Sunday, September 16, 2007

The shape of things to come

Things are settling down in the Wild West. My most basic needs (money, food, shelter, coffee) are finally all in place - the cash was touch-and-go for a while - and I've been diving into my new life as a grad student. Being a creature of habit, I find having a routine pretty soothing. I've established a fairly good one now, I feel. Work at the lab (occasionally interrupted by classes) all day long, eat free food here and there, go climbing at the gym two times a week, read journal papers and/or biochem book in the evening, leave town for The Great Outdoors during the weekend. This is a considerable improvement in many ways on my average day in London.

Especially health-wise -- I'm losing weight like crazy, here, despite being fed greasy pizza and cheese-drenched Mexican food a few times a week. Cutting down on the booze worked real well too, although after about five minutes of uphill hiking (or just biking to work in the morning) I'm still huffing and puffing. I guess I can still blame the altitude, but that excuse is only good for another month of so. On the upside, I'm going to have more red blood cells than the most EPO-infused Tour de France sprinter before long.

And I seem to have promised some pictures. And now, after getting that long-lost power adapter (thanks, mom and dad!), I can deliver. First, I get up in the morning and wander aimlessly around my shiny new apartment:



Take a look out the window - the weather is usually good, but afternoon thunderstorms hit at the drop of a hat:



Anyway, time to be off. The lab is there waiting for me:



I admit, the lack of windows is a bit depressing... But it's not like I'm staring at anything except the computer screen anyway. The research is going, well, forward. There's a certain amount of grunt work involved in generating a dataset, irrespective of how you do it (lab bench or database search), but I should be hitting the "now, what does it all mean?" stage pretty soon.

But if it's a suitable day, you can always bugger off to the climbing wall to refresh yourself. If the day is especially suitable, you might even go to a comp. And should you by some miracle be the best competitor in your class (because e.g. the hardmen aren't there), you can be a genuine, certified bouldering champion:



That T-shirt right there pretty much tops any previous athletic achievement for me. I have way more awards, diplomas and medals from running track, but none of those actually say that I won something. Ah, America, the land of oppurtunity...

Soon enough, hunger drives me home again. I continually thank God that I have a kitchen of my own, because the alternative is fast food (argh) or eating at the Washakie Dining Hall. According to those unfortunate souls who live in the residence halls (the tallest buildings in Wyoming, by the way, at all of 11 floors) the options over there aren't exactly enchanting. And really, are they gonna cook me up some nice Thai food? I think not.
On the way home, you might happen to see the sun go down over the Snowy Range:



Ah, man, I love living here already. In London, there was no way to see the sun go down because three million buildings were in the way. And of course, clear skies weren't particularly frequent. Here, I can usually enjoy the view of snow-covered peaks as I bike to the lab, and catch the last rays turning Pilot Point over on the Laramie Range a lovely shade of pink as I make my way home. Truly, I seem to have hit the right spot.

The work week, intensive as it is (take a look at "Piled higher and Deeper" (what's the acronym? Think about it...) if you don't believe me), eventually ends, and then you can get the heck out of Dodge! There's nothing to do inside Laramie, except possibly drinking, and I've had plenty of that during the last couple of years. I try to spend as much time outdoors as I can, and one very good place to do it is Vedauwoo:



Not twenty minutes from home (in a car, of course), I have an entirely mountain range's worth of forest, hills and huge piles of granite. Could it possibly get better? This place pretty much outstrips the entire Västerbottens län for climbable rock, and them routes are mighty tasty, too. My bizarre fetish for cracks that are wide enough to swallow your entire leg is working to my advantage, as Vedauwoo is famed all over the climbing world for its variety of wide cracks. Unfortunately, it's also quite renowned as a place that will eat your flesh and drink your blood if you don't wrap your entire body in tape:



Those stories of flesh-eating cracks are slightly embellished (as all good stories are!), but not that much. They bit me good today, and although I didn't leave much blood behind, it certainly hurt pretty bad. As compensation, the rock treated me to some really excellent climbing, and in three days I've done an entire season's worth of classics. I'll admit this place doesn't quite have Offerhällans grandeur, or Ringkallen's sweeping vistas, but for sheer quantity and quality it beats the pants off either. Woo-hoo!

Of course you can't go climbing without some good buddies to hold the other end of the rope, and yell/encourage you when the going gets tough and you think you're going to fall to your death. This weekend, I've been out with Dan and Karin (sadly, no Swedish connection there), Laramie's only color-coordinated climbing couple:



Who knew that married people could be so much fun? Ooh, bit of a preconception creeping up on me there...

If you want to see some more pretty pictures, including some halfway decent shots of my co-workers in the lab and on the rock, take a look at my Flickr page. You can also look at just the climbing shots, if you want to.

1 comment:

Vicky said...

Sätt upp lite tavlor! Då ser det ju nästan decent ut faktiskt.
Något större än skolådan du hade i London, verkar som om USAs great outdoors var mer din kopp av te.
Hoppas mamma och pappa vill hälsa på dig någon gång, i.e så att jag kan åka med gratis och göra det också!