Archive for the ‘Mid-town’ category

A Famous Ankles Halloween Skate

October 31, 2007

No matter how many times I tell myself to take my camera, I seem to ignore my own advice.  Today is Halloween, and in NYC that means the Greenwich Village Halloween Parade.  That’s one parade I really don’t plan to cover, but everybody keeps telling me I’m really missing something.  Maybe I am. Well, I’m actually sure I am, but I don’t know that I’m unhappy about missing such a bacchanal.

But, there was to be a parade in Tudor City.  I don’t think it was to be a real parade, but more along the lines of people going out in costumes and wandering the local streets.  In preparation for that, I decided that I needed to have my camera battery fully charged, so I put it in the recharger before I went to work.

And completely forgot that the company’s annual Halloween ice skating event at Rockefeller Center.  I’ve posted on that before and I really do enjoy skating there.  So, I went without camera.  So, no great ice skating shots from Famous Ankles, just some descriptions.

The rink isn’t large, but it certainly can accommodate a couple of dozen people at the same time.  What really happens is that the watchers outnumber the skaters by 3:1 or 4:1.  You’re always catching flash bulbs going off out of the corner of your eye, but it is often people on the ice taking the pictures, too.  This evening was a lot of fun.  One of my co-workers brought her sister and niece to the rink and, because neither of them skates well, let me take the young lady (10 or 12, I’d guess but I really don’t know) to go around it.  The kid had the gumption, but not the skillset at the time and it was more of a matter of letting her hug the rail the whole way around.

We did it about four times with each of the first three times becoming progressively better and better.  She did get to the point that she could “walk skate” ten or fifteen feet without the rail as her closest friend.  But by the fourth time she was exhausted and decided that the rail was the closest friend she had in the whole world and wouldn’t let go until nearing the very end. 

I’m happy to say that she never fell once under my tutelage.

As usual, the grandeur of the place is overwhelming.  You’re below ground level and the Rockefeller Center building just towers over the place in a way that’s beyond my ability to describe…well, beyond saying “overwhelming”.

-H

Bombs at the NYC Mexican Consulate

October 27, 2007

I took some time off and spent part of Friday wandering through the wilds of Chelsea (forthcoming posts) and decided to walk home from there.

I was walking on 39th Street toward Madison Avenue when I noticed that the crowd at the corner was a little odd.  They just were standing there.  No one crossed the street and I noted that they seemed overwhelmingly Hispanic.  My instincts said something was up and I looked across Madison and saw that there was police tape up blocking off 39th Street from eastward traffic.  I crossed and found another crowd (nothing huge by any means) and spotted a CBS cameraman doing some filming.  I took some quick photos, knowing something had happened/was going to happen.

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I noticed a double-line of yellow tape and noted that everything was pretty low-key.  As I was standing next to the cameraman, and he looked rather bored, I asked what was going on.  He said that there had been a bomb.  I said, “You mean a bomb threat?”  He answered, “No, a bomb.”

That’s a real wake-up call as you can probably imagine.  It turns out (well, it’s still ongoing) that someone early in the morning had thrown two gernades, or gernade-type devices, into the Mexican Consulate.  As this was nearly 11am, the event had been going on for hours with me blissfully unawares.

You could see the consulate from the block entry point.

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I knew nothing about when the bombing had occurred, so I was a little surprised that it was so sedate.  I waited around for a few minutes and captured some crowd shots.

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I then went over to 38th and cut over to Park Avenue and got there in time to see the NY CSI unit pulling away.

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When I saw that, I knew that it must have taken place a long time before.  So I wandered on home.

This sort of thing happened nearly two years ago at the British Consulate up in the 50s and Third Avenue.   Thankfully, it’s been minor stuff at night.

-H

5th Avenue at night

October 25, 2007

I was out one evening and took a few pictures along 5th Avenue (or is it “Fifth Avenue”, I never know when to use one or the other).

I was up about 50th and wandered around Rockefeller Center a bit.

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Just across the way is St. Patrick’s Catholic Church.  It is awesome in the evening.

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The front doors are also impressive.  Here’s a full shot of the door followed by a closeup of one of the panels.  (Each of the door’s panels is different.)

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The above panel is for St. Isaac Jogues, the first priest to come to Manhattan.  His journeys from Manhattan in the early 1600’s took him all the way to Lake Superior and he apparently even had some dealings with the Sioux tribe.  Amazing.  He was martyred after a long series of trials and tortures that he survived, even returning to Europe and then coming back to America, only to be killed by the Iroquois only a couple of hundred miles from New York City.

-H

The New New York Times Building

October 23, 2007

The New York Times has moved to its new digs on 8th Avenue.  Right across from the Port Authority Bus Terminal.  Not a ritzy neighborhood, but who am I to complain?  The new building is between 40th and 41st Street.

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The building is actually pretty big, but the Times only occupies part of it.

Oh, they have a “watcher”.

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Who watches them from under the overhang?  Who stands vigil on the Gray Lady?

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Yeah, that’s him.  Ralph Kramden:  bus driver, Raccoon Lodge treasurer, and dreamer (or so the plaque says).

This isn’t the first time that Ralph (aka Jackie Gleason) has show up in my wanderings.

-H

Bryant Park Ice Rink is Under Construction

October 22, 2007

On Saturday, I was walking near Bryant Park and noticed the ice rink is under construction.

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It’s a free rink generally filled with amatuers just having a good time.  I love going by there on occasion and seeing the extreme variation of skills.  (And rooting for the most inept to improve.  Really.)

There’s a good view for all, on and off the rink.

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Last year, I did go skating at Rockefeller Center.  This year…I’m going there again.

-H