Monday, August 15, 2011

Made it back.....video posted.

Thanks Marlene for working on video for group. Here it is. If you go to the Vimeo page you can download it.


Sunday, August 14, 2011

waiting and waiting and more waiting.

so this is our last day of camp and were all a little sad, we'll miss all of the amazing people weve met, but we'll always have these memories, and we'll keep in touch.



We're all sitting in the Churchill airport waiting for our plane to take off at 2:00pm
Until then we're going to sit here and we may go into town in a bit the people here are nice though.
We're going to get to Winnipeg and we're taking the 6:50pm flight to Toronto, and I'll be flying onto
St. Johns at 10:55pm.

This will be fun. but I think that were all sort of okay with it because we get to be together for a few more hours.

This was Harry Paddon with what i think is the last blog update of  PSA Far North 2011.

A Letter Home...

Dear Mom and Dad,

So, I know we are supposed to be comming home tomorrow.
But actually, I do not think that is going to happen.

You see, we are having far too much fun in the land of the polar bear to leave now. Churchill has such an incredible, friendly atmosphere.We have a close group of ten marvelous friends here, nearby for a laugh anytime.  We're absolutely loving the research centre and the people here, although we have been far too occupied with assignments to lounge around.

Even in the late afternoon to evening today, we packed in oodles of adventures! We went for an ultimate exploration through town and then ventured to the beaches of Hudson Bay. We set up our cookout, roasted our potatoes, warmed our fish, and skewered out hot dogs. It was scrumptious!




We then gathered enough courage to dive into the icy water. We do not quite have the same cold tolerance  as the belugas we saw however, and were wrapping ourselves back into a towel cocoons within fifteen minutes.





But don't worry mom and dad we really did do our homework as well! We spent the majority of the morning studying for our afternoon exam! We all had some worries going into the exam, but for the most part we came out feeling like we knew more than we had previously thought.
The teachers here are quite sneaky. Much to our chagrin we learned loads throughout our trip's daily expolorations! All of our lessons were very tactile, they were hands on and we got to see, touch and live what we were learning about. Because of this we were more interested in the topics and we retained a lot more of the information than we would have from a text book and tradtitional classroom.

Mom and Dad, this trip was truly incredible. To say we met great people would be an understatement. To say we just saw some animals would be an underestimation. To say we had fun would be a cliché.

I guess we'll just have to come back home, to tell you the stories ourselves.

Thanks for the experience,

Lots of love,
The Far Northerners

(Harry and Emma)

Friday, August 12, 2011

It's Friday~!

Friday - (a parody) by Shaughna and Larissa


6:45 waking up in the centre,
Gotta be fresh and half asleep gotta go downstairs,
Eric’s gotta have his bowl, gotta have cereal
Packing our bags, buying new sweats,
Walking on and on,  hope no one forgets,
Gotta get down to the buggy,
The tundra buggy, I see some bears (some bears)

Harry in front of the buggy

Chillin’ by the back deck,
Sittin’ by the window,
Gotta make my mind up,
How will Greg be BAAIIIT?!?

It’s FRIDAY, FRIDAY.
Gotta see bears on Friday
Everybody’s lookin’ forward to the exam this weekend, weekend (but not really)
FRIDAY, FRIDAY
Runnin’ Eric over on Friday.
Everybody’s look forward to the adventure.

 Eric being "run over" by the buggy

Excitin’, Excitin’ YEAH!
Fun, fun, fun, fun
Not looking forward to the exam!

10:45 we’re driving on the trail,
Cruisin’ so slow on the tundra, hey it’s my turn to drive,
Fun fun, think about fun,
You know what it is,
I see bear, you see bear,
In bush eight meters by my right ....YEAH!
I see bear, you see bear ,
Now you know it!

Polar bear! 

Chillin’ by the deck,
Sittin’ by the window,
Gotta make my mind up,
How will Greg be BAAIIIT,

everyone hanging out on the tundra buggy


It’s FRIDAY, FRIDAY.
Gotta see bears on Friday
Everybody’s lookin’ forward to the exam this weekend, weekend (but not really)
 FRIDAY, FRIDAY
Drivin’ this beast  on friday.
Everybody’s look forward to the adventure.

Exicitin’, Excitin’ Yeah!
Fun, fun, fun, fun
Not looking forward to the exam

Yesterday was study day, study day,
Today i-is Bear day, Bear day
We-we-we so excited
We so excited
We gunna have a sandwich today.
Tomorrow is Exams
And flight comes afterwards,
I don’t want Far North end!

Lunch time!

It’s FRIDAY, FRIDAY.
Gotta see bears on Friday
Everybody’s lookin’ forward to the exam this weekend, weekend (but not really)
FRIDAY, FRIDAY
Singin’ Narwhals on Friday,
Everybody’s look forward to the adventure.


As you can guess today was Friday, and went on a tundra buggy, to see the different sites and wildlife of the subarctic tundra here in Churchill. On the ride we ran into all kinds of different animals. Our favourite was the big willow bush ..... it had bear in it ... a POLAR BEAR!  We all got a chance to walk back out deck to look and take pictures of the bear, we named him Woogles the Powa Beah.  It was amazing to see the bar up that close. We were told he was a healthy fat bear sleep in his summer bed, waiting for the ice to form by the bay.
Woogles the Powa Beah

Greg taking a short nap.

The trip was a long trip out all day, with the occasional nap or two ... or five. Later in the day John, our driver was nice enough to show us and give everyone a chance to drive the tundra buggy. (Larissa, Shaughna and Doug were clearly by far the best drivers at the camp!). Then we got home to the centre and it was a long night of studying! But I hope we are ready!
Larissa driving the Buggy
Shaughna driving the buggy

Wish us luck for tomorrow!

Goodnight
Much love,

Shaughna and Larissa

The Eleventh of August, Two-Thousand-and Eleven


Today we awoke to the harmonizing cacophony of the Semipalmated Plover mingling with the steady drone of the Churchill Public Works Department dismantling an abandoned tunnel. 
The cacophony that awoken us.
  
We then proceeded to cleanse ourselves before partaking in a hearty morning meal consisting of heated Avena sativa (oatmeal).  We cleansed our palates with Dentifrice and dihydrogen monoxide before setting about our activities for the day.  Although today was not an eventful day, it was a very important day. 
The astonishing Ramsay Trail.

Throughout the morning and mid-day, we viewed several documentaries, the majority of which contained valuable information and interviews related to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.  Several photographs and videos of our class were taken by employees of Tourism Manitoba for promotion of Churchill.  During this activity, the class was able to explore the origins and consequences of global warming.  Overall, it was satisfyingly stellar series of videos and lessons. 
A Geocache hidden in somewhere in the Greater Churchill Area.

Once the morning’s activities and lessons were but a blur in our memories, it was time for our second meal of the day, lunch.  (We couldn’t find a scientific name for lunch)  Lunch consisted of Oryza sativa (rice), Phaseolus vulgaris (bean) salad, and a casserole of cheese and ground Bos primigenius (Cattle).  We cleansed our plates with dihydrogen monoxide and continued with our various scholarly endeavors, some experienced more hardships than others. The class produced such sophisticated and profound responses that the educational facilitator was without speech. By 16:00, the class, minus a few, decided to trek across the barren tundra.
One of the many rocket missles found near the Churchill Northern Studies Centre.

The expedition along a Bryophyta (moss)-covered trail was exhilarating, to say the least.  While partaking in this voyage, we were witness to several aged rocket missiles that were launched several years prior to our existence with the intent of obtaining information about the atmosphere.  The surface of these rockets was covered in oxidation.  One jolly student was possessed with the bright idea to use a component of this disused machinery as a cranial shield.  Upon our return to the Churchill Northern Studies Centre we nourished our bodies and minds once more before proceeding to burden our brains with knowledge about the impending final evaluation.  The day came to a close with an educational documentary, which was bursting with intellectual value.  Overall, educational value was plentiful today and concluded with yet another cacophony, this time consisting of classic rock, courtesy of our brilliant educational facilitator. 
Eric and his cranial shield.

