Sunday, January 24, 2010

Found at Uwajimaya

Uwajimaya is a local Asian supermarket. It is huge, it has just about everything. We found this there:


That is indeed a ginger ale flavored KitKat. It was more delicious than it had any right to be. They also had Sweet milk tea flavored (with pictures of those British Palace Guards on the label) and one with no description, but a picture of mochi, so I am guessing they make a sweet bean paste flavor (I can't decide how I feel about that one, it will be either wonderful beyond all reason or a flavor travesty of epic proportions).

Friday, January 22, 2010

A conversation last night

Me: "I can hardly resist the urge to cast on for that new sweater I got the pattern for yesterday, really, it's hard staying loyal to your socks"

Russell: Gives me a long, funny, scowly look

Me: "What?!? I haven't done it, I'm staying loyal to the socks"

Russell: "And besides, you just knit yourself a sweater, the next sweater is for me!"

Touché

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

The perfect cardigan

I finally finished my latest sweater. Well, maybe not finally. In the past sweaters have taken me literally years to complete. My fisherman's sweater, that took 3 years. My norwegian sweater took 3 years as well. The issue? I didn't actually work hard on either of those (well, until the end, once I actually started knitting on the norwegian sweater on a regular basis it flew by). Since then I have gotten more consistent. Russell's sweater was finished in a couple of months. And now, a new sweater for me, knit in a short enough time I will actually get to enjoy it in the cooler winter weather. This pattern is Nora Gaughan's Nantucket Jacket. I have been wanting it since I saw it on the cover of Interweave Knits. This last year I found Cascade 220 yarn on wild sale, and the jacket had to be mine. I cast on in September, and knit steadily away, with surprising project loyalty (ok, I did knit some socks and play with my loom).

While my Dale of Norway remains my favorite sweater overall, this is definately a close second and favorite cardigan (ok, my only handknit cardigan). It is just the right weight to throw on in my office when it gets a bit chilly, and I think it could go well either dressy or casual. It fits perfectly. I didn't make any alterations to the pattern (I even knit it in the color shown in the magazine) and it turned out just fine. If I ever were to knit it again, I would lengthen the body just a smidge, and maybe do long sleeves, but then again, maybe not.

There you have it, a new sweater, and I love it. Now, more socks.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Weekend Adventuring

The weather has gotten crappy for the first couple weeks of January. Typical El Niño, warmer than usual, less than usual snow, and this time rain rain rain. Thanks to my sister who got me an awesome bike rain jacket, I have been staying 99% dry on my rides to and from work (my feet still get wet, and my head). But with all the weather we were starting to feel a bit cooped up. We started to think about a possible snowshoe trip. As the planning went on, and we looked at the Mountain forecast, we came to the conclusion that it would have to be Sunday as the weather on Saturday was forecast to be nasty, with high winds in the pass where we were headed. Also, there had been rain and freezing rain in the pass, so the snow level was....Well it's high, with pretty crappy snow. Given the nature of this forecast we decided it would be a combination mine hike and snowshoe day. Set off first to see the Sunset Mine, outside of Index, followed by a run up to pass elevation and hopefully some snow.

Sunday morning we headed out with our friend and mine enthusiast and expert, Al. The Sunset Mine is up near Trout Creek, outside of the little town of Index. In its heyday it had multiple adits and connecting tunnels. As time has marched on most of these have collapsed, leaving mainly the primary adits, which are now mainifest as huge pits.

We wandered up the trail with Al to the first tunnel entrance. And by wandered up, I mean stumbled along the banks of this creek.
This creek just so happens to flow out of the mouth of one of the collapsed tunnels, indicating that even if one were to attempt to squeeze through (we had no intention of even considering it) it would be pretty flooded inside.

In that second photo you can see further in to the collapsed tunnel.

We then proceeded up a drier section of trail towards the "main event". We passed another collapsed tunnel on the way, complete with artifacts.
See those things that look like bare branches at the top of the photo? Those are actually old steel cables.

We proceeded onward to the first real pit. This is the first thing you can actually enter in this mine. As you approach it looks, well like a giant hole in the ground. You can then carefully pick your way down into it. Getting rained on by the water drips all the while.



From in the pit, with Russell for scale.


The view from the bottom.
What you can't see in any of these photos is there is a little wooden structure inside this pit. I tried to get a photo of it, but there is so much falling water that if your flash goes off all you see is the water blur. We clambered back out of the hole and proceeded to the next one.

The second adit is MUCH bigger. On the way there you pass this ominous sudden hole in the ground.


This is an airshaft for the hole you are headed to. There will be a shot from inside the mine later. As you come around a bend, watching carefully for any more large holes, you get your first views of the mine.



