rocks & zines I, the report:

The weather was kind to us, sunny and beautiful at the coast (a bit chill, I must confess, but we were prepared). Many fossils were found, and surprisingly the very small fossils brought a very big excitement. We had to jump some trees on our way and I made sure that Emmett, the dog, could make it. We could not predict though that he would jump to the nearest cliff and slowly sink into the mud, requiring a small rescue. But he didn’t seem to bother to walk with his mud-boots. We had many chocolate and snack breaks to get the energy to keep looking. The only setback was a bus-schedule confusion, that made us wait for some time, but the whole team's mood was kept in a good place and some napping on the sidewalk happened.

The next weekend, we met at the cozy Risofort studio. Maybe for the first time in history, million years fossils were placed on a riso-printer, turning into beautiful flatallic gold and federal blue images. There was a lot of laughing, talking, remembering, and also eating snacks. Emmett got his own place on the table, of course, and also a dedicated page in the zine. We ended up with an amazing 16-page zine that we called “The Rockers”, as there were plans of creating an imaginary band after this.