Sunday, January 31, 2010
Quick update
Did an amazing boat trip today sailing between the icebergs. I have some short movies so you will get a sense of what it is like here. So, more about that tomorrow.
Finished teaching yesterday, today was a rest day, and most of the students played pretty hard last night and I think spent most of the day sleeping...at least they have not been very visible :-)
So, more tomorrow if/when I get a reliable high speed internet connection.
Can`t wait to get home.
Cheers
Geoff
Saturday, January 30, 2010
Day 4 Teaching
Friday, January 29
End of my fourth day of teaching. Spent a couple of hours after class meeting individually with students talking about their research proposals. It was great to hear from each student their hopes and dreams for their research whether it was big or small. However, given the size of the Greenland population (a little more than 56,000 people) many of the proposed projects if successfully implemented will have national impact.
Staying in a very nice hotel isolated from the outside world, it is easy to forget that I am in fact, in the middle of nowhere. Of course, I have been in similarly isolated places in the Australian outback, but never surrounded by enormous icebergs. I have included a few more photos today to remind you of the view outside of my room (where these photos were taken). It is breathtaking. I am hoping to go dog sledging (not sledding) on Sunday and get to an outlook close to the mouth of the ice flow. Those photos should be really spectacular.
There is a full moon tonight, and I have been warned that the dogs will likely howl (I have included a photo of the dog team living outside my room). So I have my earplugs and noise machine ready J
The food continues to be very good and every meal has fish of some kind on offer—much better than taking the Omega 3 fish oil pills! I met one other English speaker yesterday—a person from Hawaii who is working on the CREDE project based in Hawaii—now that’s a long journey and a very different climate.
Tomorrow (Saturday) is my last teaching day. There are no flights out until Monday, so all of the students have a day in the town to shop and visit. I have been looking at other routings to Greenland. It is possible in the summer time to catch a direct flight from Seattle to Iceland on Iceland Air, but there are only two flights a week from Iceland to Greenland, so I don’t think that is going to work for the June trip.
I am really ready to be home. This has been a long trip!
Cheers
Geoff
PS Not sure the photos uploaded--the wireless is really slow.
Thursday, January 28, 2010
Smoked Whale and Muskox
Who said global warming isn’t real? It has been above freezing today and raining—the locals are convinced that global warming is real, and where there used to be sea ice, there is now sea. They told me to sell my ocean front property in Australia because within 10 years it will be ocean bottom property! They may have a point.
Fascinating class today. Working with students for whom English is a third or fourth language is a challenge for all involved, but we have established the norm that when students are talking to each other they will use whatever language they want. For most of the students they choose Greenlandic as they are Greenlandic. The two Danish born students speak Danish even though they understand Greenlandic. The students who are proficient in English have taken to walking to wherever I am in the classroom and providing an interpretation—without being asked—very nice.
No photos today—didn’t leave the hotel and the weather wasn’t conducive to photography.
Food continues to be good. Last night was veal. We are served one glass of wine with dinner, after that you are on your own—beer is about $13/glass and wine about $15 a glass. A bottle of beer from the mini bar is $9—might be the most expensive alcohol I have seen anywhere in the world.
Breakfast has been a selection of meat and cheese, but cereal, bacon, sausage, and hard boiled eggs are also on offer. Lunch has been some kind of soup (today it was a curry vegetable and some kind of meat), fish, pasta, cheeses, pate…unfortunately, no exercise room…so I will be back in training when I get home next week!
In the evenings the students tend to drink coffee and visit for a while and then head to their rooms quite early to watch the news, read, etc. So, the nights have been early. The hotel only has one channel and it is in Greenlandic…so, no TV watching. There is a pay per view movie channel, but English isn’t offered. So, I guess blogging isn’t a bad idea—gives me something to do J
I have been invited to go to a fitness center after dinner tonight…so will maybe have a comparative fitness center story to report tomorrow.
OK, wireless is down, so thought I would update dinner. New taste sensation tonight for dinner. Appetizer = smoke whale. Dinner = Muskox. The whale was pretty good. Only problem was that I kept picturing that I was eating Whillie from “Free Whillie”. The muskox was a little…rare. The locals recommended it be eaten “medium” which is how I ordered it, but it was definitely rare—I am sure it made a sound when I cut it with the knife J
Now I’m off to the fitness…and will try not to mix the whale and muskox all over the fitness center!
Cheers
Geoff
Thursday, January 28
Sorry for the irregular blogs…internet is spotty…especially the wireless. Which, by the way is the reason I have no photos attached.
Visited the village fitness center in Ilulissat last night. Pretty much like fitness centers anywhere else in the world. Really a central meeting place in a small village like this with lots of kids and families exercising and playing soccer.
Pleased to report that I had no side effects to the whale and muskox J
I have settled in to a daily routine of teaching (1-5), dinner is at 6pm. After dinner most of the students drink coffee and talk, at 7:30pm they all go and watch “the news”—a 30 minute news program out of Denmark—then they disappear. They tell me they are “studying” but they will celebrate on Saturday night when the class is over. Breakfast is from 7-8am and the students go to class from 8-12—I head back to my room and read and write. And, lunch is served from noon to 1pm and we start all over again.
If you would like to see some information about Ilulissat and a short video about the UNESCO World Heritage site you could visit:
http://www.hotel-arctic.gl
If for some reason that doesn’t work, just google Hotel Arctic—it is the only one that will pop up!
Hopefully the wireless be up again soon and I can post some pictures and a video of the dogs howling outside my window for no apparent reason!
Cheers
Geoff
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Teaching Day 1
January 26, 2010
First day of teaching.
