In my over a decade stay in the USA, I have not visited the
Cold Spring Harbour Laboratories. Although there were a lot of very interesting
meetings took place there, the registration cost was a big deterrent. I decided
to attend the fall Genome Informatics Symposium starting 30th
October 2013 this year. Although the whole journey was rather unpleasant I will
not discuss that here. I will talk about my experiences of staying in
affordable places and travelling to long island from there and the science.
Internal
Transportation:
I booked a place in Bronx through the trusted AIRBNB web site.
I have had pleasant experiences before using their services. I stayed very
close to the Botanical Garden Bronx. Getting to the hosts place from JFK was
not an issue, only taxi fare was a bit higher. So, try avoiding taxis and
travel light is the first lesson. After I reached there first day I just slept,
did not know when I was sleeping and when getting up. Then one of friends
picked me up the next day to her house in Brooklyn. The best way to travel is
take a metro card for a week (If you are travelling a short term) . This friend
was staying in Avenue H and daily it was a train from Avenue H to 34th
Herald Square before taking another transit to Long Island Rail Roads.
How to go to Cold
Spring Harbor:
From anywhere in the city; the best way to go to cold spring
harbor is to take the Long Island Rail Road (LRR) to Syosset (Not cold spring
harbor). The final destination for this train is Huntington. This train starts
from Penn station, and goes via Jamaica. So whichever place is close to you
just take. Suppose I am coming from Brooklyn, then I will either get down at
Atlantic or 34th Herald Square. From Herald square I have to walk
one block towards 33rd street and 7th avenue (Herald
square is at34th and 6th avenue). There is Penn station. Upon exit
from Herald square you will find several boards telling which way is the penn station exit. Upon coming out also
there will be boards and direction to Penn station (This is opposite to Hotel
Pennsylvania). Then for going to cold spring harbor you have to take Long
Island Railway services. Your Metro card will not work.
Word of caution for
buying weekly LRR weekly pass:
Here one thing to
take care is if you are starting on Saturday then take a pass, otherwise travel
as a daily passenger. For instance I took a weekly pass that is around 88 USD
on Tuesday, but its validity was between saturday through Friday. So, in other
words, I paid for the travel I have not made. This is something you have to be
careful about since it is not written anywhere. If you take a train from Penn
station, it takes easily one hour to reach Syosset (Remember you are suppose to
go to Syosset – don’t go to the cold spring harbor station). Just get down the
stairs on the opposite end. This is where the cold spring harbor shuttle stops
and ferries people through the station and institute. It stops right at the
Grace auditorium where most of the meetings take place. I was attending the EBI
workshop that preceded the genome informatics meeting. It was taking place at
Blackford hall which is at the right hand side of the grace auditorium and easy
to find.
Going for EBI
workshop what to expect?
If you are going to attend the EBI/Ensembl workshop, they
will ask you to install the virtual machine which is a typical linux box
created on any operating system. A word of caution is to bring in an OK sort of
laptop. With my small laptop, I had terrible time doing anything. I am going to
write on how to create a virtual machine shortly (watch out my blog site).
The Meeting:
The meeting is itself very tiring. It starts at 9 AM and
ends at 9.30 PM. And they have these poster sessions in between. So, it may be
better to stay very close by. Even I was told that all other meetings are also
arranged that way.
The Science:
This meeting is all about algorithms and software for
genomics, so it is very appropriate for people who are in this field. Lots of tools
and algorithms are discussed here before they get into publication, so students
watch out for this. Met Allpaths assembler creators, ENCODE people and many
other familiar faces. Overall pretty good!
By the way I am live tweeting talks #genomeInformatics
wow u had a good experience i guess mam... getting inspired
ReplyDelete