[Eril-l] ER&L advice

Deziel, Bryan G. bdeziel at anl.gov
Thu Feb 18 06:09:04 PST 2016


Last year, I asked a friend who used to live in Austin for some suggestions of things to do around Austin outside the conference – she replied with this – hope it is helpful:

http://365thingsaustin.com
That's an excellent website for things to do in Austin.

Here are a bunch of my picks:
Places to eat:
1. Trudy's or Doc's for a stuffed avocado on South Congress!
2. Torchy's tacos - try the fried avocado taco!!
3. Tarka (if you like Indian) - so good
4. Stubbs BBQ on Red River
5. Banger's sausage house and beer garden on Rainey Street
6. Hey Cupcake on South Congress
7. Home Slice Pizza on South Congress next to Hey Cupcake - so so good
8. The Oasis on Lake Travis - only ok food, but amazing view especially at sunset!! This is about a half hour out of the city, but worth it!
9. Flagship Whole Foods on Lamar - good for a quick snack or meal- the place is awesome and I recommend buying some strawberry good pops (local made in Atx)!!
9. Frank - on Congress downtown - Chicago style dogs - the sides are amazing
10. Gus's World Famous Fried Chicken - fried chicken and pecan pie.. yum.. right downtown
11. Hopdoddy- their version of Kuma's for burgers- on South Congress

Places to go:
1. South Congress for shopping and eating
2. Sixth street and red river for at least one night (Pete's Dueling Piano Bar, make sure you look for the Library Bar because it's super neat!)
3. Rainey street for one night - although it's rapidly changing and losing its luster ☹
4. Zilker Park - if it's nice you can go down to the river and rent kayaks, canoes or paddle boards
5. Hamilton Pool - about 30 mins from downtown Austin but an amazing site to see!!! You have to go early because once the park fills up it's one car out, one car in (and you can swim in the pool!)
6. Barton Creek Greenbelt - awesome place to hike right in the city
7. Barton Springs Pool - go in the side near Zilker Park so you can see the kid's train, park and a lot of fun things to do near there
8. McKinney Falls State Park - this place is so cool and you can go for 1-2 hours - it's right by the airport- you can hike (looks like Mars and there are crazy craters in the water- hard to describe)- you can also jump off the cliffs there too
9. LBJ library - I love this place!
10. The University of Texas Campus is beautiful and you can get tickets to go up in the Tower for a great view of the city
11. Hope Outdoor Gallery - it's really just a giant graffiti wall on Baylor Street, but it's worth a trip… and be adventurous and climb up the side to the top of the thing… the left side is much easier to climb up than the right
12. Congress Bridge to see the bats - they fly out when the sun goes down- you can park in the back of the lot for the austin american statesmen if you need to- they allow people to park back there for the bats after hours
13. There's famous street art everywhere so depending on how adventurous you are, you can set out to find it!
14. Walk along the new boardwalk on Lady Bird Lake!

Cool music venues to check out:
1. Austin City Limits Moody Theater
2. Stubbs
3. Emos - parking is a pain
4. The Belmont
5. Mohawk

From: Eril-l [mailto:eril-l-bounces at lists.eril-l.org] On Behalf Of Beth Johns
Sent: Thursday, February 18, 2016 7:31 AM
To: Rajia C Tobia
Cc: eril-l at lists.eril-l.org
Subject: Re: [Eril-l] ER&L advice

I haven't eaten at Clay Pit or Ramen Tatsu-Ya -- and I've been going to ER&L for a long time!

Thanks for the suggestions!


________________________________
From: "Rajia C Tobia" <TOBIA at uthscsa.edu<mailto:TOBIA at uthscsa.edu>>
To: "Chris Le Beau" <lebeauc at umkc.edu<mailto:lebeauc at umkc.edu>>
Cc: eril-l at lists.eril-l.org<mailto:eril-l at lists.eril-l.org>
Sent: Wednesday, February 17, 2016 10:50:11 PM
Subject: Re: [Eril-l] ER&L advice

And eat at Ramen Tatsu-Ya, either south or north location.

Sent from my iPhone

On Feb 17, 2016, at 9:28 PM, Le Beau, Chris <lebeauc at umkc.edu<mailto:lebeauc at umkc.edu>> wrote:
Great list of must dos Sarah!

Chris LeBeau

From: Eril-l [mailto:eril-l-bounces at lists.eril-l.org] On Behalf Of Sarah Miller
Sent: Wednesday, February 17, 2016 2:56 PM
To: eril-l at lists.eril-l.org<mailto:eril-l at lists.eril-l.org>
Subject: Re: [Eril-l] ER&L advice

All of the things everyone else said AND

1. Make conference friends.
2. Hire a taxi and head down to South Congress.
3. Eat at Guero's Taco Bar.
4. Try on boots at Allens Boots.
5. Buy boots $$$.
Also, be sure to eat at The Clay Pit!
Miss all of your ER&L faces! I'll be back someday when I'm back in the office more often than I'm on a playground with my kids!

