2/14/2009

Guess What...




Me, no flash, can you believe it?













the light house on a foggy night,
twenty feet up a hill from where i reside.












I am just breaking it in now, more will follow, and they will not disappoint.

2/03/2009

Scholarships, shopping and whatever else.

These first few days at the institute have been pretty great. I have nearly completed the first go at the experiment, we will repeat it two more times in order to get significant data, whatever that may show, but from now on I will be working on it alone.
Friday night was fun, we went to a seminar on main campus and afterward I was invited to a bar by the director of the marine station (the institute). We went to the professors' club where we met up with a few other professors, including Dr. Rajan who I work for, and discussed Hong Kong and how I liked it there, among other things. It was nice talking to them, it seemed like they had just arrived in Hong Kong because they were all eager to give their opinions on what I would have though were pretty day to day occurences, but they'd all been in HK for over 9 years.
That meeting was fun, talking to old British guys, they love to talk. Later I spoke with Rajan concerning my stay here, and he asked me if it was ok to submit my name for another fellowship. I am one person away from getting the first one I applied for, it depends on whether he can make it to HK in time or not, but if it doesn't work out there is this second one that Rajan says I am first in line for if I want it. He says there isn't as much prestige in this one, although the money is the same.
Lots to think about. I like it here. I want to study here, but can I make it four years without too many problems. Oh wait, there is a solution. Twice a year in order to encourage international exchange they pay students to study for 6 months to a year at another approved marine lab, one of which is the one in Charleston, OR. So, I study here for four years. One year of which can be spent in Oregon. I don't have to go to Oregon though, I can go pretty much anywhere in the Pacific; Hawai'i, Saigon I think, another place on Mainland China, somewhere in Australia, and many others I am sure.
I have made no commitments, but this is sounding better and better.
In the mean time I have been having fun. This weekend was relaxed, wandering around a local town, exploring the local trails, having a wild boar scare the living daylights out of me. I also worked about 5 hours both Saturday and Sunday. Rajan is a hard worker, and he expects the same out of everybody in his lab. I can understand, projects run on their own schedules.
I have been working straight from thursday till today.
But today has been excellent. I went shopping for electronics. Electronics in China. I was taken to the 'computer center' by a coworker. It is a three story mall crammed with little shops. Everyshop is bursting with all kinds of electronics. Lots of knock off brands, and lots of real brands, and it is even easy to tell the difference. I feel like I could buy a computer for 100 dollars. New digital cameras are about half off what I would expect to pay normally. too tempting. although the return policies are not quite up to par, the products are new from the makers. I wonder what is up. I guess there is a reason Hong Kong is renowned for its shopping. Something about taxes i think.
I am back at the lab now, we must prepare for an open house on Friday, the day we get approved for money. Dress to impress. I think it is a given that it will go ok, but everybody is stressed and I have to be ready to break down what our lab is doing for all the important visitors. Afterward is a lab party, I think that will be fun since I haven't had a chance to get to know many of the people here because they are always working or sleeping. Never around wanting to talk.
So that is all for now, quick and ugly, but I haven't updated any of you for too long.
PS, I will get a web cam so soon we can video conference.

1/30/2009

SWIMS

I made it to swims yesterday, even after getting on the wrong bus and ending up stuck with all my luggage with no way to get anywhere. It is beautiful here, cliffs and steep widing roads to get here, and a great rocky coast to look out from. There are islands all over in the ocean, some within an easy swim, others might take a paddle board to get to I just have to find one. I got into my room, a very nice fully furnished little room, bed desk bookshelf dresser, and then a bathroom with a shower as well. couldn't really ask for more.
The institute itself is a little smaller than I had expected, coming from one that was used as for teaching as well I hadn't expected the entire lack of teaching labs. Just offices and research labs all crammed with tanks. Dr. Rajan is very nice, he makes sure to teach you everything needed to do the work, then sets you on your own to repeat and learn it yourself. I feel like I could already repeat the experiment we are doing on my own. The guy who runs the facility is also incredibly nice. Judging by the accent I'd say he's Brittish, one of the first things he wanted to know is whether I play rugby or not. Of course he expected me to say no, but 'just in case...'. Dr Rajan led me around and introduced me to everybody, and told them all I was here to learn, so if they ever wanted help or were doing anything very interesting to come and get me. One of the Professors here dives off the coast to examine coral, I hope she'll come and get me for that. She is trying to improve coral growth by growing them on electric mesh. Never heard of that one.
I worked until ten setting up the second trial of Rajan's ocean acidification experiment, with some breaks. Like stopping for dinner, some Indian food Rajan had made, curry vegatables and wheat tortilla bread. It was tasty.
Today we are just observing the experiment, to make sure it is controlling itself correctly and later we are going to a seminar on main campus, afterward everybody goes out with the director for drinks. Supposedly hes a party animal, rugby hooligan type i guess.

