Last week I attended the 5th Biologging Science Symposium in Strasbourg, France (Yes, France!! All thanks to student travel awards from the OSU Mastin Travel Award, the Hatfield Student Organization, and the conference itself).

Pretend this is me in front of my poster at the conference instead of a giant wine  barrel.
Of course being in France, all posters were hung on huge barrels of wine! (Sadly, not actually…)

OSU had quite the showing. Almost all the PI’s from the Marine Mammal Institute were there, plus Dr. Rob Suryan from Hatfield’s Seabird Oceanography Lab, and Shea Steingass and I as student presenters. I presented a poster on my master’s research, and the poster sessions (all 4 of them!) were super productive. I was able to meet people from the Marine Mammal Commission who were interested in my work and suggested some research grants I could apply for to conduct future field work. I got feedback from my collaborator David (the raccoons in chimney guy) on my analysis and got to hang out at his exhibitor booth like a cool kid. And I got to talk with leading dive physiology researchers from Scripps Institute of Oceanograpy about how to use my tag to study specific physiological responses to extended deep dives. I think my favorite part was meeting Dr. Gerald “Jerry” Kooyman, the inventor of time-depth recorders, and hearing him say he thought my research was awesome.

Biologging is all about putting tags on animals and studying their behavior, whether it’s large-scale migrations, fine scale flight, foraging kinematics, or vocal production and communication. There were countless interesting research presentations and I was able to make some great new connections, but all week something felt like it was missing. Acoustics!! This was my first major conference that was not all acoustics, all the time, and I have to say there were moments sitting in a talk I found myself wishing for more dB’s. Don’t get me wrong, I am so thankful I was able to attend and I learned a ton. But to satisfy the acoustician in me, I recorded all over Strasbourg and now I’ll share with you the sounds of France! Or, at least a small subset recorded by your’s truly.

Free beer to anyone who makes the sounds into spectrograms and leaves them in the comments!

Siren and street sounds from outside my apartment window:

 

Inside the conference center during an oral presentation:

 

The tram that got us all over town:

 

Some performers at the open-air market:

 

The hum of a coffee break at the conference:

 

The bell’s of the Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Strasbourg:

 

 

 

 

 

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4 thoughts on “This is what France sounds like

  1. Hmm… this is quite the challenge. Standby for victory, if I can just find the time to do more than close my eyes and pretend that I”m drinking wine in France.

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