Title: Howdy from Madison Post by: 77south on July 07, 2008, 08:29:27 AM 77south signing in from beautiful Madison WI. I am a proud owner of a an '06 Monster 620 dark. I picked it up about a week after I finished the MSF course last year when craigslist hooked me up with a one year old bike with 52 miles. Who buys a bike and puts on 52 miles in one year? Mods to date include Napoleon bar end mirrors. I know I need to work on that. This is my first bike so most of the extra cash since purchase has gone for gear.
The nickname refers to the year I spent working in McMurdo Station Antarctica. (at 77 degrees south latitude) Title: Re: Howdy from Madison Post by: Ducatiloo on July 07, 2008, 08:33:48 AM Welcome kudos to buying gear right away [thumbsup]
Title: Re: Howdy from Madison Post by: Kyna on July 07, 2008, 09:22:28 AM Welcome! Feel free to post up in COW (Cyclists of Wisconsin) and say hello. We have a few other members in the Madison area.
Title: Re: Howdy from Madison Post by: somegirl on July 07, 2008, 08:00:25 PM Welcome and congrats on the new bike and gear! [thumbsup] Hope you are having fun with it. [moto]
What kind of work did you do at the station? That sounds interesting. My aunt has been to Antarctica twice, I'd love to visit (if I don't freeze to death there). Title: Re: Howdy from Madison Post by: 77south on July 08, 2008, 07:31:34 AM Well, in the summer season (oct-feb) I was a computer repair technician, and in the winter (feb-oct) I was a communications tech, so I installed, expanded and repaired the fiber optic, ethernet, telephone and cable TV network cabling on station. (Can you tell I have written that on more than a few job applications and resumes?)
Title: Re: Howdy from Madison Post by: Ducatiloo on July 08, 2008, 08:04:06 AM Wow what an experience. I saw pics once of a guy that made a bike out of spare parts and put a Ducati logo on it. Did you ever see it?
Did you work with a research team? Title: Re: Howdy from Madison Post by: 77south on July 10, 2008, 10:53:43 AM I was actually a civilian contractor that first worked with Antarctic Support Associates and then with Raytheon Polar Services. ASA lost the support contract and RPSC picked it up while I was down there. Most of the time I actually worked on support personnel's equipment, researchers usually brought their own gear.
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