~ sea-ville ~

Showing posts with label charlottesville. Show all posts
Showing posts with label charlottesville. Show all posts

16 May 2007

home again home again

somewhere around midnight, I was home. Leland & Joe were at the airport to meet me (bearing Diet Coke, Snapple, and salt bagels). I am forever indebted. More tears.



It was dark -- obviously -- driving home, but there are a few new buildings around, as Charlottesville continues to creep north, and the shadows felt different. Just more leaf-i-ness in the trees, I imagine. When I left, it was the middle of winter.

Elsa was very happy to see me. Lots of jumping and licking, tail-wagging and butt-shaking. It was a worthy welcome home. Casey didn’t come out of hiding until after Leland & Joe left, but he was there immediately after. He’s not purring at me yet, but he also doesn’t seem too pissed off. I missed my critters.

I was up until after 2 a.m., doing I don’t know what. Mostly starting things without finishing them: looking some through the piles of mail, unpacking some, wandering around the house some (Ashley re-arranged). Watching a little tv. Feeling kind of in a daze.

This morning, I woke up as soon as the sun came up. On the ship, we had room darkening shades because there are lights on the deck. I’ve gotten used to absolute pitch dark. I walked Elsa and took a few photos of my real-life to complete the map. My house & my mountains. A bit too hazy for a good view, but very green all around. 100 days later and welcome to spring.

and my puppy-love:

When we were in Himeji Castle in Japan, I was shooting photos of the view from window to window. At some point, I started to whimper to Robin that I wanted a view. I hadn’t even finished my sentence when I realized what I was saying and she already had this quizzical look on her face. I *do* have a view. I have a beautiful, clear view of the Blue Ridge Mountains from my front porch. I live in one of the prettiest places in America. My real-life is pretty darn impressive, when you get right down to it. It’s just going to take me a little while to settle back in.

Today was Target and Harris Teeter and Panera ... walking the footprints of my real-life. I have a few days of decompression before I return to work on Monday.

I had thought about ending this blog with a list of frequently asked questions, just as I had begun. What was your favorite port? What food did you like best? What did you buy? What’s it like working in a tiny little library? What will you miss most? Is it hard being around all those students all the time? Would you do it again? But, I don’t really have sound-bite answers to any of those questions. They are all swirling continuously in my head. All the ports were interesting in different ways. Malaysia was the most surprising. I had no expectations and loved Malaysia. China was emotionally overwhelming. Tiananmen Square got to me in a way I never would have guessed. Vietnam, I assumed would get to me, and indeed it did. Even the neon. Japan is beautiful and the orderliness made me feel so calm and at peace. South Africa was exquisite in every way -- even the sadness, so close to the surface -- and India was mind-numbing equally in every way. I have particular days that stand out: the day Robin & I took the cable car to the top of Table Mountain in Cape Town, the day Mary & Michael & I went to Hiroshima, the day Phoebe & David & Robin & I went shopping in Ho Chi Minh City and Robin & I negotiated the crazy traffic with Lois & Mark on the walk back to the ship. Pretty much any day that involved the Archbishop will be emblazoned in my mind forever. The birthday party for Erika, our workstudy student, who told us ours was the first "work-card" she ever received. There will be lots of other memories that will come to the fore as I’m sure others will fade away. I learned a lot about myself on this trip and a lot about the kind of work I like to do. I enjoyed my little library, but I’m over any illusions of working in a small, specialized library. And I am reminded that a public service desk is not my very favorite place to be. But, I loved working with the faculty. I loved being able to support them directly and find creative ways to meet their needs. I loved trying to find ways to make the library not-so-hard for the students to use, even as the technological situation made this oh-so difficult. I got to actually *do* cataloging again! I enjoyed working with the workstudy students, even when they didn’t do the things we asked. On the last day, Ericka thanked me for teaching her to be a librarian. I loved that. Would I do it again? I’d go the other direction around the world. Losing all the sleep was really hard. The other direction is definitely the better deal in that regard. But, either way you go, it’s a pretty darn cool experience going ‘round the world on a ship at twenty miles per hour. How does this compare to an immersion program? I spent my junior year in Spain, traveling also, but basically living in one place for the year. In Sevilla, that was my home. I felt like I lived there (I *did* live there) and by the end, it felt like *my* city. Here, at the ports, we were tourists. But what stood out here -- and what is largely overlooked in an immersion program -- is the connections between the countries of the world. This trip definitely makes the world smaller. As we went from place to place, we learned how and why people and culture and art and religion migrated around the globe. The world became smaller. And, somehow, with that, hope seems more possible and peace seems more possible. Human connection seems more possible. During his talk the morning of the Virginia Tech massacre, the Archbishop said (heavily paraphrasing) that you can’t have peace without humanity and you can’t have humanity without people and you must turn towards each other rather than away. I learned that in a big way this voyage. I made good friends and my world got smaller. So, yes, I recommend that you all -- if you get the opportunity -- go around the world at 20 miles per hour with a lot of really smart faculty and staff and insanely energetic students. And a Nobel Peace Laureate, for good measure. It was hard and it was exhausting and it was emotional beyond description or belief. But it was a blast.

