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Sean O'Brien, W. Alton Jones Foundation
Monday, 04 Oct 1999
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va.
People laugh when I tell them my job title is "circuit rider." It sounds funny, but I love it. How many people have a job title that is a pun, much less a job that requires the holder to have technical skills, an interest in promoting the health of our planet, and a willingness to travel extensively?
This is me conducting the first test of a full remote communications system in Bolivia.
Contrary to the standard model for Grist diaries, mine will not be an entirely sequential set of entries. I think that a straight week-long diary would either give the impression that I have the most amazing job in the world or the most mundane. My job requires extensive travel, both within the U.S. and abroad, but it also requires a desire to get into the hardware and software guts of computers, networks, and the Internet. Read on and you will see what I mean. First, excitement!
Eco Bolivia is largely responsible for the creation of the nearly 2 million-hectare Madidi National Park in the lowlands of Bolivia. The Bolivian government is contemplating building a dam at this site in the park, which would flood hundreds of thousands of hectares of primary lowland tropical rainforest and displace an unknown number of indigenous people.
This project required extensive research on the various methods of communication available from remote locations, and a trip to Bolivia to deliver the equipment and train the users. Fortunately, I have a background in tropical forest ecology, so I knew we were facing some technical difficulties not found in other regions, the most important being the persistent high temperatures and high humidity. In a tropical rain forest, fungi can actually grow inside the lens of a camera within a few weeks if the camera is not stored in a dry place.
Rosa MarĂa in her office. The windows are just screen, no glass; the walls are made of grass stalks that grow 20 to 30 feet high; the floor is made of split palm tree trunks; and the roof is thatched. It remains remarkably dry inside. Nevertheless, all the equipment is stored in sealed cases when not in use, and plastic sheeting is sometimes used to keep the user and equipment dry when it is raining.
One of the great things about working in the tropics is the critters. This giant yellow snail was presented to me with great delight by the Bolivians who knew we have nothing like this in the forests of Virginia.
Tomorrow I will write about a more typical sort of project for a circuit rider, establishing a local area network (LAN) with Internet connectivity (Web and email), file and printer sharing, and a backup system. Wednesday I will actually tell you what I do on Wednesday; it will be a non-travel day for me, so the everyday office tasks will be highlighted. I will also write a bit about circuit-riding models and point you to other circuit riders. Thursday we will head to Haida Gwaii (you'll have to read Thursday's entry to find out what and where that is). And Friday I will write about a what preliminary site visit or technical assessment might be like for a group looking for assistance from a circuit rider. Stay tuned. |
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