Westminster Dog Show Part 3

Posted February 14, 2008 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Events, Mid-town

One of the problems being at the Garden during Westminster is that there is little announcing beyond the “main” announcer describing the dogs, so you really don’t know what is going on.  Each time the winners are chosen, the TV audience hears who it is and all, but we had to wait until a commercial to find out who won.  Well…depending on your knowledge of the dogs.  When I saw the beagle win, I didn’t know for sure which of the dogs it was.  Not that I don’t know beagles, but there are several variations plus foxhounds and the like.  For me, it’s only leglength that distinguished that particular dog type.  So we waited til the commercial, the beagle was announced, and a lady near me said that it was the favorite for winning the whole shebang (which it did the next night).

But, this post is about the Terriers.  I love that group.  Once again, they came into the arena from the left.  At least they came after a really long delay.  It must have been interview time on TV.

Airdale Terrier #7.

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American Staffordshire Terrier #9.

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Australian Terrier #11.

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Bedlington Terrier #8.

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Border Terrier #9.

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Bull Terrier (colored) #8.

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Bull Terrier (white) #9.

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Cairn Terrier #5.

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The Dandie Dinmont Terrier was announced and then, as fast as lightning, dropped.  I guess “AB” means “absent”.  I don’t know if anything showed up on TV about it.

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Fox Terrier (smooth) #5.

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Fox Terrier (white) #7.

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Glen of Imaal Terrier #10.

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Irish Terrier #8.

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Kerry Blue Terrier #5.

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Then it was time for a commercial break.

During the mid-group commercials, they would switch sides for judging.  The dogs that had been show were just milling around with their handlers behind their yellow boxes.  The group that was getting ready to show would come out onto the main carpet area apparently to get the dogs ready for the limelight.

As as they were on commercial, I’ll do the same and wait for the next post to finish up the Terriers.

-H

Westminster Dog Show Part 2

Posted February 13, 2008 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Events, Mid-town

So, the show was ready to begin.  The lights went down and the announcer said it was time to play the National Anthem.  And so they did, and the crowd, without prompting, sang it out.  Very cool.

From the left side of the arena, the Hound Group participants came out.  I’ve watched the show for perhaps 15 years on the USA Network.  The only announcer you ever hear in the Garden is the same “main” announcer’s voice.  You know, the one where he comments about the breed and how it’s a wonderful breed and everything.  (I have to admit I listen between the lines and when he says things like “This is a dog that knows what it wants” or something like that.  When I hear it, I can’t help but think about what he must be trying to really say but is too constrained.)

I really blew it on the Hound Group.  I couldn’t really figure out how I was going to handle the picture taking and missed the first few dogs.

One thing you really notice in person is how it is really designed for TV.  (Of course, aren’t all events like that?)  In this case, the picture below captures how they are showing one dog while the next dog is brought over and prepped.  The dog being prepped below is, I think, one of the foxhounds.  I didn’t get a good picture of the winning beagle till later.

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I finally did figure out how to keep track of the dogs.  Below is Norwegian Elkhound #16.

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Otterhound #12.  Being prepped is Petit Basset Griffon Vendeen #6.  (The PBGB was a crowd favorite, including me.)

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Pharouh Hound #8.

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Plott #11, with Rhodesian Ridgeback #6 being prepped.  The Plott was a brand new dog to the Show.

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Saluki #5 (the only decent picture I got of it).  This shows how I kept track (take a pictue of the name and then a picture of the dog).

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Scottish Deerhound #8.

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And the last dog of the Hound Group:  Whippit #12.

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During the review, every so often I heard a dog howling.  I figured it was the Bassett (my absolute favorite of the group), but it was the beagle that ended up winning.

Here’s the final positioning of the winners:  beagle to the right in the #1 spot.

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And then it was time for a long, long commercial…and the Terriers.

But that’s for the next post.

-H

Westminster Dog Show Part 1

Posted February 12, 2008 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Events, Mid-town

Cuz’n Cathy (she of the occasional comment to this blog) asked me to see about getting into Westminster.

“No way!,” I replied, “It’s sold out.  It’s sold out long in advance.”

That was then.  This is now.  I scored an easy ticket to get in.  But…for general admission seating (no assignment).  And…$40!  Dogs ain’t cheap to see in Manhattan, I guess.

But I thoroughly enjoyed it.  I only went the first day and even then I left early.  I only saw the hound and terrier groups.  I will say this:  the view on TV is much much better.  I like dogs a lot, but I’m not enough of a dog person to stay up way past my bedtime in a place where they practically charge for oxygen (I was high enough up to consider asking for extra and find out how much they wanted).  That’s an exaggeration.  Virtually everything they sell on the floor goes for $4.50 (water, Cracker Jacks, cotton candy, Coca Cola, etc).  I’m sure a little O2 would cost about the same.

It was held in Madison Square Garden.