28 January 2007

words of wisdom

I'm mostly packed & my house is mostly clean & I feel mostly under control. My flight is 9:30 tomorrow morning to Fort Lauderdale.

some words of advice:

Annette says: don't miss the boat.
Paul says: don't fall in.
Toni says: eat everything, even if it's looking at you.
some words of astonishment:
Pat says: This has got to be one of the most exciting things I've ever heard of.
and some words of friendship:
Jane says: I hope you stay well and see everything in the world before you ... sea, sky, and new places and people ... Old Sea Captains wrote logs ... new Sea Librarians write blogs ...
Tim says: You are truly the coolest....I will be watching...
Ann says: I'm starting the count-down for your trip, but when I am rational I realize it won't be any different because we talk by e-mail anyway. How odd is the world??
Mrs. D. says: Bon Voyage Ma Cher and seize every precious moment and hug it to your heart.
I promise to do my best ... next post from the ship ...

26 January 2007

goodbye to me

today is my last day of work & my staff threw an amazing party for me.

This is Annette (left), who will be interim Department Head while I am away (there was a grass skirt which is difficult to get the full effect of here), and Ewa (right), whose daughter -- Kamila -- has promised to send me Girl Scout Cookies at sea!



This is the most amazing cake ever -- the MV Explorer!



Other staff & party photos:







And this is the first & very last photo of me that will be on this blog!



Annette also provided a great selection of travel quotes:

There is no moment of delight in any pilgrimage like the beginning of it.
-- Charles Dudley Warner

They change their climate, not their soul, who rush across the sea.
--Horace

If you look like your passport picture you're too ill to travel.
--Will Kommen

Most travel is best of all in the anticipation or the remembering; the reality has more to do with losing your luggage.
--Regina Nadelson

Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.
--Mark Twain

Travel is more than the seeing of sights; it is a change that goes on, deep and permanent, in the ideas of living.
--Miriam Beard

Being in a ship is like being in a jail, with the chance of being drowned.
-- Samuel Johnson

When preparing to travel, lay out all your clothes and all your money. Then take half the clothes and twice the money.
-- Susan Heller
Thanx to my staff for being so incredibly supportive & for throwing me the greatest party ever.

25 January 2007

sherri's blog

Sherri Barnes will be my librarian-in-crime this voyage. She is the Humanities Collection Coordinator at UC Santa Barbara. We serve together on the ACRL Women’s Studies Section & so we know each other a little.

Read her blog @ http://sojournerlibrarian.blogspot.com/
(or linked at left)

Sherri is well known for her project: Black American Feminisms: A Multidisciplinary Bibliography, so check that out as well @ http://www.library.ucsb.edu/subjects/blackfeminism/

And, if you are interested in the ACRL Women’s Studies Section, we'll happily take the opportunity to plug that also @ http://www.libr.org/wss/

23 January 2007

grandma lock

Deb's mother died last week. Mrs. Lock was always very good to Ilisa & me, always remembering us for birthdays and such. When I lived in Spain, she wrote me extensively. It was always a little surprising & odd & lovely & entertaining -- all at the same time -- to get mail from her. When she used nicknames, rather than given names, she would put them in quotes: Your Dad and "Debbie" came out to Indiana … "Patty" and Mark took Zane to see the Christmas lights ... I never really figured that out. As I've been planning for this voyage, I've been thinking a lot about living in Spain and all the traveling I did in Europe that year. No one, of course, writes actual letters anymore -- not that letter-writing is convenient when you are at sea -- but I do hope that you will email me. And may those emails be surprising & odd & lovely & entertaining, all at the very same time. Much love to "Debbie" and "Patty," to "Skip" and to "Rick".

