Twas the week before Thanksgiving
when all through the house,
Not a creature was stirring
Not even a mouse ( just kidding they keep making commercials).
The beakers were hung
On the drying rack with care
In hopes that sharpie
would eventually be written there.
We, children, were nestled
all snug in our lab
With visions of vacation
and tasty food to grab.
But then we left
Cause it was Thanksgiving Break.
Have a Happy Thanksgiving Everyone!
Friday, November 17, 2017
Tuesday, October 17, 2017
We're not in Kansas ( I mean Philly) anymore!
Posted by Caitlyn
After a long journey, we finally made it to Canada. The trip up was filled with extended flights, a long time in Minneapolis, and a large amount of Chick-fil-A. Movies were watched, work was completed, and a significant amount of naps were taken. Canada was not as I remembered it in all my past memories. It had been on the chilly side during the summer, but right off the plane I could feel that this was going to be a colder experience. Our first day was spent preparing for our wonderful Peatland adventures. We had a few hiccups on the way including holding back an old lady's car so it didn't roll into a very large truck.
The following day, we traveled to the far off Red Earth Creek site. We had a possible caribou sighting down the path. The site was enjoyable. However, we did find an unsettling surprise in one of the snow tubes. A snow tube took another a casualty- a squirrel.
After a long journey, we finally made it to Canada. The trip up was filled with extended flights, a long time in Minneapolis, and a large amount of Chick-fil-A. Movies were watched, work was completed, and a significant amount of naps were taken. Canada was not as I remembered it in all my past memories. It had been on the chilly side during the summer, but right off the plane I could feel that this was going to be a colder experience. Our first day was spent preparing for our wonderful Peatland adventures. We had a few hiccups on the way including holding back an old lady's car so it didn't roll into a very large truck.
Yev enjoying Athabasca
On our first field day, we brought Kristen out to experience her first outing in a bog. The Wagon Wheels were as glorious as I remembered. The weather may have been colder....A LOT COLDER.....many layers of clothing with hand warmers colder. Luckily for us, the sites warmed up after walking up a few arms. Yev and I had great fun taking down snow tubes. There were a few mess ups as the tube fell on my head at least one. We had a cold but successful adventure.
Crow Lake
The following day, we traveled to the far off Red Earth Creek site. We had a possible caribou sighting down the path. The site was enjoyable. However, we did find an unsettling surprise in one of the snow tubes. A snow tube took another a casualty- a squirrel.
Red Earth Creek
The next day, we traveled to the infamous Crow Lake. Despite the few injuries and stuck boots, we were able to complete all of our work efficiently and still enjoy the bog. But, Crow Lake is still the worst.
We enjoyed a few days in Fort Mac. It was a great trip complete with great food, great company ( our new friend Danielle), and the always great Tim Hortons for breakfast. We were able to see all the WBEA sites. It may have been the coldest days of the trip, but it was also the best. Yev kept us laughing the entire trip. There were some hiccups here and there, cold hands, stubborn weather stations, crank wires, and Yev's room locking her out, but we had fun nonetheless. Also, we saw wood buffalo!!!
Kim and Melanie reading crank wires
That's all folks.
Until next time.
What We Learned - October 2017
Posted by Caitlyn
What We Learned This Trip
1. Canada is very cold, very very cold, but at least there is no bugs."Snow is cold" -Yev
2. The ghost in the Athabasca house is 100% there.
3. Crow Lake is the worst even without the bugs.
4. Canada is 100% better without its bloodsucking inhabits
5. During a Canadian October, always wear pants when you leave your hotel room with layers on. Or you will freeze especially when you get locked out.
