Monday, May 31, 2010

Getting There!

View of the  Malaspina from the ferry terminal in Bellingham, WA
My journey began with a Cannon Ball Run - style race: after teaching kids on trail for 6 hours, returning to Old Shasta to finalize packing and cleaning, I headed out from Redding on an early Thursday evening.  Fueled by Black-Eyed Peas' "I Gotta Feelin" , the audiobook "The Alaskan", tales from Robert Frost (thanks to JM for creating the awesome playlist!), and many carrot sticks for munching, I rolled into Embassy Suites of Portland at 2am, slept 6 hours, and continued onward to Bellingham, Washington.  I had sped  across the Northern one fifth of California and the entire length (South-to-North) of Oregon and Washington -- 420 miles total-- in less than 20 hrs to get on a waitlist for a ferry heading to Haines, Alaska!  As I waited for my name to be called by the Washington Marine Highway clerk, I soaked in the dramatic view of the Bellingham harbor and the ferry Malaspina  "You are on standby for the trip to Haines, and you're #1 on the waitlist", announced Mr. Bubbly Washington Ferry Employee.  I was on my way to Alaska!

Saturday, May 29, 2010

A room with a view!

I view these mountains from the living room of my new home in Cordova, AK.  I live in a 3-bdrm upstairs apartment of the Porter House, formerly a moose lodge (yes, the living room trimming consists of little  moose cartoons!)  The apartment is very spacious and well-stocked!

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Cordova, Alaska, here I come!

Mid-way through spring, I decided to merge two goals: a desire to test the waters in working in field scientific research, and to live in Alaska.  So, I landed a summer internship with the Prince William Sound Science Center in Cordova, Alaska!

My work, as far as I know, will involve analyzing nutrients in the waters from the Copper River Delta

(CRD) using spectrometry and various chemical reactions to determine nutrient content and amounts.  I will work with Rob Campbell on a project funded by the USGS to investigate effects of increased glacial melt on the CRD ecosystem.  Some remarkable features about the Cordova area that drew me to want to live and work there for a summer include:
- an opportunity to contribute to a project that will hopefully help natural resource managers understand the changes of the local ecosystem and how these changes might affect the fish population
- a river delta habitat that is a stopover for most migrating shorebirds of North America
- pristine rain forests
- glacier-capped mountains
- bald eagles, sea lions, and glassy protected waters of Prince William Sound
- a small but vibrant community

I will miss the warmth and sun of a California summer, but the opportunity to engage in field research related to environmental conservation and the ability to live at the doorstep of amazing wilderness are well worth the sacrifice.  Look out Cordova, here I come! : )