T-4 days!

Lisa!
Lisa!

I can’t believe it’s here.  After more than a year of anticipating this dream field season… we leave in 4 days.   Lisa (my friend from master’s degree and current field assistant ) just arrived in Vancouver and we spent the day meeting the lab, packing, and experimenting with new field equipment.  Last week, I told my boyfriend that it didn’t feel like we were leaving in a week!  And he said, it will when Lisa gets there. And he was right!  Our trunks – three 50 lb. trunks (one more than we expected!), plus leftovers now being crammed into our personal backpacks – are packed. When I introduded Lisa to Diane this morning, she said ‘I guess I’ll see you on Sunday!’.  She meant, meeting us in Santa Cecilia astride her brand new ATV, ready for us to load it up and head up to Pitilla!

Yes, I still have equipment that I haven’t built yet.  Yes, my rubber boots are still 2 sizes too big. Yes, my pack is still half full of my gear from my last camping trip, and I haven’t even made my ‘remember to pack’ list. And yes, I still have no form of currency valid in Costa Rica!  BUT, my field assistant is sleeping in my apartment, I have new batteries in my camera, I have my research questions firmly in mind, and I can almost SMELL the jungle!

And we leave in 4 days!!

High Ropes Action

Hey, this is how much fun you can have in grad school (or slightly after)! Thanks Robin for an awesome team building event! It looks like it worked…

Veni, vidi, vici

She has done it! Robin has successfully completed her comps and can now be officially called a “PhD candidate”! Congratulations!

Mesocosm diversity

Srivastava lab madrecita Jana would like to welcome our new lab members!!!

Hi Martin, Angie, Virginia, Edd! We are  glad you joined the lab! This makes at least 13 of us now. Up from 2 at the same time last year! Exponential population growth? You bet! And crazy increase in diversity. We come from 9 countries, right? i.e. our Shannon-Wiener is 2.13! And the majority of us speak Spanish in some way. I am proud of this global mesocosm!

Farewell Jiichiro!

This blog begins with an ending: recently we bid farewell to our visiting PostDoc Jiichiro Yoshimoto.  Jiichiro was visiting us to work on the mite system, and so he spent a great deal of time moving around chunks of moss and staring into microscopes identifying mites.  He and I (Andrew) also spent a few hours a week identifying beetles in the Beaty Biodiversity Museum.  We already miss Jiichiro’s quiet, cheerful presence around our lab.

A gathering at Diane’s house to celebrate Jiichiro’s contribution was the occasion for a rare lab photograph.  It was a pretty complete photograph when it was taken — but its already out of date!  With the beginning of a new semester new people have joined our lab.  More news about (and from!) them soon!