You might remember that last year I had some students in the month of March; my project was once again volunteered for the same class year, but this year I ended up splitting the teaching duties with the Austrian postdoc E. who is in the lake project. He wanted the teaching experience, but would be out of town for the second half of the project; meanwhile, I was unemployed for the time leading up to it, but was rehired just in time to take the over for the second half. His good idea was to take the students out to nearby Lake Ekoln and get a new sample, since all our samples are from the summer and we are interested in finding out how the bacterioplankton is different in the winter. I do enjoy a bit of fieldwork— haven't done any for ages now— so I was more than happy to tag along with the group for the trip to take the sample. Back on 1 March, E. drove us and a trunk-ful of equipment down to the northern tip of Lake Mäleran, a basin called Lake Ekoln. This is the lake which runs all the way to Stockholm, and is what they skate on when they do the Uppsala to Stockholm skate race. On March 1, winter was showing no signs of giving up yet— new snow, a strong wind, thick ice. It took about half an hour for us to drill a hole all the way through the ice (here's me taking my turn). Then the two students got out the water bottles, took their samples, and we went back to the lab where the went through the rest of the procedure for filtering the bacteria out. They were very proud and possessive of their samples, as they should have been, since they suffered wet feet in a blizzard in order to obtain them; the Chinese student, who has never experienced anything like this, was quite pleased with the whole experience.
02 April 2010
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Half-teaching |
Posted by
Jennifer
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19:26 CET
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01 April 2010
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Jag jobbar jobbigt |
So here's my job situation. Late last year, my boss, in collaboration with a couple other professors here, wrote a grant application to the European Research Council. One of the purposes of the grant was to continue funding for my current project; the application included funding for a couple of students and a post-doc, with the understanding that I would be the post-doc. The grant was well-reviewed by the ERC, and at the beginning of December or so I was more-or-less assured of a one-year extension. But the way these grants work is that the actual funding is left up to the research councils of member states. And when Vetenskaprådet (the Swedish equivalent of NSF) received our application, they declined to fund it. ERC proposes, VR disposes.
The "good" news is that at least we weren't alone: it sounds like every application from our quite large department was turned down. The fact that we weren't alone is also the bad news: although my boss (who recently stepped down as department chair) said she would make an appeal for emergency funds at the next faculty meeting, the new higher-ups were so mad about the fact that their projects were turned down that they were not in the mood to make exceptions, perhaps especially in her/our case.
Fortunately, as I mentioned before, my boss did have enough money to keep me employed for two additional months (although back when I wrote that, I still thought I might be back on a stipend afterwards). I had to be hired as an employee, and so there was some additional fuss to the process (all positions have to advertised in the EU, get Union approval, and so forth), made a little more difficult in my case because of course meanwhile my residency permit had expired. All that has worked out now, and so finally we will get to the funny.
Guess how much vacation time I get for a two-month contract. Go ahead, guess. At my age and job classification, I get six days off. That's right, six days. That's as much as some new hires get in a year back in the US. Other job classifications might get even more time, I'm not sure.
The other amusing thing that happened is that I started working in the first week in March, but it took a week for them to get together the paperwork, even after the job had been approved. Also, by Swedish law, I am required to have a six-week notice of job termination. Therefore, the secretary came to me with the papers to sign accepting the job on a Thursday; on the very next Wednesday, she came to me with papers announcing that my job has been terminated.
The title of the post means "I work hard."
Posted by
Jennifer
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18:15 CET
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22 March 2010
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When we woke up Saturday morning in Stockholm, it was sunny and clear, just right for a sit in a park, which had been one of my chief ambitions for the weekend. After a slightly less leisurely breakfast than we had had on Friday, Joe took off to run an errand, and I packed up a mid-morning snack and headed down to the nearest good-sized park, called Nytorget, only two blocks away. Outdoor seating at the cafes lining the square were at a premium, but there were plenty of spaces on the benches in the square, where I sat and ate my leftover pizza and watched the dog walkers and kids playing in the melting snow. I walked around the area a little bit, then met Joe on the bus, and we headed back into town for an afternoon of touristing.
Our first stop was to get a cheap lunch at Nystekt Strömming, whose stekt strömming plate is said by all the guidebooks to be the best in town, and it was indeed delicious. Then we went to the City Museum, whose purpose is to document the history and life of the people of Stockholm. We learned, among other things, that our the hardware on our kitchen cabinets is from the 30s, and I found Nytorget (which means "New Square") on a map of the city dating from 1670. The courtyard of the museum has a model of the planet Mercury, which is scaled as if the all-purpose arena Globen (2.9km away) were the Sun. (Here's more about the Swedish solar system.)
