Monday, October 4, 2010

Sean's First Day of Work

My job is going to be really cool. I had orientation stuff today, but more exciting things are on the way.

The campus is beautiful, and you can see outside from just about everywhere. They have a cafeteria where the food is sold at cost. I had excellent tortellini with primavera sauce for about $3. A few people have mentioned that new employees at Janelia often experience something similar to The Freshman 15. But they have a gym on campus, so hopefully that won't happen. But the cookie(s) was(were) really good.

I can grab any lab coat from the supplies room and wear it until I'm tired of it, then I throw it into the hamper and get a new one! The old dirty coats magically disappear.

Every person I met there was super nice. I suspect that in the long term that may be the best part. I'm working with a team of five others and a leader, and they all seem like great people. We are working on something called the Fly Olympiad. I'll explain more when I understand everything better, but it looks like Olympiad is a pretty good word for it. We send many, many flies through lots and lots of experiments. But in the real Olympics, people aren't killed when they fail. Well. They aren't killed on site anyways. I was a little worried when China hosted the Olympics.

Remember that game you used to play as a kid where you had to get across the room without touching the floor because it was "lava"?
Some homes were more fun than others
One experiment I'll be doing involves putting a whole bunch of flies on a surface in the middle of several concentric rings that increase in size and thickness as you go out. Each ring is actually a sharp trench filled with liquid Fly Killing Stuff (lava). Flies that make it out of all the circles win, and they get to have babies. The cowardly flies who don't try to make it out don't get to make babies. But the ones who try but fall into the rings really don't get to make babies because they are dead.

This effectively sorts out the more active and agile flies. I'm very excited, and you'll hear more details later on.

Friday, September 17, 2010

A Good Day

We've just been hanging around D.C. over this last week, but now we're finally getting somewhere. We had been looking for a house and today we signed a lease for a pleasant little condo in Sterling, Virginia! We're hopefully moving in on Tuesday. Here's a picture I took from the porch while we were checking it out:

The porch features railings so you don't fall and get injured to death
The community is called Dominion Station, and behind that building is the pool! I know, we'll probably never use it. But still. It's a POOL!

The next step is moving all of our stuff here from College Place, Washington. I've been getting quotes from moving companies, and we're looking at around $4500. So that might not work. Our new home might be a little bit... spacious. At least until we figure out how to get our stuff here.

Heidi got a job as a lead teacher at a preschool about three miles from our new home! So that means her commute probably won't be too much more than an hour! Not bad. She starts work this Monday.

I also finally got that job I've been pushing to get for a few months. I'm excited and relieved. The job is going to be perfect. It's at Janelia Farm Research Campus, which is under Howard Hughes Medical Institute. The place itself is gorgeous and modern. Here's a picture:

The whole place looks AT LEAST this cool
I've heard it referred to as "Science Heaven." I'll talk more about the job some other time, but to over-succinctify, I'll be doing Science there. Lots of the people there are my age! That's good. I'm starting work on October 4.

We found out about both our jobs and our new home today. So today was good.

I'm going to have a couple more weeks to do whatever I feel like. I think I may choose to spend most of that time with you, my faithful reader, by blogging four times a day.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Epic Road Trip, Days 7-9, etc.

You didn't miss much! Heidi got an interview in D.C., so we drove over right quick. About 25 hours of driving in three days, in fact. But we enjoyed it. Heidi is interviewing for a tutoring job as we speak, and I'm in the same coffee shop watching her impress the interviewer. A job interview in a coffee shop! How cool is that? My job is still somewhat up in the air, but I'm pretty sure I've got it. The job would be incredibly awesome.

So we're probably moving to D.C.!

Or more like the Ashburn area. It's not too far from D.C.

We don't have a home yet, so we're casually looking for a place to rent. After Heidi's interview, we're touring a little townhouse. Of course, we can't rent until we're sure we've got jobs, but we're right on the verge of being sure.

"You look terrible, Sean." "Quiet, self!" "You're talking to yourself, Sean."
Sorry we haven't taken pictures in a while. The driving was uneventful (fortunately) and now that we're in D.C. we've been PTSD-triggeringly busy. Driving to interviews in D.C. is stressful. Our nerves are about shot what with the intense driving, interviewing, and homelessness (we've found a week-long place to stay for cheap, so we're okay).

Fun? Yes. Terrifying? Yes.