6. Apple pie fritter at Tim Hortons is AMAZING
7. The only thing worse than Canadian bloodsuckers is the McMurray Inn's wifi.
8. Dead squirrels smell real bad.
9. Canadian fall is my winter
10. There is a Tim Hortons in Athabasca
11. Kristen loves the bogs.
12. At the airport, we have the new wonderful title of bog people.
13. Snow tubes hurt.
Friday, October 13, 2017
Snow!
our deer family at the house |
Posted by Kim
No bears. No moose. Instead, we saw two Bald Eagles, a Northern
Harrier, a Rough Legged, countless un-ID-ed buteos, a handful of deer, assorted ducks, a fleet of snow
geese, bevies upon bevies of Ruffed Grouse, one coyote, one coyote poop, one
bear poop, one dead red squirrel, Wood Buffalo behind a fence, and conspiracies
of Ravens. It seemed a little slim on
the wildlife this trip, but I suppose we shouldn’t complain - we also didn’t have to leave a site because
of wildlife, so that is good.every step: deeper snow |
We did, however, experienced our fingers go red and numb,
our toes ache, and beautiful snow-covered landscapes. For the second year in a row we have done
fieldwork in the snow. Now, I love snow;
there is no denying that, but even I get a little nudgy when I have to read
crank wires when there is snow. First
you have to find the crank wires – they are wires sticking up from the moss 4-8
cm and they were completely snow covered. Then you need to clear out the snow
from them gently with your fingers in the 20 degree weather, put a ruler on
them, and measure them at ground level.
We were lying down in the snow a lot and our hand-warmers got some good
use. It was cold, but it was also
fun. Challenges doing fieldwork are part
of the gig and that’s part of what makes it so endearing.
the crew |
We have a great crew this trip and everyone has been
nothing but positive about pretty much everything. And the things that get complained about are
things like unnecessary use of hose clamps and such – not the cold, or the
hours, or being squished in the truck. I’m
proud of us all –especially after we froze our bippies off yesterday. We are all looking forward to heading home
tomorrow, but we’ll also be a little sad to leave the snowy beautifulness here
in Alberta. Another year pulled from the
calendar and we hope the next will be filled with even more field work. Keep your fingers crossed.
Wood Buffalo |
Labels:
Alberta,
bogs,
cranked wires,
Fort McMurray,
peatland,
snow
Location:
Athabasca, AB, Canada
Monday, October 9, 2017
Our Endless and Proper Work
Posted by Kim
We polled last night and it has won the Site-Least-Liked
award. Crow Lake burned around 2000 and
so the trees that died then are akimbo, losing their vertical. The peat has lost integrity producing pools
in which many boots are lost: soakers, we call them and sometimes they come in
quick succession pulling both boots off unsuspecting undergraduates. You stop.
You pull your boot(s) out of the dark sodden hole. You pour the water out, hope for the best,
and move on. The walk into the site from
the road is also quite terrible and we’ve lost two folks up to their armpits. We now are very aware of where that hole lives.
In contrast, we have two beautifully green and vibrant sites
near Wabasca, Alberta – a short drive from Athabasca where our base of operations
remains for now. I have grown to love them
both. The oldest of our sites, Wabasca
old, is full of surprises and, as far as bogs go, is pretty diverse.
The trees are dense, which made plot layout a challenge, and this
trickles down to me wandering around almost every time I’m there to make sure I’m
at the right spot. Mosses run roughshod over
fallen trees and climb up living trees making the spruce throw out new roots in
order to survive. It is a silent battle
out there that hardly anyone sees or understands, but we speak some of the
language and we try to listen and learn.
Field work is a comfort to me (even though I may grumble
about the cold or the bugs or the snow or the rain) and I have missed it this
summer. It is good to be back in the
field and among the mosses so plenty. I’m reminded of a ditty written by Mary Oliver. This is but a bit of it:
How important it is to walk along,
not in haste but slowly,
looking at everything and calling out
Yes! No! The
swan, for all his pomp, his robes of grass and petals, wants
only to be allowed to live on the nameless pond. The catbrieris without fault. The water thrushes, down among the sloppy
rocks, are going crazy with happiness. Imagination is better
than a sharp instrument. To pay attention, this is our endless
and proper work.