When the museum closed at 5pm, it was still plenty light and sunny, so we decided to take an elevator up to the pedestrian bridge at Katarinahissen—the famous elevator itself was out of service, but there is a perfectly good one (and free!) in the nearby office building. The views of the city are as good as advertised—and a great view of the Museum we were just in— and it's rather fun to watch the traffic at Slussen, which can probably be fairly said to be Sweden's major interchange.
We walked along the pedestrian bridge back to the cliffs of Södermalm, alternately envying and feeling sorry for the apartment dwellers with balconies facing the walkway—great views of the city and lake, but you would have tourists looking at you all the time! The area at the top of the bridge has a large theater that faces the lake to the north and a little square, Mosebacke Torg, to the south: we lingered in the square to watch the dressed-up people stream out from an early show. The square is probably quite charming in the summer, when the fountain has (unfrozen) water in it, and there are narrow streets running out of it, all leading downhill.
Crêperie Fyra Knop, which is one of the restaurants we had thought might be suitable for our big dinner out, is in this area, so we thought we'd just drop in and have dinner. We are, ahem, a little out of practice with this big city restaurant stuff... the hostess looked quite dubious when we said we had not booked a table, but they keep a spare table near the door, apparently in case some silly people like us wander off the street at 7pm, on a Saturday night, at one of the most popular eateries around... sheesh! (We got in just in the nick, too; lots of other people came in after us and got flatly turned down.) The place is cozy and warm, and the food was delicious (no good food pictures because it was a little dimly lit)— we each had crepes with salmon, mine with potatoes and herbs and raclette, Joe's was with garlic-sauteed spinach and roquefort.
After dinner we took a slow amble back down Svartensgatan and then Götgatan, stopping to peer in the windows of the shops and bars. We took the bus back to our home base, stopped in one of the numerous local cafes for a latte and a nibble of dessert, then back to the apartment to relax and recover from a long day of tramping around. As an extra luxury, we rented a movie, and watched it on a television.
It was really good to get out of town for a few days—I feel quite refreshed and ready to face the next few weeks, which will be quite frantic with work (tune in again soon for a post explaining my employment status). We have a list on our refrigerator labelled "Things we will feel stupid if we don't do" ('while in Sweden', we meant), and 'Stockholm Museums' was one of the items; although we have by no means done all the museums in Stockholm, I think we can justifiably cross that one off. (Don't think too hard about the grammatical structure of our list's title...)
Posted by
Jennifer
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19:33 CET
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21 March 2010
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Though a country be sundered, hills and rivers endure; And spring comes green again to trees and grasses Where petals have been shed like tears And lonely birds have sung their grief.
I suppose that yesterday's sun and warmth required redress, so as not to let the meteorological scales tip too far, too soon. Or, perhaps, nature is just fickle. Whatever the reason, this morning dawned damp and grey, and conditions have steadily deteriorated ever since.
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Sofia Kyrkan |
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Too many thumbs! |
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Söder Munkens Konditori |
It did let off for a bit after lunch, long enough for us to have one final wandering before departure. We walked through Nytorget, lined down one side with old wooden houses, and up the other with trendy eateries. There followed a quick stop in the local branch of Stockholm Stadsmission (a charity organization which runs a number of secondhand shops throughout the city); unfortunately, it was the Skånegatan branch, which really only deals in clothes and a few accessories. Then it was time to pack up and head to the train station.
So here I sit on the train back to Uppsala, hardly able to see the trees to either side through the snowfall. It was only ten minutes late into Stockholm, we've only had to stop once to wait for the tracks to get cleared, and we're just pulling out of Knivsta this very moment, so it seems possible that we'll get into Uppsala not terribly late. That would make us some of the luckier of SJs passengers this winter—right now Jennifer's reading the handy pamphlet provided by SJ, entitled "Varför går fortfarande inte tågen som de ska?" The answer? It's the worst winter in 100 years…
Epilogue
Uppsala was a mad house upon our arrival: near whiteout conditions, 15 cm of accumulation since morning, and 22,000 drunk bandy fans struggling to flee the city immediately following the conclusion of the national Bandyfinalen (in which Hammarby, a Stockholm team, defeated the team from Bollnäs—naturally, it was played in Uppsala). It took less time to get from Södermalm to the Uppsala train station than it took to get from there to our apartment. All's well now, with some hot chocolate and leftover pastry to restore our strength and some soup for nourishment.