What is lacking in these pictures is the sheer scale of this second pit. Here, let me show you as we descend into the pit.



That is a full size Douglas fir that has fallen from the cliff above, and is leaning upright on the edge. More?



That's the cliff the tree came down from and another shot with Al for scale.

Here's where I'd like to give a special note about this mine. That cliff above is eroding really badly on all sides. You may have gotten the impression from the first hole that it was raining the day we were there. It wasn't. The weather was quite dry. All that water was groundwater. I would NOT go into this second tunnel on a day it was substantially raining, too much danger of erosion and another tree coming down. Safety first.

So you remember that random air shaft? Here it is from the inside.

That beam at the center is just under the shaft, if you look carefully you can see the reflected light coming in.
There are some other wooden beams too.


Over all this pit is much deeper and cooler than the first one. Also with 50% more deadliness due to the eroding slope above. Be careful kiddies and keep your wits about you.

We emerged from the mine to the sound of rifle fire in the distance. We would later learn that it was a bunch of 20 somethings with a wide and interesting variety of firearms target shooting at an old bridge down by the road. We spent our lunch speculating about the source of the gunshots (hillbilies? drug runners? local teens shooting our car to pieces?) Russell wasn't wearing any yellow rain gear, so arranged this little number as we at our delicious sandwich by the mine to avoid being a mistaken for a deer on the way down.


Back at the car, it was time for the second part of our adventure. Yeah...the second half of our adventure was us doing this:

For two hours. (That would be digging Al's car out of the snow, it is 4WD but we some how managed to bottom out in the parking lot. As we only had ski poles, a trowel, and a stick, digging was innovative and took some time). We eventually got out, but not it time for snowshoeing, so we headed in from our excellent adventure.

Hear that sound

Yeah, the whooshing sound? That was the sound of December passing me by.

December is usually a pretty busy month for me, and this one was no exception. With the holiday coming at the end of the month, there is a sudden urgency for getting things finished before the holiday, and before the end of the year. This year December started with the beautiful but cold weather I mentioned the last time I actually posted. We never did get snow here in the city, but that was ok because the weather was so beautiful.


One of the reasons I was so busy during December was because I was raising baby salmon.

Those are sockeye parr (after they loose the yolk sac and get those stripes that is what they are called). Much cuter than Fundulus. But I have to say, not any cleaner. For being so cute, they are still little poo machines, and a good portion of my days was spent feeding them and then vacuuming their tanks. Between Christmas and New Years we carried out our science on them, so my fish care duty has now been discharged.

This was the first year that Russell and I didn't travel at Christmas, and let me tell you, while we love seeing our families at the holidays, not traveling....A Godsend (especially in the wake of the underpants bomber). The side benefit to not traveling was that we got to have our first ever Christmas tree. I was very excited. Christmas is one of my favorite holidays, and putting up the tree is perhaps my favorite part. We got a little 4' noble fir, bought some lights on sale, and scavenged what Christmas ornaments we had. We don't have a tree topper, but we didn't let that stop us. I even dug up some Christmas fabric to use as a tree skirt.

(Our house isn't yellow, I just took the photo without the flash). We saw both our families as usual, on on Christmas eve, and one on Christmas day and had a lovely time.

Oh, and one more fun thing. This year for Christmas, Russell and I went out to a very nice dinner together. We have been getting to know two guys who work for Sea Breeze Farm. We buy sustainably raised milk and meat from them, and chat about charcuterie at the farmers market. This farm also has a restaurant on Vashon Island. They were doing a Christmas fete, (involving spit roasting a whole leg of beef amongst other tasties) so as a gift to ourselves, we went. The food and group were excellent, and I highly recommend a trip to Vashon, it will be worth your time.

So there they are, the highlights of December in a nutshell. Now on to a New Year, where hopefully I will be more productive at posting.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

The Great Divide

So, originally, when I started this little blog it was to talk about everything, science, knitting, what I did over the weekend etc. But I'd like to split a little. I will still post everything here, but I wanted a separate space I could post more pure science commentary on (one that I could put on my business cards, posters etc..) and so it is with great excitement I post a link to my NEW SCIENCE BLOG: Stranded Science: The Sequence Diaries. I'll be adding a side bar as well. Things here will stay basically as they are, and I'll even be mirroring some of the science content. For anyone here for just the science I refer you to my new page.

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Ok So I haven't posted in too long

I know. And two substantial updates are coming. First, a review of my December and holidays, and what I am up to in the lab these days (aka all the reasons I am not on the blog)

Second another journal review. This one I'm really excited about. I love when scientists come up with wacky ideas. How wacky? Here is the title

"Windshield splatter analysis with the Galaxy metagenomic pipeline"

And yes, they do mean windshield splatter as in bugs.