As the weather is getting warmer lots of the seeds I have planted have started to grow! As well as the onions I have spinach and peas.
The strawberries and potatoes are also doing well.
X-ray Insider
Friday 2 June 2017
Thursday 25 May 2017
Pot Sampling - Day Four
Today was the final day of sampling. We had 7 more pots to harvest. This meant more digging out of the little meshes and more washing of roots. The difference between these pots and the ones we harvested on day two because these barley plants do not grow root hairs. The inside of the pots look very similar because the root hairs are very tiny and you need a microscope to see them properly.
Laurie used a penetrometer to measure the strength of the soil in the pot. It's smaller than the one they used in the field.
This is the end of our work in Dundee and we celebrated by eating an ice cream. Tomorrow we head back to Southampton.
Monday 22 May 2017
Field Sampling - Day Three
It was the final day of field sampling today. A large group of us met up at one of the barley plots on a lovely sunny morning and split into small teams. Tim and Laurie used a penetrometer to measure how hard the soil was, Paul and Naveed took some more soil core samples, Nico and Glyn collected small soil samples with roots, which it was my job to coat with plaster of paris to protect them. This was a tricky job as the soil samples were very fragile and the plaster of paris dried very quickly.
The sampling started off well, although having spent so much time in the lab looking a idealised soil samples, we had forgotten that real soil in fields contains stones, which can make sampling challenging.
It was great to be outside in the sunshine, however, it began to rain. We all carried on with our task, but as my hands got cold the coatings of plaster of paris I was applying got messier!
After lunch the sun came out again. Nico and I moved to the second barley plot to collect samples from there. The soil in this plot was more crumbly that the first as it contained less clay. The soil samples were so fragile Nico couldn't even lift them from the soil without them collapsing. So we tried putting on the plaster of paris while they were still in the field. This was very tricky and was virtually impossible to do without disturbing the soil. In the end we gave up as we were damaging the sample too much while trying to preserve them.
Friday 19 May 2017
Field Sampling - Day Two
While I was washing out the roots, Nico and Naveed were in the field collecting soil cores. To do this the first thing they did was cut off the top of the plant they wanted to sample.
Then they positioned an auger containing an aluminium sampler over the top of the plant.
Next they used a large hammer to push the auger into the ground.
Finally, they removed the aluminium sampler from the auger and put a red lid on the top and the bottom to stop it moving around.
They did this many times all over the field and by the end of the day had collected lots of samples.
Pot Sampling - Day Two
Today we began collecting samples. We split into two groups. Some people collected samples from the large pots, others collected samples from the field. I was part of the pot sampling group.
First of all, we opened up one of the large pots. In this picture you can see the cylinder of soil that was inside and some of the roots of the plants. Nico is taking a small soil sample from different depths inside the pot.
This sample is then weighed. Once it has dried it will be weighed again so that we can work out how much water was in the soil when we opened it.
Here are all the glass jars that were prepared for collecting samples. As you can see there is a lot to do!
After these small soil core had been taken, we dug into the soil to remove small cylindrical meshes that had been put in there before the plants grew. This is so we could collect small samples of soil with roots in. Some of these will be x-rayed to see how the roots interact with the soil. Here are the mesh cylinders before they were filled with soil and one after it had been dug up.
The samples that were not being x-rayed were washed so the roots could be separated from the soil. This was my job. Here is the washing station. There is a hose attached to each tap. I emptied each of the mesh cylinders into a sieve and then used the hose to wash the soil away from the roots. I then put the roots in ethanol - a chemical that preserves the roots until they can be studied.
I'm not very experienced at this sort of thing and I had a big mistake - I let go of the hose while the tap was on. Water went everywhere including all over me! Here is a picture of me looking bedraggled!
Tim to do the same thing as me, except he had to do it for the rest of the soil in the pots, so he had big buckets of soil and roots to clean up.
In every experiment it is important to have a control. This is a sample that you don't do anything to. I our case this meant a pot with no plant in. In the control the soil looks really smooth.
It took all day to wash out all the root. But my favourite part was cleaning up at the end of the day because we had to get rid the soil that we had washed away. And what do you get if you mix soil and water? Lots of lovely sticky mud!
Thursday 18 May 2017
Field and Pot Sampling - Day One
Today, Nico and I travelled up from Southampton in England to Dundee in Scotland, a distance of 388 miles (624 kilometres)! We are going to stay for a week to help gather some sample from field and large pot experiments that Tim and Laurie at the James Hutton Institute have grown for us. When we arrived we were given a tour of the site and shown the plants.
Here are barley plants that have been grown in a large pot. This pot has been in the glasshouse, a giant green house, and has been water regularly. As you can see it is much bigger than the plants in the field. Tomorrow, we will get to work harvesting the samples that we need.
Here is a photo of the barley plants on the field. There hasn't been much rain in Dundee over the last few weeks, which is unusual, so the plants are quite small.
Here are barley plants that have been grown in a large pot. This pot has been in the glasshouse, a giant green house, and has been water regularly. As you can see it is much bigger than the plants in the field. Tomorrow, we will get to work harvesting the samples that we need.
Friday 12 May 2017
Onions!
The onion seed I planted have finally sprouted! Here they are growing next to the garlic.
I have also planted one in a pot and taken it into the university so that we can x-ray it. We will wait until it is a bit bigger before we start scanning it.
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