The above blogule was created by Andrew Edmunds and Troy Liddell

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Andrew's Birthday day!

August 10, 2011

Picture this. You are standing by a boat where six and a half hours earlier, you would have been completely submerged. This was where we were standing this morning: by the Ithaca, which is a single hull riveted ship. The Ithaca was an ore ship that sank in September of 1960. One of the theories regarding how it sank was that it was purposely grounded during a vicious storm, but since it was insured the captain was not too worried about leaving it there. 
The group standing inside the Ithaca
Looking out towards the water from inside the Ithaca
Greg’s footnote: For his 17th birthday, Andrew got a very pricey gift from the group... A live, two centimetre long krill found under a rock during our time at the Ithaca. In short, he ate it. Live.

It was a very rusty and old boat that took a lot of effort to get to. Since the beach was covered by the tide, there were a lot of rocks with slippery seaweed attached to them, as well as lots of puddles everywhere. Unfortunately, if you did not have rubber boots on, your feet got pretty wet.

Larissa standing in one of the many puddles
Greg’s footnote: Shawna fell backwards into a puddle during our escapade back from the Ithaca. It was hilarious.

After we ate lunch, we went to Cape Merry and were separated into groups of two for a study on the beluga whale population. We sat watching our assigned zones for two hours, recording numbers every tenth minute. It was windy and quite cold but it was an exciting experience trying to spot the ridges of the belugas.

Greg’s footnote: Emma and Andrew were by far the most successful. They found fifty WHOLE fiftieths of a full beluga. In case you were wondering, they found one beluga whale.

Once this two hour excursion was over, we headed off to Churchill to explore the area and buy souvenirs. 
At a park in Churchill before we headed off to dinner
Dinner at Gypsy’s was great and everyone enjoyed the food. Andrew got two more gifts from the group- one, a card signed by each of us, and two, a Nanaimo bar as a replacement for birthday cake. The best part was that all of this was on Doug’s tab! After dinner, we made our way to visit Cape Merry.

Andrew with his "birthday cake"
Greg’s footnote: At dinner, Larissa ate an entire 12-inch pizza, and to this point of the night has not yet thrown up.

At Cape Merry, we learned about edible plants that can be found in the Churchill tundra area. Listed are some of the more interesting and delicious plants that are seen throughout Churchill: fireweed (used for jelly, completely edible), Labrador tea (when prepared properly, delicious), sphagnum moss (extremely absorbent, used as bandages), and crowberry (root used as medicine, berry used in jelly and pie).

Sphagnum moss

Fireweed
Greg’s footnote: Troy had previously enjoyed some Labrador tea uncooked and unprepared- not the safest thing to do, but he spat it out after he discovered Harry WASN’T joking about it being poisonous. Also, many of the edible plant samples were consumed by Harry and Troy. Too many :P. 

All in all, it was a great day, filled with lots of interesting information. Happy Birthday Andrew!
Andrew on his 17th birthday
 
By Shawna and Greg

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

In Which We Discover Why This Place is Called a RESEARCH Center


DAY EIGHT
Today began the same as most days. Everybody got up and headed for breakfast, with the slight added problem of a certain song about a certain sea animal ringing in everyone’s ears. On the schedule was meeting with various researchers and learning about what they were doing. Today’s forecast: boredom. Massive boredom, as old dudes in lab coats droned on about numbers no one understood
Instead, we got to meet some really cool people doing really cool things. First was Travis, who is doing a study for his PHD. He’s up here researching the effects of temperature and salinity on a certain type of bug called Chironomids. Turns out they’re everywhere, with some 15000 different species spread all over the world. They’re incredibly numerous, especially near bodies of water. Travis was doing in-vitro experiments (that means in a petri dish) where he would modify the temperature or the salinity of the water and see how the little things reacted.
The reason Travis is doing this research is because Chironomids have always been abundant. And since the shape of the Churchill area with regards to water was shaped by the glaciers of the last ice age, which would have changed the salinity and temperature of the water, he believes we can use the information from the Chironomids to build an image of the area’s evolution as a water system.
Pretty neat stuff!
Next we met Monica and Anne  who were doing research on Araci, also known as mites. They had a lot of pictures but didn’t say as much about their research, but they talked a lot about all sorts of different types of mites. They called them cute. Some agreed. Others did not.
Their research is part of a much larger project attempting to gather a DNA encyclopedia for every species. As such, their job is to identify different types of mites and gather data on them. They gather samples live and dead from all over the place and bring them to the lab in order to do that. They have at least one live specimen they’re hoping will breed, allowing it to be identified via its more unique looking offspring.