Happy Thanksgiving to especially our Canadian friends.
Labels:
Alberta,
bog,
fieldwork,
Mary Oliver,
moss,
peat,
Thanksgiving
Location:
Athabasca, AB, Canada
Tuesday, August 22, 2017
posted by Caitlyn:
We finally made it to CANADA! Our August trip was a blast and a nice trip down memory lane. It was nostalgic to stay at the same house in Athabasca and see the WBEA sites. My peat feet didn't take too long to come back after a few instances of being stuck. The black flies and mosquitoes also had faded from memory. I personally forgot bug spray when visiting our first site, Anzac, which isn't a mistake I will likely make again. Veg collection was as fun as I remembered. Everyone quickly found their favorite vegetation to pick. I personally loved Mitis, while Yev enjoyed Evernia. Kel and Wendy worked as a great team to collect all of the Sphagnum samples. It couldn't be all work and no fun though. Yev and I spent most of free time enjoying the always good Canadian Netflix. All in all we had a fantastic trip! We can't wait to go back in October.
We finally made it to CANADA! Our August trip was a blast and a nice trip down memory lane. It was nostalgic to stay at the same house in Athabasca and see the WBEA sites. My peat feet didn't take too long to come back after a few instances of being stuck. The black flies and mosquitoes also had faded from memory. I personally forgot bug spray when visiting our first site, Anzac, which isn't a mistake I will likely make again. Veg collection was as fun as I remembered. Everyone quickly found their favorite vegetation to pick. I personally loved Mitis, while Yev enjoyed Evernia. Kel and Wendy worked as a great team to collect all of the Sphagnum samples. It couldn't be all work and no fun though. Yev and I spent most of free time enjoying the always good Canadian Netflix. All in all we had a fantastic trip! We can't wait to go back in October.
Wednesday, July 26, 2017
Lab Days
Working hard in the Wieder Lab! We have finally finished cleaning the 2015 vegetation samples! Most of it has been ground and measured. Feels good to check stuff off the chart! Almost ready to start with the analysis!!
Now we have moved onto the easy stuff from August 2016. This year doesn't look nearly brutal as the 2015 bunch. A fan favorite of black spruce is getting picked today!
To say the crew is getting a little stir crazy would be an understatement. Here's Yevgeniya dreaming of the outside world and wishing to be out in Mariana Lake. She sure is missing those blueberries!
Wednesday, May 24, 2017
The Smell of Fort McMurray in the Morning
Posted by: Kim
Welcome to Field Season 2017!
Starting it off with a bang, Kel and I are tackling Fort McMurray sites and doing a fine job of it. No bugs, no rain, no sun, no problem. Actually, there were bits of each of those things today, but we weren't counting. Day one went great and we look forward to tomorrow's adventure.
Sorry for the tease, but I'm making this short and sweet. We have some planning to do for tomorrow and some good Fort McMurray food to find for dinner. We'll have plenty to talk about soon. It has been too long. We've all missed the mosses and I'm excited to share scoop on our summer plans and what has been going on over the winter. For now, I can assure you - the mosses are still here and it makes me happy to be walking among them - so lavish and green.
Welcome to Field Season 2017!
Starting it off with a bang, Kel and I are tackling Fort McMurray sites and doing a fine job of it. No bugs, no rain, no sun, no problem. Actually, there were bits of each of those things today, but we weren't counting. Day one went great and we look forward to tomorrow's adventure.
Sorry for the tease, but I'm making this short and sweet. We have some planning to do for tomorrow and some good Fort McMurray food to find for dinner. We'll have plenty to talk about soon. It has been too long. We've all missed the mosses and I'm excited to share scoop on our summer plans and what has been going on over the winter. For now, I can assure you - the mosses are still here and it makes me happy to be walking among them - so lavish and green.
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