Wednesday, 25 May 2022

Opera shocker

 Yesterday EGU seemed more comfortable with the technology or perhaps there were simply fewer remote / recorded talks. Some interesting stuff on microplastic movement on soil surfaces due to rainfall - in simulations most of the microplastic was washed away in less than 5 minutes, also an interesting talk on how biodegradable microplastics add a C source to soils and boost microbial activity.  Final highlight for me was a talk on meta-analyses. A survey of c. 31 meta-analyses on soil carbon concluded that only one had been done properly!


There was another opera tonight - The Puritans. As ever it was all about thwarted love, this time set during the English civil war. But what a shocker (SPOILER ALERT).  Standard stuff in Act one, with the hero and heroine (previously promised in marriage to someone else) falling in love but being on opposite sides of the war. The hero saves a prisoner but has to flee (the jilted lover lets them escape) and the heroine thinks shes been jilted and goes mad. Act 2 was generally arias and mad stuff. But then in Act 3 there's a final battle after which the star crossed lovers are reunited, the heroine regains her sanity and the hero (on the losing side) is pardoned by parliament so they can get married rather than have the hero being executed. Cue much rejoicing but then, in the final minute of the opera, the jilted ex-lover who was inevitably on the other side to the hero in the war stabs him to death and the heroine goes mad. Then the curtain drops. No happy ending after all.

Tuesday, 24 May 2022

A night at the opera

So day 1 ended. I think it's fair to say that EGU is struggling with the technology - in some ways a surprise given that we've had two years to sort out things like this but the switching between in person talks, remote talks and videos was not entirely smooth today. Hopefully things will improve. Science-wise for me highlights were a bit thin on the ground but there was an interesting talk about a crop growth model that might benefit from an earthworm component and a good presentation about how earthworms impact on plant defence against different insect herbivores.


In better news, as someone who isn't naturally inclined to eat salad and who likes fried potatoes, eggs and sausage, EGU poses a real threat of scurvy! So I was surprised and delighted to find the rolls I bought for lunch contained some carrots - the orange lumps might not look the most appetising but it's good to have a cheeky vegetable to supplement the tomatoes and peppers I ate at breakfast!

Carrot bread

Perhaps the main event was a return to the Vienna State opera. It's a lovely building that makes me happy when ever I walk in. 

My usual pre-opera dinner - Wurstz box and beer!

Tonight's opera was Boris Gudonov by Mussorgsky. Spoiler alert - it's a sad tale of succession to the Tzardom via murder followed by guilt, possibly madness and death. All good stuff and surely an important message for us all! The building is just as much of a highlight as the actual opera of course.

Part of the central stairs

Boxes slowly filling up

Outside balcony
















Ceiling details

More ceiling details

The main chandelier

Sunday, 22 May 2022

and then some time passed.......

 and so two years later I can report that:

1. the beetle bank samples failed to show any exciting trends. The soils from the banks had a higher carbon content but were less dense so that the total C was the same as the lower C concentration, higher density arable soil.

2. the C sequestration stuff is coming along nicely - more shortly

3. I have finally finished analysing the earthworm-plant-bacteria samples - again, more shortly.

But as we emerge from Covid the exciting news is that in person conferences are back and I am currently in Vienna for EGU2022 after, depending on how you count it two or three years away. Possibly the biggest inconvenience of Covid has been ringing up Austrian Airlines to change my ticket every year, it plays havoc with my blood pressure but at last I've been able to use my plane ticket. Today I spent some time wandering around the town, reaquainting myself with some of my favourite bits of Viennese architecture before the conference proper starts tomorrow.

Karlskirche in all its ridiculous glory
Karlskirche poking out above the trees


The opera house - performances booked Monday and Tuesday

A wonderful plant pot - reminds me of the Disc World

The Secession building - home of the rather weird Beethoven frieze

A new fave - the Hundertwasserhaus

and again

Not a building but I just love the way these road signs remind you that you are truly in central Europe




Sunday, 2 February 2020

The noble art of juggling

Either due to a lack of hand eye co-ordination or dedication to practice I've never been able to juggle bean bags, clubs, flaming fire brands, bowling balls or any other object you could care to imagine. However, as an academic juggling is a crucial skill.

This may look like a bunch of typical academics demonstrating their finely honed skills but is actually a picture of the fire juggling group FullCircle

After the successful sampling trip of early January I am now (typing this I noticed the Freudian slip of writing "not" rather than "now"!) the proud owner of 200+ soil samples that need processing. January's beetle bank samples are now pretty much dry - they now need to be weighed, sieved and weighed again. This will allow me to calculate the soil density. They then need to be treated with acid to remove the carbonate and then I can measure their inorganic carbon content. I reckon I can get the weighing an sieving done in a day. The acid treatment will take longer. So the aim here is to get them ready for acidification by the end of Feb.

The Faustian deal of field work - you can enjoy yourself collecting samples but then you have to process them. Of course you should never try and dry soil in plastic bags as you get condensation which slows the process down but if you are time limited and can just leave the samples for weeks, this works fine and saves the time of transferring the soil to drying trays. Depending on the measurements you want to make, slow drying is fine.
Also lurking in the wings are 80 samples that need processing from a carbon sequestration project, 72 samples from a project looking at earthworm - plant communication, teaching, supporting project students and many other competing demands for my attention.....

Andrea Harper in our Biology dept. kindly spent some of her time showing me how to use RNA extraction kits so I'm all primed for the next step of the earthworm - plant communication work. Probably 8 days of work there, the trickiest thing will be grinding up my plant samples which are currently stored at -80C without them defrosting, the rest is down to good pipetting.

