Cold wizard

That it might have been me, with my talks about species surviving in cold climates, they told me in Amiens…

Fot - 43

Frozen lake in Parc Saint Pierre

 I had to admit that it was peculiar that me as a cold-climate ecologist visited them during the only icy winter week of the season, but I assure you there is no wizardry involved in my PhD thesis.

Fot - 42

Cathedral seen from the frozen Parc Saint-Pierre

I did not mind the cold, though, as long as I see the sun, I am a happy man. I am used to worse from in the field.

Fot - 18

Sunny but cold, the Quai Bélu

I ended my visit to Amiens with a presentation of what I currently discovered about plants dealing with cold temperatures in the mountains. It was really nice to get a new and interested audience to talk to, and I came home with a lot of new ideas to implement in my research.

Fot - 51

Le Club d’Aviron in winter weather

That was indeed the whole conclusion of my stay in Amiens: a high-efficiency stay that generated countless new ideas to get the second part of my PhD rolling, thanks to the wisdom and experience of the local scientists.

Fot - 56

Winter sun on the Place du Don

Looking forward to make all this reality!

Posted in France | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Princess of the north

I know, I know, every city is the most beautiful city in the whole world if you view it the correct light.

Fot - 6

But there is a lot that plays in the advantage of Amiens, if there would be a beauty contest. With its endless variety of well-preserved medieval buildings, its cosy little streets and its beautiful river, there is a pleasant surprise behind every corner.

Fot - 17

And, of course, as the amazing crown on the head of this princess of the north of France, there is the cathedral, arguably the most impressive building I have ever seen.

Fot - 15

I know, I know (again), I came here to work! And that is what I have been doing, day and night (well, evening). But it does not do any harm if I have an extended lunch break, does it? The city was looking its absolute finest, dressed in the winter sun, and waiting till the work was done would only bring me the night.

Fot - 10

So I granted myself a long hour of wandering through this beauty, letting my nose guide the way and exploring the city center. It even helped getting the statistics straight in my head, because the afternoon suddenly brought the solution for the morning problems.

Fot - 11

This is definitely a fantastic stay!

 

Posted in France | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 10 Comments

Amiens, the arrival

Only 2 and a half hours of driving, some folks in a larger country might still be talking about their hometown then. But to me, it felt very much abroad when I was wandering through the biting cold at night in the city of Amiens, a city as foreign for a new arrival as any other city in the world.

Fot - 2

It had been a good day already. A quick drive without any trouble (except perhaps a bit of pondering on how it works to pay a ticket for the toll road) and an afternoon of very good and promising science.

Fot - 4

The evening brought time to think and plan ahead: what would be needed to reach the goals we hope to reach, what can be done to go even above and beyond them. The beautiful lights at the entrance of the world-famous cathedral of Amiens gave good counselling:

Fot - 5

if men could build something as beautiful as this giant, at least we should be able to succeed with the ambitious goals of our experiment.

Fot - 3

After wandering through the cold night and empty streets, it was time to reward myself with some food. Thanks to the directions given at the hotel, I managed to find plenty of restaurants. My eye was pulled towards ‘Manneken Pis’, of course a very familiar statue for a Belgian visitor, but they did not serve food on Monday nights.

Fot - 6

An all-you-can eat sushi place turned out to be the better alternative, I warmly suggest it to everyone visiting Amiens.

Fot - 1

Posted in France | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Up to Amiens

Winter has arrived. The first real cold wave sweeps over Western Europe, with snow and freezing temperatures. With this cold I will travel to Amiens. Not for fieldwork, luckily, as I’d have to take my warmest mountain clothing.

Fot - 1

Branch of alder tree on a winterday

No, the winter is for modelling, safely behind my computer, looking at the snowflakes swirling behind the window. Fieldwork is on hold till the summer sun is back.

But hopefully, Amiens will bring some nice stories and pretty pictures, along with the necessary knowledge to continue on the followed track!

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

Eating villages

The Port of Antwerp is very hungry. In the last century, it has been eating several villages and thousands of acres of land to meet the requirements of being a globally competing economic center.

DSC_0008

I find it interesting to wander in and around this massive economic monster, and study its behaviour. It feels as if the port is a giant dragon, ready to consume everything in its surroundings.

DSC_0073

Peaceful polders with the smoke of the port-of-Antwerp-dragon in the far distance.

On a sunny winter day, we hiked through the little village of Verrebroek, on the eastern side of the port and currently not yet consumed by the endless hunger of the port-dragon. There, it is only a grassy green dike that separates you from Europe’s second largest sea port.

DSC_0037

Nature protected by a grassy green dike

But that is the funny part, at our side of the dike, there was only nature and agriculture, and no sign of a port at all. This sudden boundary made me wonder. I am used to gradients in my work, relatively slow changes from one condition to the other.

DSC_0084

We study these gradients in the mountains, where they range over hundreds of meters or a few kilometers from the mild and more densly populated lowlands to the cold and desolated alpine zone. But next to the port of Antwerp, there is not much of a gradient. There is a port – a busy economic center with virtually no place for nature – or there is none.

DSC_0091

For travelling species, there is a big difference between a gradient of hundreds of meters like the one in the mountains, or one of only a few steps, like here next to the major connection to Europe’s hinterland.

DSC_0019

One moment, you are flying over your own nice little puddle, the other you are caught amid the smoke of the dragon…

Posted in Belgium | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Christmas lights shine bright

I received an amazing present from under the christmas tree this holiday season. It is called WakaWaka (‘Shine bright’ in Swahili) and it is a beautiful little solar panel.

DSC_0111

And now I am just holding a little bit of future in my hand: this kind of stuff is what we need if we want to realise any of our goals for a livable future. It is durable, provides cheap and endless energy wherever you go and with every one you buy here, there is one donated to someone in the third world without access to elektricity.

DSC_0115

For me, it is mainly a chance to get elektricity wherever I am in the field. Charging my cellphone whenever I am on a camping trip in the mountains, fixing my measurement devices whenever they start losing power, all of this now becomes possible. But for a family far away from any elektricity source, WakaWaka could of course mean much more.

A nice extra advantage for me is that above the polar circle, where I do my research, there is 24 hours of sunlight, so I do not even have to worry about nightfall to get things charged!

Important edit: it turns out that the donation of the WakaWaka to a third world family is not automatic, you have to go to their website and use the code that comes with your device to get the process up and running!

Posted in General | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments