At the roller derby

Made it out to catch Charleston’s very own roller derby team, the Lowcountry Highrollers in a match against the Greenville Derby Dames this afternoon.

It was my first roller derby experience, and it didn’t disappoint. The action wasn’t quite as continuous as I expected, but was still fun to watch and pretty fast paced. Plenty of shoving and take-downs. Before the match started they did a slow speed demonstration to show the rules to the audience (very helpful for newbies like me). It still took me a little bit before I really figured out what was going on and what to watch for.

The crowd that showed up to watch was larger than I expected, which I suppose is a good thing. What’s up with all the little kids sporting mohawks though?

I picked a spot up front in what’s known as the “suicide seats”, named because apparently there’s a good chance you might end up with a roller derby girl wiping out or sliding into those seats and who ever is in them. No such luck this evening though.

The derby track

Roller derby track

Getting ready to start off a roundjam

Roller derby girls getting ready to start a jam

Zooming around the bend

Roller derby skater zooming around a corner

Score card girls

Two roller derby skaters holding up score cards

In the penalty box

Two roller derby skaters in the penalty box watching the match

Not quite sure why these guys were dressed like this.

Fans and spectators watching the roller derby match

The final score

Scoreboard showing the final score of 115 - 47 for the roller derby match

Post match congratulations

Roller derby skaters lined up to shake hands after the match

A Barkley Happy Tail

I always love hearing from the people that adopted dogs I fostered. This was sent in for a Happy Tail entry from the people that adopted Barkley earlier this year.

Imagine that after years, you’ve decided to expand your household pack to include a companion for your 9-year old Lab, Maggie. Given Maggie’s small size, you search the Lab rescues for another small one so as not to daunt Maggie. Having learned of Barkley, a 60-lb lab who was rescued from a shelter, the pack drives 8-hours to meet him at the Wild Heir South Carolina lab rescue.

You haven’t taken into consideration that he was 60-lbs when you learned about him, i.e. a few months prior when he was only 9-months old. You arrive to find a 75-lb giant of a Lab who leaps over couches in one bound. (“He’s not 60 pounds anymore…”) He puts his paws on your shoulders and looks you in the eyes. But Maggie, whom you feared would be quite displeased with a year-old clumsy brother, is delighted with him, and you can’t help but be either.

Barkley appears to have no qualms about leaving South Carolina with unfamiliar people and dog, in an unfamiliar SUV – leaping in the back (momentarily). He merely views the back seat as an exercise hurdle to get to the front. (“uhm, he’s in your seat.” ) You open the door, take him around to the back. By the time you’re back in the car, he’s back in the front. Repeat two more times.

He never appears confused or anxious about arriving in a new home. He paces the bed every night (“Did we get an insomniac?”) until you realize he just wants on the bed. After that, you – and Maggie – are pillows for him to lay across while he sleeps. When it comes to sleeping, he never applies “lay down” but rather falls across you from a standing position. He buries his nose in your neck for the entire night.

All dogs are friends, all squirrels are foes, and moles are to be to be carried carefully in one cheek. (“What’s in Barkley’s mouth?) Leashes and Maggie’s collar are edibles (“Why isn’t Maggie’s collar on? Why are her ID plates on the floor?”) His Nylabone and tennis balls are pacifiers. Water is for slobbering across the kitchen, requiring you to put a rug down. Maggie’s head is for drooling on. Vacuums are a terror, causing you to have to replace the Plexiglas door he broke through to escape one. (He wasn’t injured.) Couches are for you to sit on – with Barkley’s entire self on your lap. Maggie is his most beloved big sister and best friend whose side he won’t leave.

Maggie, now 10-years old, is a pup again. Post-breakfast is Labrador wrestlemania, as indicated by the joyous sounds of thunder throughout the house and by every rug accordionned against a wall. She loves an ambush – hiding under a desk or chair and leaping out at him with a playful “snap snap” of her ferocious fangs. Every play session begins with each giving each other nose licks, and then pandemonium ensues. She lets him chase her just long enough to gain momentum and turn on him – the chased becomes the chaser – and he seems as delighted as she. She has taught him that the first thing to do every morning is check the tomato plant for new green tomatoes, thus ensuring we never get to eat a ripe one.

Such is our life with our beloved rescue Lab, Barkley. If you rescue a Lab, you will be blessed to have the same love, affection, fun and frivolity as we do.

BarcampCHS website is live!

Thanks to Chrys, the BarcampCHS website is now live and ready to take your ideas for sessions, workshops and demos!

There are still a few small things to be added, but the important bits are ready to go.

What are you waiting for? Go sign up and add your sessions!

Searching for a PhD project

The Clemson Bioengineering department normally wants PhD students to come up with a proposal and do the qualifying exam within 18 months of starting. Since my plan is to do course work and research concurrently, I need to come up with something sooner than that.
I’ve been rolling around a few possible areas in my head and doing some literature searching to see what’s been done.

One obvious area, given our brand-new-state-of-the-art-only-3-in-the-US dual source CT scanner, is dual energy CT. There’s been some work doing tissue discrimination and characterization using dual energy CT, but not too much. I could also spend some time studying some of the dosimetry characteristics of doing dual energy CT.

Another area that I would like to explore is phase contrast imaging, although that generally requires a synchrotron source and fairly specialized detectors. Plus I’m not sure that would fit in with the Bioengineering group very well.

There’s another idea about CT dosimetry that has been rolling around in my brain for quite a while now, but it’s going to take a fair bit of work to flesh out properly and see how feasible it is. If I can take this concept, formalize it, test its validity and make it easy to implement, it could potentially change the way patient radiation doses are determined by the CT scanner.

That would be a lot to do for a PhD, but even if I only accomplished half of it, it would be a big thing.

Dragon*Con

Yes, I’ll be going to my very first con next weekend.

Going to be meeting up with a couple of friends from back home so it should be a fun time.

Woohoo!