-Sarah

Sarah Miller
Reference Librarian
AOK Library & Gallery
University of Maryland Baltimore County

On Fri, Feb 12, 2016 at 5:38 PM, Platkowski, Melissa <platkowm at uwgb.edu<mailto:platkowm at uwgb.edu>> wrote:
I’ve never been to ER&L, either.  I’ve heard good things about it, though, so I’m sure it’ll be worthwhile.  I am actually a co-presenter with a few of my colleagues, but I’m not able to go to the conference.  (Miracles of modern technology!)  I have been to other conferences, though, large and small.

When I am preparing for a conference:
I watch for names I recognize in the presenter list, when that comes out.  I watch for people on the listserv talking about stuff that piques my interest, or that I might be able to contribute to their information gathering.  I write them all down, and why I want to talk to them.

Then I start e-mailing them a few weeks before the conference to find out if they are going, and if we could talk about (insert interesting stuff identified).  Then I make plans to meet up – during the opening reception (if there is one), breaks, maybe for dinner.  It’s easier to talk to someone if you’ve made contact before, and then they will be looking for you, too.  At a networking event, I helped our group find another group we wanted to talk to just by asking random people if they knew anyone from that consortium – sure enough, we found each other!

Also say hi to people you sit next to in sessions, at meals, at breaks.  Even if you’re shy – they are all there for the same reasons you are, so you already have stuff in common.  If they are shy, they will be relieved you initiated the conversation.  Think about dinner plans early in the day.  If you find yourself with a fun group of people, or one person you’ve enjoyed chatting with, ask what they’re doing for dinner.  They are very unlikely to turn you down, and if they already have plans with colleagues, they will invite you along.

Bring business cards if you have them.  I like to keep some handy in my conference badge necklace thing – also a great place to keep meal/event tickets if you have those.  If you get business cards from someone, write a keyword or two on the back so you know why you might want to talk to them again someday.

Also, for keeping track of what you learn – I got this from Jamie Matczak, (at the Nicolet Federated Library System here in Wisconsin) - a nice “quick-and-dirty” note form for conference sessions, and I use it in sessions with good ideas and practical applications.  It helps you focus on how you could use the information.

It has three questions on it:
What do you hope to gain from this event?
What are you going to bring back?
What can someone else use?

I am also a crazy woman when it comes to my schedule, and I make my own schedule spreadsheet.  I like to see all my top choices and 2nd choices in one place in front of me.  It’s totally nerdy and weird, but I find it helpful.  I put everything on it from leaving home to getting home, and everything in between – who I am meeting and where, meal times.  Check it against the program schedule, though, in case something got moved on you.

If you are an introvert, make sure you carve out a little downtime to not talk to anyone in the evening.  Bring a good book, watch trashy television, and recharge your batteries!  You will be VERY TIRED when it’s all over.  And yes, stay at the conference hotel.  It’s so nice to be able to nip up to your room for a breather or to get something you forgot during a break.

Also, pack a scarf or two – a lifesaver in a chilly room or after a coffee accident!

HAVE FUN!!!

Melissa Platkowski

Systems Librarian
David A. Cofrin Library
University of Wisconsin-Green Bay
2420 Nicolet Dr.
Green Bay, WI  54311-7001
P: (920) 465-2764<tel:%28920%29%20465-2764>
F: (920) 465-2136<tel:%28920%29%20465-2136>

platkowm at uwgb.edu<mailto:platkowm at uwgb.edu>

http://www.uwgb.edu/library

<image001.png><http://www.facebook.com/cofrinlibrary>  <image002.png><http://www.twitter.com/CofrinLibraryGB>

From: Eril-l [mailto:eril-l-bounces at lists.eril-l.org<mailto:eril-l-bounces at lists.eril-l.org>] On Behalf Of Tiffanie Wick
Sent: Friday, February 12, 2016 2:17 PM
To: eril-l at lists.eril-l.org<mailto:eril-l at lists.eril-l.org>
Subject: [Eril-l] ER&L advice

Hi, everyone.

Do you have any pointers for a first time attendee of ER&L?

Thank you,
Tiffanie


<image003.jpg>

Tiffanie Wick
Electronic Resources & Interlibrary Loan Librarian
Natural & Environmental Sciences Liaison
Western State Colorado University

970.943.2477<tel:970.943.2477>
western.edu<http://western.edu/>
twick at western.edu<mailto:twick at western.edu>

<image004.png><http://western.libcal.com/appointment/2639>


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