{"id":1213,"date":"2018-05-28T16:14:48","date_gmt":"2018-05-28T14:14:48","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/arctrain.de\/?p=1213"},"modified":"2018-11-08T10:57:46","modified_gmt":"2018-11-08T09:57:46","slug":"wind-waves-and-pies-an-arctrain-student-out-in-the-real-world","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/arctrain.de\/fr\/wind-waves-and-pies-an-arctrain-student-out-in-the-real-world\/","title":{"rendered":"Wind, waves and PIES \u2013 An ArcTrain student out in the real world"},"content":{"rendered":"
As you, dear reader, may have guessed already from previous posts, being an ArcTrain PhD student does not mean that you are only spending time in front of your computer or in the lab but it also means leaving your cozy and comfortable office and desk behind to enter the real world which you have been studying in theory for quite some time.<\/p>\n
Since I am working in the field of oceanography, going out into the real world means in my case spending a couple of weeks far away from everything else on a research vessel crossing the Atlantic Ocean. And as if being out there in the middle of nowhere on the Atlantic is not enough, my new home and office for these weeks is moving quite a lot (writing this I am trying to fix my chair with my legs somehow in front of the computer to avoid sliding back and forth through the entire room).<\/p>\n
Iceberg seen from the research vessel. (Credit: Hannah Nowitzki)<\/p><\/div>\n
Although I definitely don\u2019t like high waves (and I suppose after a couple of hours or even days of storm, high waves and strong ship movements even those of us who secretly wished for \u2018a little bit of storm and big waves\u2019 really had enough) it is very impressive to see how strongly dependent we are on the elements. And this is something you cannot experience by sitting in front of your desk in your office. Every single data point I have been working with suddenly becomes much more valuable after having seen how much trouble it is to retrieve it.<\/p>\n