Saturday, September 4, 2010

Epic Road Trip, Continued

Day 4: Yellowstone!
After a long drive from Glacier to Yellowstone, we found a campsite at Indian Creek and settled in. The next morning we got up early and toured Yellowstone, including Old Faithful, the Paint Pots, the Mud Volcano, the Grand Canyon of Yellowstone, Yellowstone Falls, and countless steam vents, pools, and geysers.


We ate lunch with Gus the buffalo, who sat and watched us from the nearby woods. Four times during the trip we were close enough to touch buffalo just by driving along the road. We also saw coyote, dear, elk, and maybe a bear. Without binoculars we weren't quite sure.


During our two nights in Yellowstone, the temperature dipped below freezing and frost covered our tent, firewood, and car. The first night and morning we couldn't get a fire started with the wet and cold wood, but the second night we made it work and had grilled cheese sandwiches, tomato soup, and corn on the cob. The next morning a sweet couple from Scotland or Ireland (maybe one from each?) had some left over boiling water so we were able to have a hot breakfast!

Day 5: To Grandma's House
We left Yellowstone and drove across Wyoming, including the charming town of Emblem, population: 10. By that evening, we were in my Grandma's house in Hot Springs, SD, enjoying hot homemade food, hot showers, and a real bed.
Day 6: East as far as we can get
This morning we had to leave Grandma and Uncle Carl, sadly, and continue our trek. I got an unexpected phone call inviting me to interview for a teaching job in an inner-city DC charter school. I'd applied months ago, but wasn't hired, until a teacher quit after school had already started. I'm interviewing Tuesday, and if I get the position, starting on Wednesday. Sean also got pleasant news when his top choice for a job contacted him and informed him that they are "very much interested" in him! We're so excited to have things start to work out and are making our way to DC as fast as we can. Nothing's final until it's final, of course, so if we don't get the jobs, we'll just pick up our epic road trip from there and head north to see Boston, New England, and Niagara Falls.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Epic Road Trip, Day 3

After several days in the mountains with no cell service, we finally found a friendly Starbucks in Great Falls to update our blog.  So far we are loving the trip, although it has been rainier, windier, and colder than we ordered.

Day 1: Flathead Lake
We stayed at a gorgeous little campground right on the lakeshore.  The weather was perfect!


Day 2: Glacier National Park
The next day we drove up and through Glacier on the Going-to-the-Sun Road.  The scenery was stunning but the road slightly scary.  There was construction all along it with construction workers wearing full climbing harnesses!  At the top of Logan Pass, it was sleeting, so we headed down quickly and pitched camp at Rising Sun Campground, which was cold and wet but protected from the wind by some trees.  It rained all night and into the morning, but we learned that our tent is so amazing that even when the tarp underneath collects a puddle of water, we stay dry!


Day 3: Moving toward Yellowstone
Since it was still raining, we decided not to hang around any longer and packed up in a hurry.  On our way out we stopped for some hot showers to cheer us up.  Since then, we've been driving through alternating storms and sunny weather toward Yellowstone National Park.  We'll be there a couple days, probably without service, but we'll update after that! Feel free to look at our Picasa web album. The link is on the right under "Picasa Photostream."

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Epic Road Trip!

We don't even know where we're going! Actually we have a vague idea for the first week that puts us in Boston. We'll hit Glacier, Yellowstone, Mammoth Hot Springs, and the Badlands. But we'll try to blog throughout the adventure, assuming we can find internet. There's a cool widget on the right over there that should tell you where we are. Also, we hope to be uploading photos throughout, and you'll be able to see all of them by clicking on Picasa photostream. It's on the right column, too. I try to put a photo in every post, but I can't think of anything relevant. So here's a brick being thrown into a dryer:

Thursday, August 26, 2010

We're back!

It's been over a year since we've updated this blog. You didn't miss TOO much. We spent another Summer in Rosario where I did my research.


Fresh Cut Improv was a major project of ours over this last school year, and we're proud of how it's been going. We spent Christmas in Baja and Spring Break in Las Vegas.


I wrote and successfully defended my thesis, "Temporal patterns in preening of Glaucous-winged Gulls." I graduated with a Masters in Biology while Heidi graduated with a Masters of Arts in Teaching. And lastly, I learned that when you click on the Comments button below you are bombarded with Obscene Amounts of Orangeness.

So where are we now? Heidi has some tutoring jobs lined up in Washington, DC, and I've applied for several jobs over there too. I'm REALLY hoping to get one of them. We had to move out of our house since we graduated, so we've been hanging out with family the last couple weeks. But if we're going to DC (and it looks likely), our families will want to know what we're doing, which is why this blog is going to be updated more frequently. I promise.