First things first, yes I did in fact construct a transformer costume, and yes it did win me 1st prize in the haloween costume contest (good for 75$ at Ye Olde Trading Post). I tried to make my entrance into the Arctic Club (aka the bar) as inconspicuous as possible, however, when you're wearing a costume which is over 6 feet by 4 feet, you tend to draw a bit of attention. Even moreso when your costume is a kick-ass decepticon!
As cool as I look as a robot, the serious applause and admiration came once I busted out my transformation (mind you, being a 2-day project I was only good for 1 transform....I was low on energon cubes!)
Needless to say, it was not the most mobile of costumes. In fact I spent about 12 hours building this pain in the ass costume only to transform once and take it off a mere 20 minutes later!Those of you more versed in the Transformers universe will realize that my costume is in fact, not a Constructicon, however, seeing as this week this costume was just one building project in addition to a portion of the stage I'm building for the Olympic Torch Relay in Alert happening Nov 8-9, as well as constructing a winterization cover for the Dual Optical Absorption Spectrometer (DOAS) telescope at the lab (about which you'll learn more in my next post), I figured I deserved the Constructicon title.
Other news, various television stations, including CTV have shown interest in Alert for the upcoming Olympic Torch Relay, with a successful telephone interview already being performed, and another unsuccessful live Satellite feed being (unsuccessful in the sense that Roel (my neighbour) was prepped for an interview, and shut down internet connections throughout the station to save bandwidth, only to be cut from the show due to a lack of time). The consensus is that more news coverage is definitely to follow.
Aside from that, the population is slowly dwindling as temporary staff is leaving and only the hard core darkness full-timers remain. Speaking of which, it is now officially the dark season, a little more difficult to deal with than the light season. Driving to the lab has become a much more accident prone task (not that I drive often, as I am more than comfortable having Graham, my co-op student track-truck it up daily). While I'm on that topic, Graham and I received a welcome present over boxtop, a nearly $100,000 Ford F-250 (after shipping), a brown truck which I named Brown Betty, after what I think is a line to a Kings of Leon song, but I may be mistaken.
Anyway, within a few minutes of getting that truck from Maintainance, the steering fluid line blew open on me, draining all of our fluid and leaving me with no option other than driving straight or stopping. Had this been a one time occurence I might not have even mentioned it to the powers that be in Toronto. However, after another blown line just after we arrived at the old Transmitter site before the lab, cause for concern was definitely there.
On the upside, it appears as though the truck is working fine now as we've been driving for a couple weeks without incident. Not only that, but we have been able to pick up radio stations on clear days from Germany, the Netherlands, Japan and Barrow Alaska (as far as we can tell). It's quite an amazing feeling to pick up an AM radio station playing the Beatles while in Alert!
Sidenotes: Amazing Race Alert was held earlier this month, with Team Myriam and Byron taking a disappointing 4th place of 7 teams.
Later this month the Alert Sports Challenge took place, with an even more disappointing outcome for myself. Not being able to hit a 3-point shot when you play as much basketball as I do is more than a little sad.
Also this month (possibly late September) was Canadian Idol Alert, with the fan favourite but not necessarily most talented vocalist, Olivier Beaudry, taking the crown.
Other than that it has been business as usual in Alert. Steak wednesdays and junkfood Fridays.
I will continue to anxiously await Rockband from the family back home as they take advantage of Canada Post's free shipping to military postings!
The next post will be a long one so brace for impact!
Byron
"use the matrix to light our darkest hour"
This is AWESOME!
ReplyDeleteWe'll be checking out the Olympic newscasts to see if we catch you!
Man it's hard to believe you've been up there 4 months already...
hey, you'll be able to track Santa Claus for Lucas-- how cool to be the uncle that close to the man in red!
love, moomah
You'll be inducted into the Costume Hall Of Fame when you get back to TO!
ReplyDeleteI think the One-Transform model is worth 2-days' work...blew us away!
We'll be watching for Alertians (hey, sounds like Martians) on the news re: the Olympic Torch..
Despite the population bust and the darkness, sounds like a blast up there!