Archive for the ‘Manhattan’ category

Central Park’s Bethesda Fountain

October 2, 2007

If you’re in Central Park on any weekend with wonderful weather, prepare to run into the Brides!  If you’re at Bethesda Fountain and don’t see a Bride, you ain’t lookin’.

Okay, it’s a wild exaggeration but bridal couples, and often just the bride, can be seen actually dashing from one area in Central Park to another with one or more photographers and family to catch the light and the just-right background for a shot.  And there are few places more photogenic than the fountain.

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As you can see, a wonderful open area called, I believe, the Naval Terrace, leading to the Bethesda Fountain which is just a few yards from a nice lake.  Brides seem to love it.

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She may be too young to be a bride (maybe it’s a coming-out/debutante or whatever they call it) but it’s the same sort of idea.  Dress up to pose at your absolute best in front of one of NYC’s best spots.  The Fountain is in a low area and the climb out of the place is a bear…

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I’m sure she was having a great time.  She certainly was the center of attention of a whole lot of us for a few minutes.

Here’s another, somewhat tighter shot of the fountain.

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It is nice.

Oh, as I was heading out I saw a verifiable Bride and Groom in somewhat unusual regalia.  Here’s the front shot of them walking up toward me.

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I noticed the Bride had a gown that wasn’t standard garb…here’s the back shot….

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Angel wings.  Hey, it is her day so who can/would say anything about it?  Actually, the New Yorker in me loves that sort of individuality.  Good for her.

-H

Burmese Protest on East 39th Street

October 1, 2007

I should really carry my camera every time I leave the co-op.

I took the day off and actually spent most of my time working around the house…you know the drill.  I went out about twice today to pick up supplies, but this evening I decided to go out and grab some dinner and low and behold, I ran into a Burmese protest outside the Eastgate Tower building around 2nd Avenue.  The Foreign Minister of Myanmar (i.e., Burma) spoke today at the United Nations regarding the mass protests and killings that have been occurring there.

Well, the local Burmese population here is making itself heard right outside his living quarters tonight.  As I was walking nearby, I heard loud chanting and made a beeline toward it.  39th Street is pretty narrow and maybe 100 to 150 protestors were on one side of the street spilling onto one lane of the street and were loudly protesting.  They were led by a Burmese monk who must have leather lungs.  On the other side of the street were a contingent of police and security people lined up and looking pretty calm about it.  In fact, I didn’t get any sort of frisson of danger or anything.  It was loud, but polite.  That’s not to say there wasn’t anxiety.  I talked to two protestors and they both seemed more weary and afraid of what’s happening back in their homes.  One guy was particularly interesting.  He was pretty tired and sat down on a sort of stoop area next to a tree and started saying how he never, ever does this sort of thing; but he couldn’t avoid protesting this time.  He said that right now is the time that will make or break the hold over his homeland.

The Eastgate towers is pretty large, maybe 45 stories.  I doubt anybody knows if the Foreign Minister even has a view of the group, but I guarantee he’s aware of it.

In truth, there was nothing particularly special about the protest, but at least they weren’t being shot; unlike what’s happening in Burma.  The pictures wouldn’t have been especially interesting, but that’s how these sorts of things go.

Incidentally, all of the protestors were using the term “Burma”.  Good for them.

-H

Got Ogbono? The Nigerian Independence Parade

October 1, 2007

I was all set for what I thought would be a real downer of a parade.  I expected to almost revel in how minor an event it would be.  But the Nigerians ended up coming through with a pretty good parade.

Last year, I had accidently run into the parade on my way home from some wanderings and had been entranced/bemused by the display.  I had seen a series of flatbed trucks packed with people just bouncing to some loud music; most of them didn’t even have any banners on the flatbeds.  The parade moved incredibly slowly and I had done my grocery shopping at one point and when I came out, the parade had barely moved.

And I expected just about the same this year.  But that wasn’t to happen.  This year, I went out a little early for the parade and found myself a good spot around 47th.  The parade was on 2nd Avenue and the cops had blocked off about half of the street (lengthwise) and still let two lanes continue on.

The parade was to start at 1pm.  Well, that time came and went and all that I was seeing were me and the cops.  There was a flow of Nigerians (discernable from their green and white clothing) heading northward, where the parade was to begin.  A perverse part of me started to think that perhaps that was the parade…just an occasional group of one or two or five people on the sidewalk.  That would have been even more low-key than last year.

At 1:25pm, it was still just me and the cops.  Amazing.

 At 1:30, I started to hear some music in the distance and people started to line up at the barricades.  By 1:45, I’ve seen the beginning of the parade.  The parade started 54th Street, so it had taken them 45 minutes or so to get 6 blocks…if they had started on time.

Finally, they arrived.  This is the only Manhattan parade that I’ve been at the very beginning and not seen the cops on horses.  Nor were there any politicians; although that’s happened a number of times.  But they did have the other staple:  the dignitaries.

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Of course, I haven’t the slightest idea of who any of them are.  But this guy looked pretty impressive.

