Monday, July 21, 2008

going out in Vienna

My last weekend was dedicated to clubbing, and in Vienna, it is quite easy. From the Finnish perspective drinks are cheap in bars and nightclubs, the public transport starts again before the clubs shut down and there are plenty of places to chooce from. My Friday consisted of a local wine tavern in Simmering with tradiotional "Austrian" live music, salsa club in the downtown and finally into side of Saturday morning flux club with indie rock night next to the danube canal. On Saturday after recovering for most of the day, I started in a "beach" bar by the Danube canal and stopped completely exhausted in Arena closeby Gasometer after 5 hours of fervent Drum & Base rhythms. Optionally, I could have gone to the Nuke festival in St Pölten which is some kilometers off from Vienna to listen Chemical Brothers and Lennie Kravitz. However, on Friday I was still not quite sure how my bruised toes are able to cope and I did not bother to persuade people to leave the city. Today I learned that I was not the only one of the YSSPrs to enjoy the ear shattering (I had the plugs and still my ears were ringing) beats on Saturday, but we had failed to coincidentally spot each other between the 3 different dance floors and few bars and food stalls.

What is difficult, though, is the adjusting of the daily (or should I write nightly) rhythm between work and clubbing. On Friday, people started to flow into the club only after 24, which is the time when I close my eyes during the week. Fortunately on Sunday I did not sleep to long and somehow managed to go to bed at 10.30 and drag myself out of there today at 7.10.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Bad Samaritan

It is nice to have good lectures from time to time and contrast to many interesting seminars here at IIASA, the one we had today was also entertaining. If you happen to see book called Bad Samaritan The Myth of Free Trade and Secret History of Capitalism I would recommend borrowing, buying, or if you are from a poor country pirat copying the book. The book is nicely titled and will surely attract plenty of conspiracy theorists, although the author Ha Joon Chang, refuses to take the arguement quite that far. Instead, it is nicely shown that at certain extensive periods, most of the "developed" nations have sheltered their industries from free trade and more often than not this had led to economic prosperity.

After such topics going back to my own work with crop categories, soil classes and field slopes is so boring...

Monday, July 14, 2008

Hochschwab in Styria


Another awesome hiking trip for the weekend. We took a train to Bruck an der Mur and a bus from there to Seeweisen where we started the hike from. Only four minutes between the bus and the train left me without food supplies and little water, so the advise for future hikers would be to take care of the supplies in advance (instead of say playing poker the previous night). Well fortunately my buddies Stef and Julia had food and we got water few hours later from a mountain spring. Also close to the top there is a restaurant and few more when you get closer down to the valley. The first hours went by without seeing people, but instead we met a mountain goat who took the incidence quite calmly. Should have guessed that they are used to people who started to trickle from the opposite direction when we had reached the top of the range. The weather forecast for the weekend was gloom and few times we were close to getting wet, but then the sky cleared again thanks to the heavy wind and we got even some sun shine. We reached the "hut" near Hochschwab top almost in time after about 5-6 hours of walking. The hut turned out to be a cross between restaurant and a hoster with modern interior design and prices which were as close to the sky as the restaurant. While having the coffee, we contemplated the chance that we would encounter Saskia who had taken a later train and as we declared that it would be unlikely to see her during the trip (without mobile network coverage), she walks in :)

Well we made it to the windy top an hour later and from there walked for 3-4 hours more for our potentially fully booked hut. We found it before dark, discovered that we would have beds and I had some very good dearstew, local snapsch and bier. Next morning (after night of listening to snoring) the weather was foggy and we took our time with the breakfast. We decided not to go for any more mountain tops, walked back towards civilisation, had a swim in the green lake and were utterly drenched by the thunderstorm just few minutes before reaching the restaurant close to the buss station. Thanks to Stef for arranging the hike!

Friday, July 11, 2008

ktm strada 3000


new nice fast and shiny

Wednesday, July 09, 2008

Sigur Ros

Just back from Sigur Ros gig close by Gasometer. For students living in Simmering this is really handy location. Unfortunately, the place seems to be more tuned to bands and the djs play somewhere else like Pyramid, which is quite a bit further away and hard to get away in the middle of the night. The gig itself was great, I can only wish it would have lasted a bit longer. Tickets were about 40 €, which I guess is quite close to what you pay elsewhere for Sigur Ros. Maybe they are consciously keeping their ticket prices high, who knows.