June 25, 2011

Mt. Lofty

Hi everyone!

The highlight of this week was an awesome dinner at the house of Heather and John (who works at the archaeology dept). We started with champagne and a tray of cheeses and olives. For dinner, we had delicious zucchini parsley soup with fresh bread, followed by grilled snap peas, asparagus and salmon. Dessert was incredible: chocolate cake with caramel and homemade honey ice cream. Wow. Everyone at the dinner was really nice, and it was certainly one of the yummiest and funnest meals I've had in a long long time.

Yesterday, I went on a hike with a few friends to Mt. Lofty, which, while probably not technically a mountain, was a really pretty walk up to a great view. Also, I brought croissants and dolmas, which made the whole endeavor 120% more rewarding.  

In other good news, I finally found a beer I really like, Vale Ale.

View of Adelaide from the top of Mt Lofty. Downtown is visible, and so is the ocean.



big sur pictures







here's a few snaps from our time in big sur:

summer in the sierras

Well, I guess I’ve been MIA on this blog since our trip, partly because I’ve been sucked in by my summer bird job, and also because my backpacking (mis)adventures don’t seem quite as thrilling and exotic as Emily’s globetrotting cavorts. Also, I really don’t know how many people actually read this blog, so if you do, you should tell us and we’ll be encouraged to keep writing in it, although Emily has been doing an awesome job, must be nice to have internet access every day.

So, anyway, I’ve been in the Sierras of central California since late April. Before my job started I helped out with another project that my non-profit (the Institute for Bird Populations) is conducting with the funding of the Forest Service that works with Black-Backed Woodpeckers. We were doing playback surveys and catching the birds with mist-nets, putting transmitters on them, and then tracking their movements with radio telemetry. After a week doing that in northern California, I started my real job in Yosemite. This year was my third summer doing the job (though in a different national park every summer), but my first as the crew leader. I was a little nervous for the extra responsibility, but glad to have been able to work up the job ladder a notch. The first three weeks were training for the newly hired interns. Every morning we’d go out at dawn to bird for most of the morning, and then for the rest of the day go over how to carry out the protocol for bird surveys. It was interesting to be on the other side of the student-teacher relationship.

The first week all four of us surveyed in Yosemite, then after that Zeka and I went down to Sequoia/Kings Canyon for the rest of the summer while Ryan and Sam stayed in Yosemite. Emily came down to visit for an all too brief weekend after the first week and the two of us went camping in the Big Sur area of the California coast. I’d first explored Big Sur on time off while I was doing spotted owl work back in 2006, and it was great to share some of my treasured places and memories with Emily.

After that Zeka and I got started in Seqoia/Kings Canyon, or SEKI, for short. It’s been really cool to survey in groves of sequoias, the largest trees (by volume) in the world. This year is a really heavy snow pack year, and it’s had a huge affect on the field season. We gradually survey sites higher in elevation throughout the summer, and usually place at least partially melt out by the times we need to hike there. Not this year. It’d be manageable to this point because we’d been in lower sites, but now every site left required beefy trips into the backcountry, most of which involve crossing high mountain passes. The weather has been relatively hot and dry recently, and the snow is melting, so hopefully we’ll be able to get to places eventually. While everything is melting all the streams have surged with all the meltwater, making crossings a little dicey. We’re trying to get where we can while being safe at the same time.

After this job ends in July I’m planning to hike the John Muir Trail, which spans over 200 miles between Yosemite and Mt. Whitney, which is just outside Sequoia NP. I’ve been wanting to do a long hike like this for a long time and am getting really excited for it! I’ll be joined by a few friends for at least a good part of the hike, and it’ll be great to share such an incredible experience with them.

Hope everyone reading this is doing well. Write me and tell me what’s going on with you. Take care.

June 18, 2011

Adelaide fun

Hi everyone! I've been up to some fun stuff in Adelaide since returning from Canberra. My hostel is really close to the Adelaide Central Market which is, as would be predicted from the name, a large market. There is tons of cheap veggies and fruits there, as well as cheese, olives, bakery goods, wine and coffee. I've been by a few times to pick up some odds and ends, but on Saturday morning I went for a cup of coffee to soak up the scene. I had a nice night Friday, I went to a pub with some friends, there was a great band playing. The one majorly disturbing thing about Australia so far (especially for someone used to Portland) is the outrageously expensive ($7 for 14 oz), crappy beer. Luckily, wine is dirt cheap and de-licious!
Today I went with some friends to Port Adelaide to go on a boat ride. The big attraction was dolphins - and we saw about a dozen! As you probably all know, I tend to freak out when watching dolphins, and I think it was only the freezing water that kept me from 'accidentally' falling in.
Also, I wrote a blog post about my research for the Finders Uni Archaeology blog. If you're interested, here's the link: flindersarchaeology.com

Mini donuts and espresso - The breakfast of champions.