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It was interesting that a lot of the Nigerians were happy to pose for photos during the parade.  I have to admit I liked that a lot.  Usually, marchers are caught up in what they’re doing or talking with their friends or even talking on cell phones.

There were a number of different groups that came through.  None of them were slickly produced or had expensively created stuff.  Here are a couple of examples.

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 The parade had one marching band.  I don’t know if they had any direct connections to Nigeria as one of the members handed me a card when he saw me taking pictures.  The band is called the “Pan-American Marching Band of New York”.  Nevertheless, they were good and loud; and that counts for a lot in a marching band.

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But they did have some company that looked very Nigerian.

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The parade was reasonably long, but the highlight of the parade came with the MoneyGram float.  They were playing some loud recorded music and, during a pause in their slow progress, some of the float riders decided to dance.  It was great!

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 And I’d be remiss not to mention that the parade did have another standard item in the parade:  men in skirts.  Okay, these guys cheated by also wearing pants, but I think the streak of every parade having some men in some sort of skirt does continue.

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 There were a number of other floats and groups and the like.  But one of the more interesting items about the parade was, as usual, the crowd.

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As parade viewers go, this was a pretty diverse set of people.  But I think the key is that most of the Nigerians on Second Avenue during that perfect Saturday afternoon were actually in the street marching with their countrymen.

An aside:  just before the parade started, a woman had come by to find out what was going on.  I told her about the parade and how I had expected it to be a poorly executed and viewed parade based on what I had seen last year.  I think this caught her attention and she stuck around for most of the parade.  She’s with a well-known foreign policy thinktank (in a staff support role) and may simply have had a sympathetic reaction to such a pronouncement.  Instead, she got a pretty good parade and she was actually very supportive of the groups that were marching past.  (My apologies for leading you astray.)

And finally:  ogbono.  I dunno.  It was on a shirt that I saw.  Apparently ogbono is a type of nut that Nigerians use to make a variety of their staple foods.

-H

Belvedere Castle in Central Park

September 30, 2007

Whatever else it may be, Central Park is diverse and varied and just all over the place in terms of what’s there and what you can see at any one time.  When it was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux , they seem to take to the idea of it being impossible to see in one fell swoop.  There are areas that you can see a lot of the Park, but no place that you can see the whole.  About the best you can do is go to Belvedere Castle and get an elevated view.

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There are a number of ways to get there, but the primary means I’ve always done is by wandering through The Ramble and it kind of ends up there.  But, for me, the Ramble is something I do when I really want to do some twisty, curvey, wooded walking.  It’s really nice and I usually view Belvedere as my “reward” for having done the walk.  Once you get there, you can go up and take in that semi-aerial view.

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The body of water is called Turtle Lake and this time it was pretty well covered with some sort of pond scum.  I think it’s “duckweed”, but that’s a guess on my part.  Few ducks, but quite a few turtles.  The area in the distance is one of the many lawn areas that dot the Park.  Some are much grander (the Great Lawn and Sheep’s Meadow are two famous and wonderful ones).

The inside of Belvedere is a Park exhibit on the ecology of the area.  Mostly, though, what people do is go up this tiny circular stone stairway to the top to get the best view.  I don’t think I’ve ever done it without running into someone coming the other way and one of us has to back out ’cause it’s too small for two.

One of my more odd pleasures in doing the Ramble walk is seeing what’s right next to Belvedere Castle.  It takes a few pictures to capture it all, but I’m used to putting up too many pictures.

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It’s the official Central Park weather station.  I always get a kick out of it thinking it’s the source of all the “current weather” reports on NYC.  There are no signs and I’ve never seen anyone in there, but it’s definitely a weather station…or an alien communications station…nah, it’s a weather station.  It’s completely enclosed in a secure fenced-in area but I have my secrets for getting fence-free pictures.

-H

The Box in NYC

September 29, 2007

As much as I wander the streets of NYC and as much as I think I know the City…I know almost nothing.

Here’s a place just off Rivington Street in the Lower East Side (LES).  Whattaya think of it?

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There’s not even a sign.  I’m not sure which door the the real entrance (the address is 189 Chrystie Street so I presume it is the far door).  It’s “The Box”, a NYC hot-spot club that I walked by a bunch of times and kind of tut-tutted over the grafitti.  I had no idea.

It’s got a somewhat interesting website at www.theboxnyc.com that describes the place as a place for “fine dining and theater”.  But this really isn’t telling you anything about it.

I first heard about the place when I was at a juggling store called Dube (a future post, I imagine).  I do some juggling and was looking for some juggling balls for a little cousin.  I ran into a character whom I thought was an employee, but it turned out to be a performer by the name of Flambeaux  (note that some of his site has stuff that is…not G-rated) who works with fire as part of his show.  We got into a short but terrific conversation and he described working at The Box and how it looks terrible on the outside and magnificent on the inside.  I haven’t been inside, but his word on the outside is correct.

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The back of this place was on my previous posting on Freeman Alley.

Someday I’m gonna go in and see how it looks.  Of course, this is the sort of place that tends to keep my uncool sort out.  Not a real problem.  I just think of all the places that look like this when I wander the streets and wonder what they are like inside.  You never know.

-H