22 January 2007

gotvoice?

Here's something to know about: http://www.gotvoice.com/

You can get your voicemail messages delivered to your email account. For free. It saves them as .mp3 files. You can download them, set them to shuffle on your iPod, have them forever or forward them to other people. Or just receive them as email if, like me, you'll be in places with no cell phone access but where you will have email.

The Internet is an amazing & wondrous thing ...

Thanks much to Mary & Kelly (fall 2006 voyage) for this tip!

18 January 2007

for shipboard & maritime operations

UVA Library has been acquiring new digital content right & left. On my to-do list before I leave has been downloading records & getting a handle of what's where to pass on to Janis. One of those databases is Referex Engineering from Elsevier, where I happened upon this title:

Seamanship techniques : for shipboard & maritime operations / D.J. House. (2004)

Contents: The ship -- Anchor work (fundamentals) -- Ropework -- Wirework and rigging -- Lifting gear -- Cargo and hatchwork -- Boatwork and life saving appliances -- Survival craft and practice -- Communications -- Watchkeeping duties -- Marine instruments monitoring and measurement -- Meteorology -- Preventing collisions at sea -- Emergencies -- Fire-fighting -- Search and rescue operations -- Ship-handling - equipment -- Ship-handling - manoeuvring and mooring operations -- Tanker operations -- The application of MARPOL and the prevention of pollution.

Looks like I've got some reading to do ...

16 January 2007

missing ALA

Let me start by saying that I’m VERY excited about going to sea. I can’t wait. But, I’m also sad to be missing ALA Midwinter. Folks here are getting read to leave for Seattle. I love the ALA energy and this is the first conference I’ve missed in several years. Here are some of the things I would be doing in Seattle this weekend if I were going:

  • ALCTS Forum: The Future of Cataloging and Basic Values
  • The Next Evolution in OPAC's and Search Engines (MARS Hot Topics)
  • Managed Discussion of Issues Related to Metadata Creation and Management (Networked Resources and Metadata Interest Group)
  • MARC21: Going Strong, or So Long? (MARC Formats Interest Group)
  • How Catalogers and System Developers Work Creatively with Metadata (Cataloging Norms Discussion Group)
  • Training for Implementation of the New CONSER Standard Record (Continuing Resources Cataloging Committee)
  • Whither Women's Studies?: Feminism, (Inter)Disciplinarity, and the Future (ACRLWomen’s Studies Section)
  • Resource Description and Access (RDA) Update Forum & the Committee on Cataloging: Description & Access (CC:DA)
  • Name Authority and Name Disambiguation Challenges (Cataloging & Classification Research Discussion Group)
  • The Simple Knowledge Organization System (SKOS): Bringing Vocabularies to the Web (LITA Standards Interest Group)
  • MARBI: RDA/ONIX Framework for Resource Categories; RDA/MARC report; Recording the linking ISSN (ISSN-L)
  • Evaluation of Libraries External Operations for Sharing Bibliographic Records & An Operational Model for Metadata Management (Catalog Management Discussion Group)
  • OCLC Connexion Users Group & OCLC eSerials Holdings
  • ALA Metadata Get-Together

Of course, all the good sessions always conflict with each other anyway …

And then there would have been seeing Bob, who I miss a lot & who could have shown me all around Seattle, which I’ve never been to before.

And what has turned into a lovely biannual tradition: dinner with Evelyn (my Director at SJU), Elliot (President & Director of the Free Library of Philadelphia), and Lisa (Deputy College Librarian and Information Literacy Librarian at Franklin & Marshall).

And running into lots of other colleagues, Pennsylvania-folks, former-UVA-folks, visits with Geac & ex-Geac friends, Lester, Bill, Jackie, Mel, Phil, Allison (Phil & Allison must have a baby now? pregnant as she was at Annual in New Orleans in June).

I hope you all have fun in Seattle without me.

08 January 2007

planning

I’ve learned a number of interesting things along the way that thought I’d share in case you ever need to know:

  • You can die from the Yellow Fever vaccine. The vaccine is a live virus & you should absolutely get it if you absolutely need it, but you should absolutely not get it if you don’t absolutely need it. (I got it.)

  • You shouldn’t get pregnant in any malaria-infested areas.

