A good day This is the first of two articles about what makes for a good day in science. If you have an insight or anecdote to share, please get in touch at careersbriefing@nature.com. Science can be a slog: tedious, repetitive and maddening. Good days — the first moments after a newly discovered insight, holding an undescribed species or a student overturning a long-held assumption — are few and far between. But it’s these singular moments that remind researchers why they chose their career. Nature ’s careers team asked scientists what a good day in science looked like to them. Some anecdotes came through social media; others, we sought out. Good science days come in all shapes and sizes — from finding a dreamy location for a natural experiment to setting schoolchildren’s curiosity ablaze. RAQUEL PEIXOTO: Finding the perfect test bed Coral-reef biologist at the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology in Thuwal, Saudi Arabia.…