They also had these cool leaves that had been used by the mites to make something called galls. These are large pods of flesh that grow around a mite larvae, drawing energy from the plant and giving it to the larvae. It’s really cool, and we got to open some up to see if we could find any larvae. Some of us did.

Pulling larvae out of galls for Anne

Greg showing the fruits of his labour


Then we all have lunch, and then we went  out with another researcher named Anne Corkery.  Instead of sitting in the classroom or the lab, we went out to the tundra. There, she told us about her research on Semipalmated Plovers, a type of shore bird. Anne was researching what the effects of climate change, and the resulting changes in bug patterns, were on the success of the Plover’s breeding season.  She would have to find nests via the bird’s behaviour, then basically stalk the "groundbound" chicks until she could catch and measure them, and mark them for later checking. The data gathered from this could be used to predict the effects of global warming on larger animals, which is pretty clever.

 Anne describing stalking the elusive SP plover. 

After that we spent the afternoon and evening working on assignments. Not the most wild day, but a very productive one!


Adventures in the Sketchmobile with Shaughna and Andrew!

Hello everyone this Shaughna and Andrew!
Once again setting standards from the lovely town of Churchill~!
Today really started in the early hours of the morning (like 1 o’clock) when we all got an amazing chance to see the northern lights. It was cold, buggy and spectacular.  And I spent a lot of the time blinding everyone in the aurora dome with the every now then camera flash. But it was all a good time. 
The Northern Lights!
After rising very early in the morning, we drove away in a van dubbed... well the name isn’t really appropriate for a blog so we shall refer to it as the Sketchmobile! It was a bumpy ride ..... and when I say bumpy, I mean REALLY FREAKEN BUMPY! I was fearing for my life. I think we should have worn helmets.  AAAAAAAAnyway, once we arrived at the forest fire site, we got down to business.  We loaded out of the wonderful Sketchmobile and everyone got into our extremely spiffy looking bug gear, showering ourselves in lots of bug spray. Of course we still managed to amass a huge amount of bug bites.  But the work was very interesting.  We examined several sections of different sections of the forest floor, looking for different species and types of moss and plants that we could identify for part of a lab.  We got to see a lot of the difference species we have been learning about this week as well as getting a chance to find and identify some new ones.
Everyone looking great in their bug gear~!
      
Reindeer Moss!

Then afterwards we got back into the Sketchmobile, and headed off to a healthy full growing boreal forest so we could make a comparison between the two about the number of different species in each. My favourite plant we got to see was the Labrador Tea.  Mine was the reindeer moss.  Once back at the center, we gulped down our lunches very quickly and reviewed what to do for our labs.  Then we worked in the caf for a good three hours .....(in which Harry managed to hurt himself a couple of times and work was not happening as much as we really wanted.)

It's the Sketchmobile!!
The outside
The scary ceiling.
Aaaaaaand the back.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

One of our many views in Churchill

Then after dinner and short bit of free time we got a chance to listen to Caroline, who is a Dene elder speak about her culture and life. She also brought along all kinds of different beaded works and things made of caribou. It’s really cool they use EVERYTHING from the caribou to make stuff.  It is amazing how the Dene use every part of the caribou, from the sinew to the hide.  Nothing is wasted.  We had fun trying on mittens and playing a game that involves pieces of bone and hide on a string attached to another piece of bone. I got the hang of it on the second try! Although others were not as successful *cough*Larissa*cough*hehe. Although Troy found a way to fail but still make it look “stellar”, to quote the man himself.