  • The typhoid vaccine is available in pill-form. Who knew you could get vaccines as pills?

  • University Human Resources can get you a “vacation override” for prescriptions if you need more than 90 days. The UHR healthcare ombudspeople are GREAT. Something you very well might need to know some day.

  • The UVA Travel Clinic folks are also great. UVA has a travel clinic that can answer all your burning questions & give you all your vaccines. Make your appointment well in advance. They are only open Tuesday afternoons.

  • We have some very helpful people at UVA.

  • Safaris are very expensive and very hard to choose among.

  • Melarone (for malaria) is very expensive. But it doesn’t make you delirious or give you nightmares or cause yeast infections, like other options. I’m willing to pay.

  • Visas are very expensive.

  • Getting many prescriptions for more than 90-days all at one time is very expensive.

  • The UVA travel clinic is very expensive.

  • Just when you decide to take advantage of a wonderful, fabulous opportunity, cool things happen at work while you are away: Google-planning, faceted-browsing research, Deanna Marcum & Lorcan Dempsey both get scheduled to come to UVA. Oh well. Not that I’m complaining. I guess there has to be a downside.

  • Blogging is very fun. And deciding on templates & colors & layouts is absurdly addictive. Especially when you are moderately obsessive-compulsive about such things to begin with.

  • It’s not easy to improve the Internet access on the ship. It’s not just about throwing more money at the problem (although money certainly would help some). Different satellites are different. Cruise ships can take advantage of an individual satellite’s technology because they are going round & round in a single area of the world, often interacting with only a single satellite. But, our ship is going round the whole world, so it’s basically lowest common denominator amongst all the technology. (Z39.50, anyone? … libraries know all about lowest common denominator …)

  • The University offers employees (for free) Medex Plus, “a comprehensive program providing you with 24/7 emergency medical assistance -- including emergency evacuation and repatriation -- and other travel assistance services when you are 100 or more miles away from home.” Medex -- in case you need to know -- does not cover expenses arising from: “mountaineering or rock climbing necessitating the use of guides or ropes, spelunking, skydiving, parachuting, ballooning, hang gliding, deep sea diving utilizing hard helmet with air hose attachment, racing of any kind other than on foot, bungee jumping, operating a vehicle when not properly licensed, or participating in professional sports unless otherwise agreed to in writing.” Good thing I read the fine print.

  • If you spill a full glass of water on your laptop, it’s not a lost cause. Take out the battery and the hard drive and turn it upside down to let the water drain out. I am proof. I am typing …

03 January 2007

frequently asked questions

How long is the voyage?

100 days + orientation/training:
January 29th – I board with the Administrative Team in Ft. Lauderdale
January 31st – Faculty/Staff board in Nassau
February 4th – Students board in Nassau & we set sail
May 14th – Ship returns to San Diego
May 15th – I return to C-Ville
How many people are on the boat?
About 750. That number includes students, faculty and staff, “life-long learners” (adult passengers/continuing ed.), and officers & crew.
Is it called a boat?
Nope, it’s a ship and we’re going on a voyage, not a cruise.
Where’s Mauritius?
Southwest of India – see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mauritius. It’s an island.
Is the library really in the casino/bar?
Yup.



(Photo courtesy of Barbie, our summer voyage librarian & the first one of us to go)
Do you really have to crawl under the bar to get behind the circulation desk?
Yup.



(that’s Barbie)
Although some librarians have reported jumping over the bar instead.
Why don’t they just fix the bar to make a passageway or install a hinge-thing?
Because the Institute for Shipboard Education, who runs the program, doesn’t own the ship. They don’t like making alterations to the ship.
Is there a laundromat?
No, laundry is not self-serve. There is a service that you pay for. $5/bag.
How about housekeeping?
Yes, there is housekeeping, it’s like a hotel.
What’s the weather where you are going?
According to http://worldclimate.org average temperatures are:

nassau, bahamas ..... february ..... 69
san juan, puerto rico ..... february ..... 82
salvador, brazil ..... february ..... 79.5
cape town, south africa ..... march ..... 68
port louis, mauritius ..... march ..... 84
chennai, india ..... march ..... 91
penang, malaysia ..... april ..... 81
ho chi min city, vietnam ..... april ..... 83
hong kong ..... april ..... 71
beijing, china ..... april ..... 56
qindao, china ..... april ..... 50.9
kobe, japan ..... april ..... 58.1
honolulu, hawaii ..... may ..... 77

