Saturday, September 16, 2006

September musings

I spent the proverbial 40 days doing piglet post-mortems, rectal swabbing and Salmonella isolating and can now safely say that anyone who waves anything to do with piglets at me for the next few months is going to get punched.



In all seriousness, I learnt a lot both from my own escapades, and from watching the masters at work - all the PM room staff are excellent at what they do, and work to a standard I can only dream of attaining.

Now have to spend two weeks in PM-less Belfast and get everything organised for another year at vet school - I've waterproofs, books, notepads, stethoscopes and thermometers to buy - pets of the world beware!!!!

This year's our first clinical year - we actually start learning how to be vets. Which fun because it's going to be more interesting than what we've been doing, but is also kinda scary, because we've less than two years to become semi-competent!

Monday, September 11, 2006

The week after the week before

Withdrawal easing, although I did PM the chicken I was having for dinner tonight.

Think this habit is going to take a while to break.

Sunday, September 10, 2006

Spoke too soon...

Spoke too soon, and had to go up to the vet school this morning and hand in three library books that were pretending to be doorstops.

But I’m home now – so anything else that’s lurking about my flat in Glasgow can stay there until October!

Friday, September 08, 2006

Day 40

Finally finished my summer project today - the report is finished and handed in, all library books are back in the library and I have all my personal belongings (except the wandering lab coat).

Had an excellent afternoon, after the stress of the week! Saw 6 cases being post-mortemed and got a nice trip out to Helenburgh this evening - being a student in Glasgow is great but it does get quite frustrating not seeing the countryside for months on end!
0900: Definitely have Salmonella, albeit stupid Salmonella that doesn’t realise it’s supposed to turn TSI agar black and not yellow. Ran the agglutination tests and proved it’s the same Group as the rest of the stuff I’ve isolated. Entered the results onto the computer and ran! Going to need to spend the rest of the day working to get more of my report written. The results and discussion are taking forever; thinking of things to write is getting harder and harder, and was never really a strong point of mine in the first place.

My motivation for getting it finished tonight is that then tomorrow I’ll be free and be able to spend all day in the PM room – I’ve been missing my daily dose of butchering over the last week!

0100: Got to keep working!

0400: Got the CG-diagrams done and pictures cut, resized and inserted in the correct places. Now just have to pull the Discussion section together.

0500: Finally! I have a complete draft of the report, so relieved. Now to try and get some sleep…

Wednesday, September 06, 2006

Day 38

0810: *yawn*

0900: Bacteriology early again – stuck bacterial colonies from the agar into urea broth. Hopefully I’ll have some results by later this afternoon.

1700: Back to Bacteriology – and we have some Salmonella. Possibly. Stuck the positives into TSI and put them back in the incubator to see what happens.

1900: Argh! For spending most of last night awake, I didn’t get very far with the report – just started typing in some sections. I foresee more very late nights.Trying to find supervisor today to go over some more of the report was quite difficult as he has so many things on at the moment. I finally managed to hunt him down, with the help of nice PM room staff, late this afternoon. He gave me a copy of the farm records that the farmer finally got round to sending him this morning – going to have to integrate these into my own results and see what happens!

0200: Took hours tonight trying to reconcile my results with the farm records – in some cases the figures I have are so different from the farm’s that I wondered at times if I was looking at the right spreadsheet. In many cases, piglets have suddenly appeared, as if by miracle, and where before there were maybe 10 born alive, now there were 12. In other cases piglets disappeared, and one sow, complete with her litter of piglets, disappeared completely after I looked at her. So I spent a considerable amount of time tonight – over three hours – trying to bring the two sets of results together. I really can’t see why there’s such a difference. I know my figures are correct – when I open a bag, and see three dead piglets and a placenta, I know that that particular sow had three dead piglets. How, on the farm records, the same sow suddenly has two deaths is beyond my understanding, unless of course, the farm workers can perform miracles, and one of the dead piglets was resurrected from the skip at the PM room and magically transferred back to the farm…

Apart from that, I got a fair amount done. Have something written in the Results and Discussion sections now, so at least tomorrow I have something to work with. Whether or not it’ll make sense when read by someone who’s fully conscious remains to be seen.

Tuesday, September 05, 2006

Stupid writeups

1400: Went to Bacteriology early this morning to inoculate the broth from yesterday onto agar – today’s were slightly quicker than last weeks as I only had 26 samples and not 31!

1700: Managed to find supervisor at several points during the day, then ran home early to buckle down and concentrate.

1712: Concentration waning.

1720: Very bored and taking a dinner break.

2200: Too much to do and not enough hours in the day! Help!

0200: Bed looking very inviting. Must not give in to temptation.

0400: Not actually tired any more, but I think if I want to function tomorrow I should probably go to bed now…

Monday, September 04, 2006

Day 36

Last day of collection today. Arrive in to find two very heavy boxes awaiting me. Turns out, on the same day, one sow had an amazing 12 stillborn piglets (with 7 born alive – a staggering 19 in total) and another had 7 stillborn (with 10 born alive), both from the old house. Which completely changes the results! Argh!

By the time everyone had come to look at the 20 mortalities (before you say I can’t count, there was another piglet born dead in another litter), and had finished taking pictures, and I had opened up every piglet and recorded weights, pathology and category, it was almost lunch time. Typical.

Went off to the farm to obtain the last batch of salmonella samples at 2pm. Today we were looking at the weaner pigs housed on flat decks in one house, and a hospital pen in another house. I was a bit unsure at first as to whether the flat decks would hold my weight, but my supervisor assured me I wouldn’t fall into the slurry below. Thankfully, he was right. The pigs were very cute (think Babe in the movie of the same name) and it was hard to grab one and stick a swab you-know-where to get a sample, until one bit my foot. Then I had no qualms about it!

On the way back to the car we found another bag of material left out for me to look at. And I thought we were finished! We took it back to the vet school and I looked at it after I’d stuck all our samples into tetrathionate for the night.

Made sure to bring boxes and body bags away from the farm so I don’t have more stuff to look at later this week!

1800: Having trouble concentrating on project report.

1900: Stressed exam resit student come round to visit.

2200: Stressed exam resit student gone, and has left behind a stressed summer project student!