Outdoor lover. Lecturer and scientist at the University of Kent (and a bit of an engineer, as well!). Rower. Runner. Road cyclist. A bit of a geeky nerd, too. All opinions my own.
In my last post I was, oddly enough, not ranting about the cold while heading for my morning practice. Well, that was still in November! π
It is true that, so far, no snow has fallen in Kent (although the alternative is not very pretty, at the moment – I had a quick glimpse on WindGuru for Whitstable and it is definitely not great!), but last week we had a few freezing days, with everything covered in ice and the temperature dropping to -2 degrees C early in the morning.
Beautiful chilly morning @ Plucks Gutter, Kent. My trusty Galaxy S II still takes some nice shots!
It was absolutely great! It actually turned out to be one of the best rowing sessions of the year – the clear sky, the ridiculously flat river with no wind whatsoever (and the current was so faint we were struggling to find the direction to place the boat against π ), and just the fact that I witnessed the sun rising from my single, absolutely perfect! (the pogies I was trying out for the first time also helped… π )
Anyway, enough rowing talk, otherwise I will never finish! I think the most important thing happening in this last couple of weeks was my triumphant return (hehe) to Portugal for Xmas. It is true that I was only about 3 months away, but still it is nice to come home and enjoy the company of family and friends, not to mention great food!
The day I returned was a good example of that – I landed, after a combination of waking up at 4h45, driving 1h30 to the airport (best idea ever! So easy and stress-free…) and hopping on the plane a couple of hours later. Immediately after I was picked up and driven to my old university, where aΒ francesinha lunch awaited (courtesy of the UP SPIE Student Chapter!). There’s no better welcome present than a niceΒ francesinha,Β well watered up with a couple of beers (Super Bock, of course! π ).
This year the organisation put the runners’ names on their bib number – it was quite interesting to see everyone around us with their names hanging out! π
And this last Sunday I ran my 3rd SΓ£o Silvestre, which happened to be the 20th one. I managed to beat my previous time (45 min something…) by going down to 43:27, but honestly I know that I am able to go lower than this – my breathing failed me completely! (in retrospect, perhaps my initial goal of a sub-40min time was a bit overly ambitious… but that may feature in my New Year’s resolutions for 2014! π ). Anyway, my thanks to my friend Abel for pushing hard during the whole race, that first climb was quite nice! (a shame that I don’t have a GPS trace for it – I’m on the process of getting myself a running watch, but I’m still in the comparison phase!)
Right, enough for now. Unfortunately, I have about 50 reports to mark (so far, the first three I’ve seen weren’t that bad – am I going softer or is this batch of students better than last year’s? π ) and a few other things to do. If I don’t come around here soon, a merry Xmas and a happy 2014 for all of my dear readers (me, myself and I! π ).
Hello there, and welcome to my personal web page/blog!
My name is Manuel Marques, and Iβm a lecturer in the School of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Kent (United Kingdom). I am also a researcher in the Applied Optics Group at the same institution. My work lies mostly in the area of Applied Optics, namely white light interferometry and its two/three-dimensional variant, optical coherence tomography.
Outside work I'm a keen runner/sculler/rower/cyclist, and I do enjoy being in the outdoors (photographing them is a bonus, too!). Other hobbies include tinkering with things, both big and small (not always with a positive outcome, I must say), travelling, reading, in no specific order.