I would like to perform my observations every day between noon and 1. We'll see how that works out. While I cannot know the relationships between the subjects, my hopes are if I perform my observations around the same time everyday I will begin to see the same people returning, and perhaps glean something about their relationships and habits.
I hypothesize the majority of the smokers around the flagpole will be animated and friendly with each other. Not necessarily that they will all be friends, but rather they will interact as friends of circumstance. This may include conversing with a person while inside the smoking area, and essentially ignoring each other upon departure. Also, I am fairly certain that in spite of a habit, if the weather is disagreeable, people will not attend this particular safe place to smoke.
. . .
Thursday, February 26, 2009, between the hours of 12:24pm and 12:47. Weather's nice.
~An interesting interaction. A girl with very short hair (initially I mistook her for a boy) rides towards the flagpole and stands her bike. She is smiling, and she goes to greet a girl sitting against the flagpole reading a newspaper (she also has very short hair). As far as I can see, the girl sitting down is not smoking.
~It seems people generally want to put their butts out in the flower pots around the flagpole, but if they are standing towards the edges of the area they are less inclined to, and they simply drop it to the ground, stamp it out, and leave the area.
~It seems almost as if people outside this smoking environment are afraid or extremely uncomfortable with the area as I've noticed students will take the brick paths all around the area rather than making the straight and much quicker path through the grassy area. Only one person cut through the area and he did so with such certainty, and I had become so comfortable with the avoidance convention that he actually surprised me. I initially assumed he was walking determinedly to have his smoke.
- 12:24 ~There are about 10-15 people on the grassy area in the center of Polk Place, where the flagpole stands. About 3 or 4 of them are not smoking, the rest are. Those who are not smoking appear to be friends with a few of the smokers. It is interesting that the majority of the girls have relatively short hair; in fact, a lot of these people seem like the kind of people I would like to get to know. Of course, one can never judge a person by appearance alone.
- 12:34 ~Egh, people are starting to look at me funny. I guess I do look a bit like I'm creepin'; I'm just standing against a tree watching the people. I suppose I should find a way to be more discreet about my observations.
~An interesting interaction. A girl with very short hair (initially I mistook her for a boy) rides towards the flagpole and stands her bike. She is smiling, and she goes to greet a girl sitting against the flagpole reading a newspaper (she also has very short hair). As far as I can see, the girl sitting down is not smoking.
~It seems people generally want to put their butts out in the flower pots around the flagpole, but if they are standing towards the edges of the area they are less inclined to, and they simply drop it to the ground, stamp it out, and leave the area.
- 12:47 ~People have begun to trickle back into the area and now there are almost as many people as there were when I began my observation. So far, I have witnessed only one person light a second cigarette, but this could be due to the fact that there are so many subjects, and I may have just missed it.
~It seems almost as if people outside this smoking environment are afraid or extremely uncomfortable with the area as I've noticed students will take the brick paths all around the area rather than making the straight and much quicker path through the grassy area. Only one person cut through the area and he did so with such certainty, and I had become so comfortable with the avoidance convention that he actually surprised me. I initially assumed he was walking determinedly to have his smoke.