Showing posts with label Halloween. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Halloween. Show all posts

Thursday, November 14, 2013

November already?!

Since I returned from my trip to Alaska and the Northeast I haven’t posted much in the way of updates to my blog and time has just been flying by. That's mostly because the semester has been an eventful one, full of hard work, new challenges, good times, and great company. Here's a little run down of what's made it so special:

Halloween
Of course, one of the highlights of this time of year in the USA is the craziness which is Halloween. For the third year in a row I headed down to New Orleans to spend the night on Bourbon Street with all the other people in costumes. It's always a lot of fun walking up and down the French Quarter checking out all the crazy costumes people have made or bought - my favourite this year was a long-haired guy dressed as Jesus holding a cask of wine which had this used to be water written on it. We had an awesome night out, trawling the various bars and drinking hand grenades, with the night finally culminating in a photoshoot beside the LSU-coloured Lamborghini in the post prior to this one.

Weddings
I’ve been to a couple of weddings this semester which was really cool as I haven’t been to a whole lot so far in my life. The first was the wedding of my girlfriend’s cousin, which was held in Lafayette, a city in Louisiana about one hour west of Baton Rouge. The second was the wedding of my lab mate and friend Ganesh, to his long-term love Sara, who had finally finished her studies in Sweden and had come to join him in the USA.

They were both really nice occasions, but also couldn’t have been more contrasting in style. The first wedding was pretty much similar in style to that of a New Zealand wedding, with a nice ceremony conducted by a wedding celebrant, followed by a big reception with food, drinks, music, and dancing. Everyone was wearing their number ones and the celebrations carried on well into the night. Ganesh and Sara's wedding was much more low-key and intimate, with a small personal ceremony held at their apartment where they exchanged a few words about one another and presented each other with flower garlands, before everybody present had tikka (red rice paste) placed on their forehead. This was then followed by a delicious dinner at the Baton Rouge Nepalese restaurant.

Tikka on the forehead at Ganesh's wedding
Hiking Trips
During the semester I've somehow found the time to get away on a couple of one-day hiking trips to Fountainbleau State Park in Louisiana and Clark Creek in Mississippi. Fountainbleau State Park is right on the edge of Lake Pontchartrain and even has a man-made beach. It has around 12 km of trails, a nice campground, and also a lot of Phragmites where I took a little time to do some data collection. Clark Creek is just over the Louisiana/Mississippi border, close to the Tunica Hills Wildlife Management Area, and it was really nice. We all took lunch and lots of water and hiked for over 6 hours along creek beds, beside waterfalls, and up and down the largest hills you can find this close to Baton Rouge. We saw a few armadillos, some deer, frogs, and lizards, and a baby snake. It was a great place to visit and was definitely a highlight of the semester so far.

Hiking in Mississippi
Large orb-web spider at Fountainbleau State Park
One of the waterfalls at Clark Creek
LSU
Of course, there is always plenty going on at university, with my school commitments again being shared between research, teaching, and coursework. This is basically my last semester of coursework before I can solely focus on my research and teaching. I'm still having a lot of fun teaching the ecology lab class, although this has been a freak semester where I have only had a total of 11 students compared to the usual 24 (hooray for less grading!). One of the projects we conduct with the students even made the Baton Rouge newspaper (http://theadvocate.com/features/people/7470629-123/lsu-students-work-to-keep). Because I've been enjoying my research and time in Louisiana so much I have decided to stay on and finish my PhD. I already have a lot of nice data and am making steady progress towards producing a nice dissertation and a number of scientific papers. Next February I will be sitting the dreaded general examination. This is a comprehensive written and oral exam where your PhD committee members supposedly ruthlessly probe your knowledge of the field of ecology to determine whether you are worthy of becoming a PhD candidate. According to my advisor Jim, it is the last major hurdle before defending your dissertation research. It's time to start studying NOW!

The LSU football team hasn’t been doing so well this year, and have already lost three games. They looked great in their first few games of the season but then lost a couple of close ones before being blown out by the #1 ranked team Alabama over the weekend. Next weekend they have a big game in Tiger Stadium against Texas A & M, who have Johnny Manziel, one of the best and most exciting quarterbacks in College Football. I've only been to one home game this season, but I'll definitely be attending this one!

On a final note, I’m especially proud of my great roommate and friend Darko, who has received an offer for his dream job to work as a petroleum engineer at Shell; it just goes to show that hard work will always be rewarded. He’ll be moving to downtown New Orleans in June next year so many visits to his new apartment will have to be in order!

Monday, November 12, 2012

Halloween 2012

After spending Halloween weekend at New Orleans last year, I had to go back again. I went with my friends Fallon, Pradip, Bibek, and Whitney, with Whitney's Mum nice enough to let us stay at her house for the night. We had an epic night out on Bourbon Street, hanging around with the thousands of other people in costume!
The two zombies with Cheech and Chong before heading to downtown New Orleans

The usual chaos on Bourbon Street

With my labmate Anthony


Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Halloween

Halloween is kind of a big deal here in the United States. Huge numbers of people dress up (not just children and university students) and the whole Halloween weekend is celebrated with trick-or-treating and rowdy parties. For my first Halloween in America I dressed as Ron Burgundy (Will Ferrell) from the movie Anchorman and roamed the streets with my friends interviewing other party-goers. Anchorman is a funny funny movie (see the clip below), and I was stoked to dress as Ron Burgundy using secondhand clothes from the thrift store for just $14! My mustache could have done with a bit of work though...


On the Friday night of Halloween weekend I went to the Carlotta Street party. This is an annual party on a street just on the northeast edge of campus. The police shut all the surrounding roads for the party and thousands of people turn up to check out all the crazy costumes, have a few drinks, and enjoy the live bands playing in the residents' front yards. The party had a really great atmosphere and I had a lot of fun, even if the turnout wasn't as high as normal due to the cold weather.
I'm Ron Burgundy?
On the Saturday, myself and six other guys traveled the 90 minutes down the highway to New Orleans to spend the Saturday night of Halloween weekend on the fabled Bourbon Street. For those who don't know, Bourbon Street is a long street in the heart of the city which is dedicated to only bars, restaurants, and souvenir shops, and is open 24 hours a day for 365 days a year. It lives up to its name, and you will see drunk people there at all times of the day. We had booked a hostel to stay in and when we arrived we found it was an old asylum for the mentally insane (quite appropriate for Halloween). Our dorm room smelled like a mixture of vomit and burnt diapers, so we quickly decided we would spend as little time there as possible. We quickly put on our costumes and headed out into the early evening. We had an excellent night touring many restaurants and bars on the street, meeting lots of fun people, and taking in the lively atmosphere: almost every bar has a live band playing, there are performers on the street, and most of the patrons are also putting on a performance themselves. The only downside of the night was Felix getting pick-pocketed (apparently a common occurrence on Bourbon Street). We arrived back to the hostel at 6am, desperately ready for our 3 hours sleep, before catching the bus back to Baton Rouge at 9:30am to catch up on our school work for the weekend. We're now into the serious part of the semester with around one month left until final exams, so it's time to knuckle down and get some good grades!

Guillermo, Ali, Immy, Mikel, Darko & Felix - my asylum dorm mates


A Kiwi, two Brits, a German, a Serb, and two Spaniards walk into a bar...


The chaos that is Bourbon Street