We were served lunch on the boat ride. I even ate a few bites of my fish!
My friend Greg took this picture with his fancy camera.

The river banks were pretty industrial, but still interesting to see.


Port Adelaide lighthouse.

June 15, 2011

Canberra

I just got back from a trip to Canberra, Australia's capital city. I was there for the official orientation to EAPSI - the program that got me to Australia and is supporting my research. We were wined and dined by the Australian Academy of Science - I had some seriously fabulous food and (more than) my fair share of beer and wine. We visited the National Gallery, which has a great collection of Indigenous art. We also got to tour the Parliament House, and were able to sit in on 'question time', where politicians are able to query other representatives. This was awesome for two reasons:
1. The Dalai Lama was also sitting in on questions time. I have NEVER been so excited to be in the same room as someone in my life - including the time we saw Torii Hunter at McDonalds.
2. Most of the time was spent by politicians avoiding questions in hilarious ways, and being heckled by their colleagues. To imagine the scene, just think of a guy in a suit saying "Jobs blah blah blah they want to take away you pension blah blah we will create jobs blah blah blah..." while 100 other people are pointing and muttering and laughing rudely and standing up and sitting down, and one dude in the middle is yelling "order ORDER" in an Australian accent. Awesome.
The only sad part about the trip is that it was a lot of fun to hang out with the 20 other students, and now we're all split up into our host cities.
Canberra is a totally planned city, built from scratch. It is laid out symmetrically, all the streets are very wide, its super clean, and bars close at 10:30. Reminds me of my summer in Utah.

This picture is actually taken from the top of the capital building, which is covered in sod. The buildings in the large park area are the old parliament building and the war memorial. 

Top of the capital building.

June 11, 2011

Barossa Valley

This Saturday, I went to the Barossa Valley to go wine tasting with some professors and staff from the archaeology department. The regions around Adelaide are really famous for their wines. We went to four different places and had a really nice lunch in a strawbale restaurant overlooking some vineyards. The wine all tasted good to me -- I think I inherited Dad's 'sophisticated palette'. Anyway, it was a really fun day!

Since I got to Adelaide, I've been pretty busy with reading and thinking about the culturally modified tree project that I'm here to do research for. It's going to be a really interesting project, but eight weeks is such a short time. I'm staying in the city center in a really nice hostel. Since its the Australian winter, most international people are here to work or study, so its pretty quite and relaxed around here. Flinders (the University I am doing my research through) is about 45 minutes south of Adelaide by bus. It is a really pretty campus, its on a hill where you can see lots of the surrounding area and the ocean.

If anyone would like to arrange a skype date, let me know!


June 6, 2011

Adelaide!

Hi everyone! After 24+ hours on planes and in airports, I finally arrived in the fair city of Adelaide, where I'll be living on and off for the next three months. It is a pretty big city, with over a million people. There are tons of shops, museums, parks, restaurants, and coffee shops. The good news is that museums are free, the bad news is that the American dollar is the worst ever against the Australian dollar, so I'll probably be spending more time eating sandwiches than at restaurants. 
I've been here for 2 1/2 days, and I've already been to the South Australian Museum twice - its awesome! I have free wireless at the hostel I'm staying at now, so I'll try to update this blog frequently while I have the chance. Hope you are all doing very well. I miss you all!
The first display I looked at in the museum was of a culturally modified tree - what a good sign! This tree was peeled to remove a large sheet of bark, which was probably used to build either a canoe or as part of a shelter.

This is a bark canoe, which was made out of the bark peeled from trees like the one in the first photo. Sorry for the crapiness of some of these photos, there was no flash photos allowed.

This painting, which measures approximately 7x5 feet, was created by contemporary Indigenous artists. It is a map of some of their traditional lands around Adelaide and it portrays dreamtime stories. The colors are very vivid and it is very striking to stand next to it. 

This caption is next to the painting, and it explains some of the elements of the landscape and stories that are described in the painting.

Today I took a walk by the river and saw tons of native black swans - they were very exciting to see!