Posted by
Joe
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21:59 CET
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19 March 2010
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We're in Stockholm this weekend, through the generosity of a friend who happens to be (a) in possession of an apartment in Södermalm, and (b) out of the country for a few days. So, for three days, we're trying out life in the big city. Now, admittedly, March in Stockholm is the off-season for a reason: caught between the rainy south and the snowy north, the weather in Stockholm is quixotic at the best of times, and after its snowiest winter in decades the thaw is proving a bit ugly. On the other hand, it's a lot easier to feel like a native when there aren't hordes of tourists on every street corner in Gamla Stan...
We came in on Thursday night, so that we could have an easy start on Friday. As predicted by the Norwegian weather bureau*, Friday dawned wet and dim--the perfect day for some museum hopping! We started by fortifying ourselves with some fresh-baked pastry from the Nytorgs Hembageriet, just around the corner (raspberry weinerbroed, aepple korg, and cardamom bear claw) and a cup of coffee, then we spent a little time formulating our plan of attack.
Our destination of choice today was the Museum of Medieval Stockholm. This is a relatively recent museum, first open some time in the mid-80s I believe, located underneath one of the bridges to Gamla Stan. It came about as a result of a planned underground parking structure for the Riksdag: the excavations turned up a 50m long section of the medieval city wall, along with a large cemetary. The garage was scrapped, and in its place an underground museum was built around the wall. We've wanted to go to this for years, but from before the time of our arrival it was closed for repairs (it turns out it's not so easy to build a musum underground on a small island, with a busy bridge overhead, and keep everything safe and dry at the same time); it only just reopened a couple of months ago.
The ruins are impressive, and are supplemented with some nice reconstructions of the sort of brick buildings that would have surrounded the wall in its time. There are plenty of scale models and videos to give one a sense of what Stockholm would have been like in the 13th century, and several more or less garish displays of life in those grim times--the reconstruction of "Gallows Hill" (pictured) would be the "more" part of that equation. The free English audio guide made up for the occassional lack of understandable explanatory text, even if Jennifer did, for some mysterious reason, choose not to proceed when prompted, "If you would like to learn more about life in a medieval hospital, press the button now." Most of the Swedes in the place opted for the guided tours, of which there were at least three while we were there.
By the time we had finished there, we were both tired and hungry (this turns out to be that rarest of Swedish museums: those with no fika!), so our next step was to wander over to Drottningatan, one of Stockholm's more notable streets. Alas, these days it is mostly notable for being full of sort of junky, touristy stores; nevertheless, it was a good spot to grab a hot dog from a street vendor and do a bit of people watching, and there is some decent architecture buried behind all the dross.
Restored by our respective Stekt Jättetjockar, we decided to wander back a bit towards Kungsträdsgården, so we headed up through Jakobsgata Arkaden. On the way, we passed St Jakobs Kyrka, a pleasantly gothic pile, where a free organ concert was about to start, so we stopped in and spent a pleasant hour resting and thawing in the company of Buxtehude and Bach.
By this time it was growing dim, and the light misting of the afternoon was turning into a cold, gentle rain, so we decided to get for home. I managed to sneak into Tourist Info just as they were turning off the lights and locking up, and came away with an inner city bus map for my troubles; I took my prize back to the bus stop where Jennifer was waiting, to find her staring at a much better one posted at the stop (not a usual thing in Stockholm; most of the bus stops provide at best vague information about destinations). Sigh. Anyway, we took a bus down the eastern edge of Gamla Stan into Södermalm, past the mad tangle of Slussen, and the disturbing statuary below the Södermalm cliffs, and wound up not two blocks from the apartment.
As it was nearly 7, I high-tailed it to the local Systembolaget to procure us some beer. With that safely deposited in our fridge, one more walk around the corner was all that was required to snag a couple of rental movies and an excellent pizza (pepperoni and leeks, and easily the best pizza either of us has had in Sweden).
Posted by
Joe
at
21:04 CET
1 comments
08 March 2010
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Where was I? Oh, right, winter. So the snow started a little before Christmas, and since that time we've only had a couple of afternoons where the temperature got a couple of degrees above freezing, meaning that for the most part the snow has just kept building up. At the moment there's about half a meter of the stuff outside our door. I'm sure that it won't last too much longer now, so I figure I'd better post these pictures before the season sublimates away. And if these aren't enough, there's plenty more in the gallery.
(Yes, they're all pictures of snow—there really hasn't been that much to do other than watch the Olympics and walk in the snow. Well, that and hike back and forth to Migrationsverket to get our visas renewed, but that isn't nearly as entertaining as it sounds. And that, my friends, is saying something.)
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Picnic, anyone? |
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All roads lead to… umm, Norrby? |
Posted by
Joe
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21:42 CET
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