We're back in internet range-yeah. The cruise has been pretty good-crew dynamics haven't been great but have been good enough to get the job done. The weather was bad for about half of the cruise and the launch pad proved the better of me a few times. On the other hand isn't puking over the side required at some point in a sailor's life? A friend on the boat gave me some bonamine (can't buy it in the US and it's difficult to find in Van) which made me better in less than an hour. Since then I haven't had to take any more and I haven't puked over the sides any more. yeah drugs. Once I got over the seasickness, I could sleep most of the time. I did find that waking up airborn at the crest of a big wave is more frightening than waking up being slammed into the wall (a la the Feb. cruise). Less painful, but much more disorienting.
Because of the bad weather we skipped some stations on the way out and are picking them up now. The first of our large volume casts is in the water and by lunch tomorrow we should be done with the big filtering for this cruise.
the water calls-I shall return
Showing posts with label field work. Show all posts
Showing posts with label field work. Show all posts
Sunday, August 30, 2009
Thursday, August 13, 2009
updates cause I left you hanging
So after the scare last week when the electricity went out while all of my DNA was sitting in a gel, all was well. One sample didn't work very well. But my ridiculous streak of good luck with these samples continued-the sample that didn't work was one that I still had DNA left and it worked when I repeated the proceedure. So now I have 50-75% of my major lab work successfully completed (the range is because we're trying to get approval to run more samples). All the hard work figuring out what the data mean hasn't even begun, but at least the stage where a little bad luck or moment of inattention or both can completely ruin a sample is nearly done.
I'm heading back out to sea Tuesday. The turn around between the June cruise and this Aug cruise is crazy short. Too short for me to have worked up much excitement about going out again, but hopefully that will come once we get everything packed and organized.
Our collaborators have contributed to my near-dread of the coming cruise, we've been bending over backwards trying to help this lab get samples (they don't have any money for sampling). But they keep demanding more and more samples-we're taking 3 people this time because just 2 of us last time was too punishing AND we dropped several of our planned samples. The work that they are supposed to do will be interesting (providing that they can get their methods to work) but they are increasingly difficult to deal with. The collaborator lab is headed by a very young investigator who doesn't seem to realize that we aren't working for them-we're working with them. And we don't need them, there is a lab in our building that does the same type of work with slightly older methods (as in proven methods). However, collaborator lab can't get these samples without us. Yet they still thought that my sampling plan was somehow a negotiation position, that they could just come back with their demands and we'd drop some of our samples (again) in favor of theirs. There were some veiled threats that they may walk if they don't get there way. then they reconsidered. We'll see if that turns out to be good-saving the collaboration-or bad-prolonging the pain of a doomed relationship.
I think that we all realize that ultimatums are not a good way to go. Professional ultimatums probably are going to backfire. Professional ultimatums when you have nothing to leverage are just stupid.
I'm heading back out to sea Tuesday. The turn around between the June cruise and this Aug cruise is crazy short. Too short for me to have worked up much excitement about going out again, but hopefully that will come once we get everything packed and organized.
Our collaborators have contributed to my near-dread of the coming cruise, we've been bending over backwards trying to help this lab get samples (they don't have any money for sampling). But they keep demanding more and more samples-we're taking 3 people this time because just 2 of us last time was too punishing AND we dropped several of our planned samples. The work that they are supposed to do will be interesting (providing that they can get their methods to work) but they are increasingly difficult to deal with. The collaborator lab is headed by a very young investigator who doesn't seem to realize that we aren't working for them-we're working with them. And we don't need them, there is a lab in our building that does the same type of work with slightly older methods (as in proven methods). However, collaborator lab can't get these samples without us. Yet they still thought that my sampling plan was somehow a negotiation position, that they could just come back with their demands and we'd drop some of our samples (again) in favor of theirs. There were some veiled threats that they may walk if they don't get there way. then they reconsidered. We'll see if that turns out to be good-saving the collaboration-or bad-prolonging the pain of a doomed relationship.
I think that we all realize that ultimatums are not a good way to go. Professional ultimatums probably are going to backfire. Professional ultimatums when you have nothing to leverage are just stupid.
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