After a somewhat relaxing morning preparing for class (making copies of materials, getting together Vegemite on bread and butter—heh, it’s Australia Day!), and working out how to drive a state-of-the-art classroom (really, it is amazing, all touch screen technology) it was time to have my first class with the 17 students.
It would be an understatement to say that this is a learning experience for the students, and me. There are many cultural differences (apart from the language) that make this a very challenging environment. The students move back and forth between Greenlandic, Danish, and English but we have established a norm that individuals will speak in whichever language they are most comfortable in, but that someone will translate a summary for me. There is some tension between the two Danish students and the rest of the group. This became evident today in an exchange around appropriate choice of language. As one Greenlandic student pointed out quite emotionally, “We have waited many years (nearly 300) for the right to speak Greenlandic!” I am learning that in an era of self-rule, the native Greenlanders are ready to keep colonialism back to the 20th century. The irony in some the discussion was discovered after dinner when somebody pointed out that the only two teachers working in settlement schools (for example, a k-10 school of 19 children) were the two Danish-born teachers. Interesting stuff.
I have not been outside since arriving yesterday…no time and too cold…oh, and I have developed a cold just to make things a little more challenging J Here are a few photos:
1. The classroom: a beautiful high-tech environment. We break after two hours and have cake and coffee.
2. The view out of the classroom window—spectacular!
3. A view of the sun: this is as high above the horizon as it got. I think that there is officially 3 hours from sunrise to sunset…but I think they are exaggerating!
After today’s class I met with a group of three students to talk about the class and what they would like to get from the remaining classes. They are very concerned about their research proposals and academic writing, so I will start to build time in every day to focus on these topics.
So, time to sleep and try to ignore the dogs outside my window!
Cheers
Geoff
Australia Day above the Arctic Circle!
January 26, 2010
Australia Day! That’s right—the celebration of the arrival of the first fleet in Australia in 1788—and here I am 200 miles above the Arctic Circle! Kind of amazing to think about really.
After a quiet weekend in Nuuk that included a reindeer fondue meal at the home of one of my hosts, it was time to pack up and head north. The weather in Nuuk on Sunday was dreadful, so I chose not to leave the hotel…just worked on my classes and watched DVDs.
Monday at noon I flew from Nuuk to Kangerlussuaq and then connected to the flight to Ilulissat. It was amazing to fly in over the ice and to see amazing icebergs. The photos in this blog are taken out of my hotel room window. Talk about a room with a vieI guess I should also mention that these photos were taken around 10am. There will be some light here for just a few hours, but if it brightens up I hope to get some more photos.
I met most of my students last night and was pleasantly surprised that many of them had some English language capacity. However, I also found myself facilitating an after dinner meeting where the students wanted to talk about how the classes would be conducted. Turns out that they are very unhappy about not having time to discuss issues and that they do not want to sit passively through long lectures: sounds like we will be a good match for each other.
I also met my teaching partner Dr. Anton Hoem for the University of Oslow (Emeritus). It was a brief meeting, and I suspect that Anton and I will do our own thing. He will teach from 8-12 and I will teach from 1-5.
Did I mention that there are a lot of dogs in Ilulissat? There are reportedly 4,500 people and 6,000 dogs. I woke up in the middle of the night to the sound of dogs howling—not quite a full moon—but enough to get the hounds excited. This morning I can see that a dog team lives about 50 yards from the hotel. I have been told that all of the dogs north of the Arctic Circle are sledge dogs and that they are bred specifically for the purpose of dog sledging. In fact, dogs from the south are not allowed in this area for fear of cross-breeding and weakening the working dogs.
I will blog again after my first class today.
Cheers
Geoff
Saturday, January 23, 2010
Saturday in Nuuk
Greetings from Greenland: Saturday
Cheers
Geoff
Friday, January 22, 2010
Greenland Day 2
Thursday, January 21, 2010
Nuuk at last
G’day from Greenland!
Well, it feels like I have been traveling for two days—which I guess is correct. I left Medford at 6am Tuesday, January 19 and arrived in Kangerlussuaq at 11am (Greenland time, 6am Medford time)) on Thursday, January 21 (exactly 48 hours)! Crikey—makes travel to my hometown of Perth, Western Australia look easy—usually only takes about 30 hours J Unfortunately, my flight to Nuuk from Kangerlussuaq was delayed a couple of hours due to “technical difficulties” but finally arrived around 1:30pm.
After the initial shock of having to leave Medford at 6am instead of 11am, everything has gone very well. The flight from SFO to Frankfurt (10 hours) was pleasant as I was able to sleep for 7 hours (thanks to my friend Ambien). Frankfurt to Copenhagen was a short one hour flight and amazingly my bag arrived at the same time as me. I was lucky to be staying in the Copenhagen Airport Hilton located directly across the street from baggage claim.
Wednesday’s challenge was to stay awake after a 2pm arrival. I accomplished this by spending some time with my friend “ellipse trainer,” a call home, and a drawn out meal at the hotel’s overpriced buffet. But by 9pm it was lights out until 6am Thursday in order to navigate Copenhagen’s airport and amazing duty free shops. You name it, they have it.
I was met at the airport by Aviaja Egede, my contact at Innerisavik and the person responsible for getting me to Greenland to take over from Frank. Aviaja has scheduled meetings at the university for Friday, and then a “cultural tour” of Nuuk on Saturday.
My home for the next four nights is the Hotel Hans Egede—it’s not the Copenhagen Hilton, but it will be fine—although I’m not sure how I will survive without a workout room. I guess one exercises in Nuuk by shuffling around on the snow and ice J.
I’ve added a couple of photos to today’s posting taken on the way in to Nuuk. Really is spectacular.
More tomorrow after I meet with folks at the university.
Cheers
Geoff