The ship is described as cold & dry.
Who’s taking care of your animals?
I have a great dog/cat/housesitter (Ashley) who my animals love & who has stayed with them many times before. I will, however, miss them very very much.
Who’s going to do your job?
One of my staff will become interim department head (Annette) and she will be fabulous & wonderful.
What does your staff think?
My staff (and my boss!) have been amazing & supportive and several of them also hope to go on this adventure. I very much hope they will also have the opportunity.
Do you really get your normal UVA salary?
Yes.
How did you get picked?
I responded to a call for volunteers. Quickly.
How much time do you spend in port?
Roughly 5-6 days in each location, though Hawaii for example, is just one day. About 55% of the trip is spent at sea & 45% in port.
How long does it take to cross the ocean?
Salvador, Brazil to Cape Town, South Africa is 9 days.
Kobe, Japan to Honolulu, Hawaii is 8 days.
Do you get seasick?
No, I'm usually ok. I went to Alaska a couple of years ago on a cruise & I was fine. And I've been on a number of other boats from time to time. They say sea-sickness is hard to avoid when the waters are rough, though, so we'll find out!
Do you have a roommate?

No, faculty & staff don’t have roommates (unless families are traveling together). Otherwise, only students have roommates.
Are you the only librarian?
No, the fall & spring voyages have an assistant librarian. Sherri Barnes is the assistant this voyage. She is the Humanities Collection Coordinator at UC Santa Barbara. Sherri & I serve together on the ACRL Women’s Studies Section & so we know each other a little. She is known for her project: Black American Feminisms: A Multidisciplinary Bibliography @ http://www.library.ucsb.edu/subjects/blackfeminism/ I’m looking forward to working with her! We’ll additionally have 5 or 6 workstudy students.
How many volumes does the library have?
About 9,000.
What’s in the collection?
The collection is largely an eclectic mix of titles requested over the years for course reserves. The classes taught aren’t necessarily the same from voyage to voyage. There are also ready-reference materials, travel guides, DVDs (both recreational & documentaries), and maps. UVA will focus on collection development as the voyages proceed. We are also providing access to the entire suite of electronic resources available through the UVA Library.
What are the working hours?
The library is open 0800-2300 all the days that the ship is at sea and is closed when the ship is at port. On previous voyages, one librarian has often worked 0800-1600 & the other 1600-2300, though there are also other models. Sherri & I haven’t figured that out yet. (You’ll notice I’m practicing my 24-hour time …)
How’s the Internet access?
Not good. It’s satellite & has been described as slow-dialup & is often unavailable when the seas are rough or when you are at port & the satellite signal is blocked by a larger ship.
Are you worried about Internet withdrawal?
Yes. Very very very much so. Though I have slow-dialup at my home in rural Virginia, so I’m hoping that’s some preparation … stay tuned …
Are you ready to go?
NO! ... but, I imagine I will be by January 29th. Wish me luck.

01 January 2007

happy new year

Today is New Year’s Day and so it seems a good day to start a blog. This is my first official post as I get ready to go to sea. I will be the University of Virginia Librarian for Semester at Sea, spring 2007. I am the third UVA librarian to head off on this voyage.

I first want to thank everyone who helped me think up creative blog names. For those of you who don’t live in the #1 city in the country, you need to know that we go by C-Ville (or CVille or C’Ville, punctuate as you like). Sea-Ville, therefore, seems all too appropriate for a blog name as UVA undertakes this still very-new adventure. Other names in the running included:

Luna Sea (already taken)
Water Log (already taken)
Seas the Day (already taken)
I-sea-a-librarian
LibrarianOverboard
ESS, oh ESS!
Around the world in 100 days
(or, cataloger joke: Around the world in 1XX days)
Sea-also
Sea-reality
SeaQuestered
Finding Stalberg
Sea-span
Fishy Pokey, which even came with a song:

Put your left fin in, take your left fin out
You do the fishy pokey and you turn yourself around that's what it’s all about
Put your right gill in, take your right gill out …
Or, quite amusing, but much too long to type:
LibrarianAtColloadialSuspensionOfSaltMicrofaunaAndFloraAlsoKnownAsSea

Aren’t you glad I chose sea-ville instead?

Anyways, we sail February 4th. I leave C-Ville on January 29th.
Bookmark this space!