I managed to measure the pH of the carbon sequestration samples last week and this week phosphorus measurements are pencilled in. I've also had a good conversation with Harvey Wood at the Clean Rivers Trust about the work and am meeting him in a few weeks time to talk further.

Last week was also occupied by an earthworm workshop in Dusseldorf. This was a great opportunity to talk earthworms and revisit ideas and considerations from Alice Johnston's Syngenta funded PhD of a few years ago now that Richard Sibly and myself were involved in, along with Tania Alvarez and Pernille Thorbek (now at BASF). The workshop was all about producing a computer model, acceptable by regulators and industry, that could predict how earthworms respond to applications of agrochemicals in the field. This could save industry a lot of time and money and have all sorts of spin offs in terms of understanding and predicting earthworm ecology.

The conference was set in an area of old docklands which is being developed in a way that seems far more sympathetic than London's Docklands area. There are old buildings preserved and even incorporated into the new builds.

The Innside hotel at Dusseldorf, set in the old docklands area.
I was in a working group on earthworm movement. It was great to catch up with Alice and Kevin Butt again and good to meet Yvan Capowiez and Martin Holmstrup for the first time, Martin in particular as we are co-authors on one of Alice's earthworm model papers!
Discussing earthworm movement controls with (clockwise from left) Alice Johnston, Yvan Capowiez, Vanessa Roeben, Martin Holmstrup and Kevin Butt. 

Not just earthworms - visiting a local brewery one evening to help with discussions!

The meeting was funded by a European Food Safety organisation and showed how Europe has really helped with science and science-informed policy. Of course, it has been a mad three years in the UK and Friday, the day after getting back from Dusseldorf, was, according to many the day that Brexit happened. It's not over by a long shot with lots of negotiations to come but it did make me wonder on the way home whether that was my last hassle free trip to Europe in the near future. Hopefully not.

EU passport control at Dusseldorf airport - no queues, no hassle. Fingers crossed this continues to be the case.


Friday, 10 January 2020

Day 5 - all done

With three banks and fields to sample today and a lengthy drive home I got up at 6 a.m. to make sure I was at Sennowe Park prompt at 7 a.m. This entailed a cold breakfast of toast which didn't put me in the best of moods. I got to Sennowe Park for about 7.15 am but then was unable to get started until after 8. Whilst I waited it started to rain. So not a great start but the clouds had a silver lining because by the time I was able to start the rain had stopped and it turned into a sunny day. Two of the three banks turned out to be the same age so I only sampled one of those which also meant an early finish enabling me to get home at a reasonable hour though in truth three banks of different ages would have been good.
A rather diffuse bank, c. 20 years old
The final bank of the tour, c. 26 years old
The first bank was rather diffuse and it was tricky to work out where the bank began and ended - it sort of merged into the uncultivated strip next to it. The second was a bit better though had lots of brambles on it which was a nuisance.

The soil was far sandier than the previous days but still had a little flint in it. It was also deeper and ended in a clay rich layer rather than the previous three days chalk - nice for a change.
Flinty not chalky surface

A good auger's worth of soil without hitting parent material
Orange tinted, clayey stuff from the bottom of a core
And that was it - a drive back to York with more Radio 4. In total over 700 miles of driving and a grand total of 216 samples which now I just have to process....





Thursday, 9 January 2020

Day 4 - breakfast mysteries and banks in the sun

A lovely days sampling today in the sunshine despite the predicted rain but the day started with a mystery.....

Gregg's porridge with a serving suggestion of dry oat flakes!
Fond as I am of Greggs, how can a picture of some dry porridge oats be a sensible "serving suggestion" for porridge?

I tried not to let this perplexing question delay my sampling too much and was soon back in the field. only two banks today, the second in particular was a delight with buzzards overhead in the clear blue sky.

2005 bank - lovely blue sky
2015 bank - sky looks a bit ominous but soon it was sunny











The soil was still shallow and chalky, I have high hopes of the Norfolk sampling tomorrow at Sennowe Park for some less stony, deeper soils.
A final shot of chalk bespeckled soil
It was a four to five hour drive from Cranbourne up to Norfolk through some very unpleasant rain (the thick stuff you have to strain to see through, I was very pleased to be in the car and not sampling) but the M25 was moving quite well and I got to my hotel (a Best Western this time, the room is boiling due to some hot water pipes!) at around 6 pm.  It's another early start tomorrow so I can be at the estate office for about 7 am then just 3 banks and fields to sample before heading home!

Wednesday, 8 January 2020

Day 3 - the banks keep coming

Another busy day sampling - three more banks done, this time dating from 2017, 2013 and 2011.

The 2017 bank

The 2013 beetle bank

The 2011 bank
Again the soils were shallow with chalk parent material at depths somewhere between 20 and 30 cm.

Chalk at the bottom of the auger from the 2017 bank
2013 samples with depth (and chalk) increasing left to right











The last bank was about 2 km from where I parked so this was an excellent opportunity to work out how to carry the auger, the corer, the GPS system and my bucket over distance - I'll need to do that again tomorrow for a 2005 bank, again at Cranboune. Despite the walk I was finished by 1700 and back to the Ringwood Travel lodge where I chanced my arm and got some additional complementary tea bags (that's four I've had now over 3 days!) and my shower gel dispenser topped up. The pub over the road (The St Leonard) is OK for food and has decent beer and you can get breakfast at Greggs next door to the Travel lodge (porridge for me!) but it has to be said that I won't be rushing back to the Travel lodge (though to be fair the bed is comfy and the shower is hot).