 Success! for Harry
 Troy shows us how it's done


And now we find ourselves at the end of another fascinating, swaggerific day in Churchill.  We will finish off by listing the many lessons we learned today. 

Lesson #1- When sitting in the back seat of the Sketchmobile, wear a helmet!
Lesson #2- Labrador tea is poisonous, no matter what Harry says. (Troy)
Lesson #3 – When you have TWO FREE HOURS don’t learn the words to a song about  narwhals  (no good can come from this!!!)
Lesson #4- 5 pin bowling was invented in Toronto by a guy from Guelph.
Lesson #5- Peat moss can hold up to 20times its dry weight  in water!!!


These were so soft.
check out my mitts.

This was Andrewand Shaughna signing off from Churchill Manitoba!  


Sunday, August 7, 2011

Day Six in Land of the Polar Bears

We were up late last night
To see the lights
That dance throughout the town.


We then shut our eyes
Until sunny skies
Woke and brought us down.

We all went to class
And then alas
We went to see the lake.

We ventured afloat
In a rubber boat
With whales in our wake.
We set off by foot
On tundra and soot
With photos along the way.



We continued our romp
Surrounding the swamp
Which made for an interesting day.

Four hours past
We were at the fort at last
And they had something to share!

All white and plump
|From the nose to the rump
We had seen our first bear!



From there we venture
Back to the centre
For dinner and homework hooray!

This was Harry and Emma
And this post was our day!

Saturday, August 6, 2011

Museums, Forts and Whales (Oh my!).

We woke up to a much nicer day this morning. The sun was shining, even though it was still chilly to us northerners we ran out in shorts and t-shirts. Our travels started with a trip into town to the Eskimo Museum where we enjoyed authentic Inuit art as well as some fluffy stuffed animals.
An example of Inuit sculptures, animals are a big theme in thier art
A big fluffy cuddle buddy. (a stuffed polar bear)

Harry, after a very long night. (More Inuit sculpture) 

An arctic wolf.

An arctic fox.
 After our visit to the Eskimo Museum, we hopped onto the ferry to visit Fort Prince of Wales. The fort was set up by the Hudson Bay Company in 1731. The fort was held for many years before the second governor Samuel Hearne, who had large pet beaver living with him in his office, surrendered the fort to the French. The French disabled the fort’s cannons and destroyed the fragile parts of the fort, leaving only the large stone walls. As we ascended to the top floor of the fort, we had a magnificent view of the Hudson Bay where it met the Churchill River. From here we could see a preview of what the ferry ride back would allow us to experience, a bunch of belugas surfacing.
The Far Northers with the Fort Prince of Wales in the background.

The Fort Prince of Wales.
On our ride back to Churchill, we crossed the river via ferry, where we saw an incredible number of beluga whales. The number of whales we saw was incredible. There were tons of whales. We saw pods of 7 or 8 whales at a time circling and descending under our boat, surfacing very often. We were lucky to hear the whale songs from a microphone on the ferry. On our way to the shore, we saw what seemed like an army of hundreds of belugas of all ages and sizes around the boat. The babies were a tan-beige colour, while the cubs were grey and the adults were a bright white. We even saw a seal or two.
A few pictures of our Beluga adventures.




Sitting on the Ferry, having fun spotting whales.

After returning to the center, we had a lesson on GPS navigation. Using this knowledge, we went out to an open patch of tundra, where we had a GPS scavenger hunt. After fending off the swarms of mosquitoes, our first real encounter with the mass of bugs in Churchill, getting wet in the tundra bog, and finding clues we found using GPS co-ordinates, we raced to decipher a coded message. Liam was the first to successfully decode the message, shortly followed by the football team of Emma, Greg and Shawna. In the end we were all winners and won a prize of a thousand mosquito bites and one lollipop each.
After a long day of adventure we all headed back to the center, to get ready for another big day.
Signed Eric and Larissa.