Learning

Baby animals - 1

Lion cub hunting its mother’s tail

A PhD is a lot about learning. Although I am ‘really’ working for ‘real’ money; and I feel (and act) like a scientist, there is the ‘student’ part in PhD-student that should never be neglected.

Baby animals - 2

Mom and baby ring-tailed lemur

Although I am not truly a baby animal that needs to learn to make its first few steps in the dangerous world, there is a lot of stuff out there to learn for a scientist. That learning process needs some time and, at least as important, it needs some more experienced people to learn it from.

Baby animals - 4

Baby capybara

I am convinced I would never have gotten as far as I am now without the combined input and support of so many people. And still, there is a lot more that the ‘student’-part of me needs to learn from my supervisors before I feel I can truly call myself a scientist.

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Mommy giraffe supporting her baby

But there also is another side to this: the PhD is the time to learn new methodologies and spend time trying (and failing). As your academic career continues, you will have less and less time to dive into a topic or a method. You will have gotten faster and better at performing most relevatn tasks, but to reach that level, big chuncks of time are needed to get truly familiar with it.

So I am glad I am not thrown out there just like that and that I can carry the name of student for a little while longer. In the meantime, I’ll just try to get as much out of it as possible!

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Blossoms

Spring blossoms - 2

Buttercups and blossoms from around Beersel, south of Brussels

I arrived at that point in my PhD in which future project ideas grow wilder than the yellow buttercups in this meadow.

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As could be expected, finding the answers to my first set of questions brings lots of inspiration for new ones. But getting to know the possibilities, the available methods but also the other scientists in the field, all of that sparks new ideas and solutions.

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It is important for me to encourage this blossoming of ideas, if I want to continue with what I’m doing when my research grant runs out. That is of course still in the future – more than two years to be precise – but to continue after that I will need a solid future plan, and that deserves some time to ripen.

Spring blossoms - 4

We are also always in search to strengthen our research beyond what I am doing. It would be fabulous to set up some more solid collaborations with other scientists. As such we can make sure many more questions will be answered than I would ever be able to answer within the short timespan of my PhD.

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And let answering questions be exactly what I hoped for in science!

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Come together

One of my favourite study subjects is all over the news this week! Yet, it is a bit in an unusual manner: I am talking about the dandelion (Taraxacum officinale), the symbol of the upcoming Eurovision Song Contest!

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There is not much that I have to do with the Eurovision, except that they chose the dandelion for its well-known ability to spread super fast with its tiny little parachutes.

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Let that be exactly the reason why they are so interesting for me as well: they use their tiny parachutes to stay at the forefront of climate change ànd to invade new ranges all over the world!

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Or as they say it themselves: “most people can relate to it. It has an enormous growth potential, it is widespread across Europe and it can move”. They do let the parachutes fly in reverse, though, back to the mother plant, which rarely happens in my research, but let us just be happy for the little plant’s week of fame.

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Ready

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Totally ready for this summer, thanks to my new Fjallflora! The compact version of my Floran, with a focus on the mountain species. The same amazing drawings, just smaller :-).

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The red campion

It is funny to see the differences and similarities in plant species between the place where I work – northern Scandinavia – and the place where I live: Belgium. There are quite a few similarities in species, especially in the lowlands, yet it is always a surprise to find one you know from one region in the other.

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Red campion in Eastern Flanders, Belgium

This one, the red campion (Silene dioica), is a common sight in both places. In the north, I know him from its delicate pink in the birch forests under the midnight sun, in the south it happily occupies roadsides and forests. In both regions, I am always happy to see them!

Silene flower in forest in Lapland

Red campion at the foot of the mountains in Abisko, Sweden

 

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Bluebell-beauties: a gallery

Young sycamore maples sprout everywhere in the forest

Young sycamore maples sprout everywhere in the forest

Some eye candy: scroll through pictures of beeches and bluebells from the Hallerbos in the gallery on the right.

Wood anemone (Anemone nemorosa), the much-needed white counterpart of all this purple power.

Wood anemone (Anemone nemorosa), the much-needed white counterpart of all this purple power.

As an assistant in the course on forest types at our university, I spent several hours of my springtime in the Hallerbos, a Flemish forest often ranked in the top ten most beautiful forests of the world. As usual one of the highlights of the season, and after seeing the gallery, you might understand why…

The tallest bluebells often led their head hang

The tallest bluebells often bow their little heads

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