The power of dandelions

I’ve been completely wrong all the time! I knew that invasive plants were an issue and I knew you could find them everywhere in the world. But I couldn’t have imagined their real impact. Even Punta Arenas, a city as far away from the rest of the world as you can go, even this city is completely engulfed by invasive plants.

The dandelion is the most impressive one. It turns out to be the most common plant in the whole city, easily overruling all native species. Whole fields turn yellow due to massive flowers, even bigger than at home.

It’s allowed to be impressed, because these dandelions show a remarkable flexibility. Even when it’s snowing,even when strong and cold wind still remind of the horrible winter, even then dandelions are flowering. Hundreds, maybe thousands of them.Dandelion2

As strong as a dandelion. If it ain’t a proverb yet, it should become one soon. 

Dandelion3 Dandelion1

Posted in Chile | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Birds

Lapwing

Birds, birds everywhere! Small, active songbirds, majestically floating birds of prey, angry shouting lapwings protecting their young… Birds everywhere, and all of them different from the species I know. That’s a good thing, because now even the most common birds know how to impress me.

Luckily, birds are not as shy here as they are in Belgium. I can get as close as I want, which is good news for the camera.

Check out the photostream ‘Punta Arenas’ on the front page for a growing list of pictures of this wonderful place.

Birds1

Posted in Chile | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

Airplane food

I like airplane food. It comes at random moments of the night, you only have half the space you need to fit all the tiny boxes on your table and you don’t get anything if you use your nighttime for sleeping and can’t hear the trolley.

I got chicken tandoori in a small box with couscous and it tasted amazing. I don’t know which magic tricks they use, but I’ll never manage to make such a tasteful chicken-tandoori. It might be because I don’t add enough flavouring additives… . The chicken  was accompanied by a salad with pasta and olives  (even more tasteful, can you imagine? And I don’t even like olives), bread with butter and cheese ( flying with AirFrance for a reason), a tangerine (a bit dry) and a heavy chocolate mousse that could serve as dinner all by itself. Plus: free drinks and an additional bottle of water. Crossing the Atlantic could have been worse.

And there is more! It might be only on AirFrance flights, or I never explored my previous airplanes thoroughly but I  discovered the all-you-can-eat on the airplane today. Before you get too excited, the options are limited to crackers, some strange orange-tasting cookies and a surprisingly awesome little flask with applesauce. But those were freely accessible  the whole night.

Around 11:30 European morning or 7:30 Chilean time, we approached the Andes. Around then breakfast was announced. Again a wonderful collection of small boxes. The Highlight was the ‘oeufs brouillés florentine’ (oh so incredibly tasteful, how can eggs be so tasteful!)  combined with a nice piece of bread. A bit strange was the combination of fresh cheese and apple compote (why?) and the little box (box!?) of orange juice. The French croissant was unfortunately absent, instead we got a sandwich with jam, which wasn’t that bad after all.

Even on the short domestic flight from Santiago to Puerto Monte the food was interesting. The ‘Queque de manjar’ was an awesome sweet cake and I was allowed to choose a second snack! I wisely chose mixed fruits, which turned out to contain a well-balanced mix of pineapple and pineapple juice. From Puerto Monte to Punta Arenas, only two hours later, they gave me the same choice again. The ‘Queque de manjar’ was definitely a go, but I replaced the mixed-fruit-only-pineapple with ‘Grissines de queso’, which turned out to lack the promised taste of parmesano and oregano a little bit.

It’s a different world up in the air, that is for sure.

Posted in Chile | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Up to Punta Arenas

I’m on the other side of the globe! Barely one month into my Ph.D and I already left the save environment of my new office to explore the world. It’s only for a short period of time, I will be back in ten days. W e squeezed an incredible amount of travelling and pretty tight working scheme to install our plots in these ten days. Maybe we find an hour or two to explore the wonderful atmosphere of South-America as well. I hope to find the time to make some nice pictures to share this experience, otherwise you’ll have to believe me on my word that it’s awesome here.

Up to Punta Arenas2

The approach of our work here :

Installing the southern hemisphere twin sister of our experiment in Northern Scandinavia, analyzing limits to invasion by alien plants in a cold mountain system. These ten days wewill explore the mountains around Punta Arenas, choose the ideal study sites and plant seeds of local invaders on three different elevations in the mountains. after that we come back home and leave the experiment to the forces of nature. We’ll pray that at least some seeds have survived when we come back next year.Up to Punta Arenas1

Read all  the stories about this trip under the header ‘Chili’!Up to Punta Arenas

Posted in Chile | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Summer snow

When autumn gives Belgium a stormy warning that winter is on its way, I escape all the bad weather and go to the southern hemisphere. There spring is working at full speed. While you all cuddle together under blankets with your feet on the heater, I’ll be merrily hopping around through fields of flowers, between little bunnies and ducklings. It sounds like a very smart idea, no?

At least, that’s what I thought at first, but my research irresistibly pulls me towards the subarctic, where autumn starts before spring even begins. I remember my traveling experience of last year, I left a Belgian heatwave to enjoy the Scandinavian summer.

Summer snow

This picture  taken in the middle of July clearly tells the whole tale: subarctic mountains don’t participate in the silly game called spring. Now I go to Punta Arenas, a city dreaded for its cold and biting winds…

I’ll better start packing an extra suitcase with sweaters, windstoppers and mittens. And a shiny picture of the sun.

— Some more pictures in ‘Pictures from a PhD’ —

Posted in Chile | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

Surviving the field

These little guys recently arrived in the mail and I’m really excited about them! They are unparalleled little helpers for an outdoor ecologist like me. Waterproof paper! What a brilliant idea! No need to mess around with clumsy paper protection anymore, no unreadable ink stains, no transparant papers with blurred letters, that’s all from the past. Fieldwork without worries, that’s the future!

Notebook1

Of course, I immediately put my precious catch to the test. Writing stuff on it is awesome, because the paper feels really smooth. Everything stays perfectly readable under my artificial rain treatment, even ink. The Water just doesn’t infiltrate at all.

Notebook2

That’s already really cool for a notebook! But there is more that needs to be tested. We  also need to be able to write in the rain, our work is not limited to reading. That was the next test:

Notebook3

Now, pens didn’t performe that good anymore. Of course, that’s a problem of the pen, not the paper, a wet pen is just plain useless. Even with this doubtful result, I easily forgive my notebook and just remind myself to always take a bunch of pencils in the field.

My last test revealed that my new notebooks were even clumsy-proof, just imagine!

Notebook4I spilled my tea on the paper, a very likely event in the heat of my brain-actions, but no writing was destroyed. It can’t get much better than that!

A milestone in science is reached, that’s the least you can say. I can’t wait to go out in the field in a horrible autumn storm and see how everything works.

Ah, biology is so beautiful.

Posted in Belgium | Tagged , | Leave a comment