consuming, cutting, deep, diligent, eager, earnest, energetic, exaggerated, exceptional, excessive, exquisite, extraordinary, extreme, fanatical, fervent, fervid, fierce, forcible, full, great, hard, harsh, heightened, impassioned, intensified, intensive, keen, marked, piercing, powerful, profound, protracted, pungent, sharp, shrill, stinging, strained, strong, supreme, undue, vehement, violent, vivid, zealous.
Notes: emotions are intense while sustained application or attention is intensive, intense arrives from within and intensive come from outside, (it is imposed or assumed)
Antonyms: calm, dull, low-key, mild moderate.*
Amphitheater at Theodore Roosevelt NP (South Unit), Medora, North Dakota. |
I've tried to explain to folks about the reason I say I've worked for 6 years with the National Park Service. In actuality, I have 26 months with them. I've tried saying I have 6 seasons, but for most folks that doesn't really register--sounds like a long gig, like a hunting season. (I have a friend who writes that in 12 years she's worked 19 seasons~~true that.)
Telling a hilarious story on the Historic Islands Boat tour at Acadia, 2005. That's not our Hinkley in the background. Sigh. |
Yesterday, I decided to do the math:
I've worked 26 months for NPS.Therefore, I've worked 104 weeks.
I've averaged 3 programs per day.
I work 5 days per week.
Therefore, I've presented 15 programs per week.
Therefore, I've presented 1,560 programs.
That's a hella lotta programs.
If you just look at my time at Yellowstone, it ups the average:
I've worked at YNP for 60 weeks.
I've averaged 4 programs a day there, for 20 programs per week.
Therefore, I've presented 1,200 programs just at YNP alone.
I did a remarkably unscientific check of the programs presented through our local park district. By extrapolating the stats, I can say with complete honesty that I've given more programs during my "seasons" than my counterparts here give in a year.
Another factor we look at is visitor contacts. This includes anybody I speak with regarding park stuff while I'm on duty. I know for a plain and simple fact that my 4 months worth of visitor contacts is waaaaay more than any one here in my home park records in a 12 month period, but I've crunched the numbers anywho. At THRO, we had half a million visitors each year, most of them in the summer, and a very high percentage of those folks came through the Visitor Center. Acadia's visitor numbers are much higher, but I only had to work the desk for a total of 5 hours per week (thank goodness), but did at least 2 hikes every day, along with roving in between hikes, thus lowering my own visitor contact numbers. But the sheer volume of visitors at YNP (including 2 of my 4 summers that had record-breaking attendance), really gooses my visitor contact numbers through the roof. Okay, so by my calculations, I've personally spoken with over
35,000 people
At bear jams, and |
elk jams. I loved that these gals using the motorized chairs were able to see the elk without having to be in a car. |
Now factor in the living conditions . . . in my case making arrangements for here at home and boys' schools, traveling 1700 miles twice a year, hauling a small cargo trailer and 1 to 2 teenagers and/or husband . . . packing for said trips, pretty much by myself . . . then living in a very nice but tiny 644 sq. foot apartment, yeah with all 4 of us . . . learning about an ever-changing environment each spring . . . and the addition of learning and figuring out the personalities of 10 to 12 new peeps in my duty station, and associated places like OF, YA, the campground, and the Chamber . . .
Now figure out how much money I end up with. Start with my base pay, subtract taxes, housing, extra utilities, and travel, and ta-daa, I get a $3000 "profit." That's the frosting on the cake. Yum.
Neighbors are kinda pushy.....
So to make another short story long . . .
Working in such an environment, we cram way more into those 4 months than most folks cram into a year.
*Thanks to thesaurus.com for their help.