1/26/2009

a few photos

I don't know how many of you ever saw the new Batman movie, but, if you remember the part where Batman rips that badguy out of a building in Hong Kong by way of Sky Hook, that tall building in the background is the one.
This was the first evidence of traditional Chinese decor I saw, at the entrance to the University Hall where my dorm is for the next couple days. Its an old castle converted to monastery, to police headquarters, to dorm.
Bamboo scaffolding. I never thought they'd have entire buildings covered, and this one is small compared to the really tall ones covered by the stuff.
A road near Victoria Park.
This is Causeway Bay. I just thought the guy in the boat paddling with a single long oar was cool.

Sorry about the image quality, I only have my camera phone to use. it does ok though.

1/24/2009

A day on Hong Kong Island, with Kelvin

My Hong Kong island adventure began last night around one in the morning when my plane finally arrived. About 7 hours late, the train had stopped running so I was stuck taking a cab. That was a rush, if I wasn't completely awake before I got in, I couldn't have been more alert when I got out. I found my room without problems, in what used to be the bishops house of an old missionary.
This morning I called Kelvin, my guide for the day and we met up around lunch time. He showed me a few really cool areas of Hong Kong. First of course he took me to a mall, assuming that is where I'd want to go the most. After finding food, some delicious bbq pork and rice, we left for something more interesting.
We went to Hollywood Road, Kelvin says its one of the oldest parts of Hong Kong. Here you find all the antique vending in the city. It looks exactly like China town in San Fransisco and the street vendors have more or less the same goods. We also stopped in at a temple that was full of smoke from all the incense. Coils of thick incense were hanging from the ceiling, and pots of sand for incense sticks stood in front of the gods. The more incense you light the more fortune that god will bring to you. It is the year of the Ox, so those born on that year of the zodiac burn especially large amounts of incense. The light them, bow repeatedly to the god, and stick them in the sand where they stand for about one minute before a worker takes them all the the incinerator. Kelvin and I are both born in the year of the Ox, we didn't burn any incense.
Just down the street from the temple is the bar scene. It consists of one street going straight up the side of the hill, with a giant escalator raised on giant concrete pillars going all the way up the hill. We rode to the top of the hill looking in the windows of the shops. The bars all have signs in English, and each bar had a good number of white people sitting at the tables. The escalator was a good experience I guess, the only problem is that it is one way. The staircase down really tested my quads.
It was on this ride that we started talking about marine bio work and Kelvin decided to take me to one of his favorite parts of the city. It was a section spanning 4 or 5 blocks crammed with hundreds of shops selling aquarium fish. I am pretty sure that I saw every kind of fish that I spotted when at the Marshal Islands. They had tanks of jelly fish that I am pretty sure are highly poisonous. The enormous tanks full of coral were beautiful. It was a very cool place and I think I would start the most incredible aquarium if I lived in the area. I have a sneaking suspicion that these corals and fish were collected from wild reefs though, which is pretty sad.
It was here also that I got my first look at some of the real Chinese food. Unfortunately the first spell was so pungent that I lost what little appetite I had in an instant. I had to move on quickly.
After fish town we headed back to campus, Kelvin showed me the canteen where you can get some amazing food for about 3 dollars, or 20 hong kong dollars.
That takes me back here, blogging. Tomorrow night is the firework show in Victoria Harbour, I'll be looking forward to that.