Saturday, June 11, 2016

Telepathy, bike-paths, and confusions on Groote

Working in remote places requires a certain degree of patience, flexibility, ingenuity, and planning. Working closely with team-mates in remote locations makes all these qualities even more important. This is Groote Eylandt field work in a nut shell.

There's no doubt remote field work can be difficult. The idiosyncratic behaviours of others can quickly turn from a source of amusement to total frustration and bemusement. I mean - I really don't understand how the hell he can eat the same god damn breakfast everyday. What the f*** is wrong with him? But, we do our best to push aside any intolerances and work together for the common goal.

Chopper eating breakfast
But it's not all bad. There can be amazing benefits to the long, exhausting hours working closely with others. Communication can evolve.......into something almost telepathic.  It's like you're on another plane of consciousness - you understand what your team-mate is thinking before they even think it!! The nuance of their lip curl or subtle lift of their eyebrow are all that's needed to communicate a complex idea or emotion.

The latest trip to Groote Eylandt should be no exception to the telepathic communication of remote field work in a group. After all, Chopper (a.k.a. Andrew Hunter) is a key man in the team. He's a man of eloquence, temperance, empathy, humour and good ol' fashioned manliness. He's a provider, a homemaker, a nappy changer. He has it all. So it was a real surprise then that I received an email from Gwendolyn suggesting otherwise........

Gwendolyn sent me a figure that she feels best describes the relationship between the time taken to understand an explanation by Chop versus the effort required by Chop to explain. See figure below......... It seems to show that those two working closest together (Chop and Gwen) are having the most difficulty with the communication of complex ideas and concepts.



The relationship between the time until people understand a concept versus Chopper's explanation effort this is required. Robbie, Skye and Gwendolyn's data points are provided.

It's not easy to speculate as to the root cause of this pattern. After all, Chopper's legendary explanation about the dangers of bike paths in St Lucia have changed policy and bike-path design. Is Gwendolyn unusual in her ability to not understand Chopper or is it that Robbie and Chop just share a special telepathic communication that defies explanation. Let's explore the possible explanations together......


Chopper explaining the complexities of
bike path design
Possible explanations for the pattern observed above (not mutually exclusive) - feel free to suggest others I can add in:
1. Gwendolyn represents the norm of society and Chopper is just an incomprehensible blood-nut.
2. Robbie just understands the muffled garbles of a lunatic.
3. Every analogy used by Chopper somehow relates to the bike paths of St Lucia.
4. Skye represents the norm and the tails of the distribution are given by Robbie and Gwen.
5. Gwendolyn is too busy dreaming about tigers to listen to Chopper.
6. Gwendolyn believes (incorrectly) that if she stops moving and listening that he will move away and talk to someone else.
7. ?

Wednesday, June 8, 2016

Dogs, Dereks & Decks – a Lesson in Remote Data Collection

Andrew and Gwendolyn are off and running. Traffic lights are green, and the project looking at how dust affects the health of the Anindilyakwa people on Groote Eylandt is underway. We have done three trips since late 2015, spending most of March, May and June on our island paradise – a welcoming breath from the hustle of Briz-Vegas. Us chumps have been on and off Groote for the past 4 years, so we settled into the pace of island life seamlessly.
Settling in to Groote Eylandt life at Little Jagged

Serena, Carol, Judy, and Gwen visiting Bickerton Island

All the community organisations have been a great help, and with their advice and keen support we met many awesome people across the Groote Eylandt Archipelago and Numbulwar. Much of these trips were spent chatting with the local Angurugu and Umbakumba mobs about the project with the help of a trusty bilingual video, ad-hoc liaisons and a box of fresh bananas from the Angurugu Market Garden (cheers Dave!). A special mention goes to Groote Eylandt Linguistics, who have been invaluable to this project, even joining us on missions to Bickerton Island. One of the biggest lessons we learned is that some of the best opportunities happen through being in the right place at the right time…. and a pinch of luck

For example, a quick 5-minute chat about a community BBQ turned into a 2.5 hour guest spot on the Umbakumba radio station with DJ_Percy. We discussed our project and managed to intertwine quoll-sexcapades with smooth Bob Marley beats. Sunset BBQs under the tamarind tree, volunteering on ghost-net boat patrols with the Land & Sea Rangers and loitering outside supermarkets were just a few random ways that led to some interesting chats and project break-throughs. Worth a mention is when we tested our basketball skills against the zippy local kids – a humbling experience where we left with our soft city feet blistered and pride dented after being dusted in the final seconds of overtime.



Collecting rogue ghost-nets with the Land & Sea Rangers





Chopper recruiting help for the BBQ 


From Groote, a 20 min jump in a 6-seater plane finds you in the closest mainland community - Numbulwar. Conveniently, our long-lost UQ soccer club stalwart, Selena Uibo aka the current Labour Rep for East Arnhem, was living in Numbulwar and was the perfect host. Across a couple of trips, we saw Robbie take a few dives on the Numbulwar soccer court, met a bunch of smiling locals and we were invited to the public viewing of the men’s ceremony – an incredible experience to witness the pure joy and pride in the local culture (thank you Selena and Junga!).



Robbie fooling Chopper with his body swerve before slotting
home a goal for the good guys



Selena, Andrew and Gwen at Numbulwar Jetty

After a lengthy period of serious face-time in the communities, the snowball was gathering speed – data collection had successfully begun! In libraries, community gardens, backyards, on beachside decks and occasionally in air-conditioned bliss – wherever we were invited, we went forth in the name of Anindilykwa health.

However, living in sweaty paradise was not all about work. The UQ team, including the quoll contingent, brought home the bronze medal from the Games on the Green – a fundraiser for local sport. Andrew spent every spare second out on fishing jaunts, painting his fishing lures with glittery nail polish and fantasising about his next honking fish. Gwen and her ultimate doggy-friend, Buddy, spent most afternoons walking the bush outskirts of town getting stalked by resident crocs. Skye has been working her volunteers, Pip and Sarah, to the state of exhaustion similar to that experienced by male quolls at the end of breeding (minus the satisfying ending). When Skye wasn’t head-deep in quollness she limbered up with majestic yoga moves beachside at sunset (unknowingly putting on a show for the miners having after-work beers). The weekends brought us all together for some explorative camping, reading relaxation and vigilant prairie-dog-style swimming.


Pip, Andrew, Skye and Gwen receiving the Bronze at
the Games on the Green.


Chopper and his beloved Queenfish


We left Groote mid-June knowing our return was imminent in a couple of months, and with a few more key lessons learned:
1. Despite a perfect record of fixing the problem, opening the driver’s side door whilst fiddling with the sun-visor actually has nothing to do with helping a temperamental starter motor tick over.
2. The Bohnanza card game is Amazebeans.
3. To effectively communicate with other humans, articulating context in random one-liner-outbursts is crucial – never assume others can read your thoughts in the 20 minutes of silence preceding said outbursts……Andrew.
4. Whilst camp dogs ain’t always the prettiest, they have a cheery disposition and happy tail that won’t quit.
5. In small communities, there is nothing surer than running into Chatty-Cathies and Doomsday-Dereks.
6. “The Wire” is in the top 5 TV shows…. ever. In the immortal words of Senator Clayton Davis

Andrew and his new camp dog companion