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I got there early and figured I’d see if I could get in.  After a couple of years of being sold out, it just wasn’t this time.  I was there very early and figured that I might be able to get in to see the dogs close-up for their breed judging before the finals for each of the types (hounds, terriers, toys, sporting, etc.).

As I walked in, I got to the main floor and found a judging going on.

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I was a little mystified because of the different types of dogs being shown.  It was a pretty slow process with no announcing going on.

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The crowd was pretty small and intimate.  I actually tried going onto the floor and was instantly stopped and told that my ticket was only for sitting up way, way, way high in the grandstand.  I ignored the directive to hike up and keep on going up, and just went to the lowest areas of the grandstand.

I saw another set of presentations going on and finally figured out what the entire process was:  the Junior Showmanship trials.  I think the handlers were probably being more judged in this event and not the dogs.

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Below is the picture taken at the closest point I got to the dogs.

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The Junior Showmanship stuff ended and the Madison Square Garden crew started the setup for the night.  I wandered around the Garden just looking at the general area.  I later found out that I could have gotten backstage if I had gone about the time I showed up.  I have no idea where “backstage” was with all the dogs being groomed; but that would have made the whole event worthwhile.

Instead I watched the crew.

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If you hadn’t realized it, they put several of the breed cards inside each other in the order of the showing during the evening.  Between the groups, the crew comes out and yanks off the outside card.

At this point, I was in a pretty good spot.  I had been told that I was in the general admission area and was surprised to find such a good seat.  You know what comes next:  the seatholders showed up and I found out that I was way down amongst the assigned seating area.  I gazed upward and realized I had a climb ahead.

Below is the view from where I ended up.  When I first got there, it was pretty empty, but it filled up starting about 7:45pm.  A lot of people were carrying binoculars.  I only had my camera with the 5x zoom.  No zoom on this picture.

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Over the next two posts, I’ll cover what I saw.

-H

New Year’s Day Parade in Chinatown Part 2

Posted February 11, 2008 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Chinatown, Events, Parades

Sunday’s parade was sort of fun and had a number of interesting moments.  Being in the tight confines of Chinatown with a million or two or three close up against you can bring out some interesting issues.

During the crowding time, some girls came up behind me.  I never saw them, but they didn’t sound  Asian and I doubt they were.  They talked like any teenage girls in America, with the exception that they wanted to GET THROUGH the crowd and were doing everything they could to do it.  Mostly by being obnoxious and saying they needed to GET THROUGH.  At least one of the two (or maybe three) of them ended up directly behind me and kept pushing at me.  It wasn’t as if I could have moved very easily but the poking and prodding was enough to get me to stand my ground.  After a while they drifted off, although they may have been picked up by the crowd and carried away for all I knew.

What everyone wanted to see was the dragon dancing.  To do the dance, you create/buy an elaborate head of a dragon and then get a bunch of your friends to line up behind you with the “body” of the dragon being a long line of fabric.  Another bunch of compatriots start banging away on drums and cymbals in a rhythm and you twirl all about.  In the best of the displays, there are two or more dragons doing fake battle against one another.

We had those.  All types, combinations, and quality of dragons.  Below is one of the times that there were multiple dragons.  Unfortunately, they were usually pretty low to the ground and fade into the background a bit.

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But they did rise up at times.

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During the parade, there was one time that I think there were four or six dragons in front of the reviewing stand at the same time.  But they were just too low for any sort of decent photo on my part.

But there was one dragon that was superb.  Just wonderful.

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The dancers went around in circles several times showing the dragon coiling and uncoiling.

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Until they straightened out and went down Mott.

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At the very end of the parade, a view came that I had not expected.  I don’t think anyone expected.  Heck, even the people in the display were probably dumbfounded by it.  Cowboys!  Or, rather, Caballeros!

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The music sounded Mexican to me, but the last display identified their country of origin as Columbia.  Maybe they just like a good party.

After the parade ended, I went back down Bayard and saw some of the participants posing for pictures.

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-H

New Year’s Day Parade in Chinatown Part 1

Posted February 10, 2008 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Chinatown, Events, Parades

Yes, I finally found another parade.  It’s been a while.

I left late for the 1pm parade and knew it would be tough getting a good viewing spot.  Chinatown’s tiny little streets and people’s fascination with dragon dancing and the like meant I wasn’t going to find a nice vantage point.

When I got there, here’s my initial viewpoint of the parade.

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I was at the corner of Bayard and Mott Streets, right where the reviewing stand was.  That meant a great place, but lousy positioning on my part.  First, I was way too far away and, second, I was across the street from the reviewing stand which meant that the paraders were facing them, not me.

But Famous Ankles has his ways.  Over time, I got a lot closer as you’ll see from the pictures’ varying vantage points.  Last year when I came to the parade, I discovered that no one manuevers the crowds better than older Asian women.  I simply started following a couple of them and ended up getting much closer.  A corrollary to that fact:  don’t get in their way.  (Perhaps the high moment of the parade was when the crowd parted to let an angry and screaming Asian woman through without impeding her in the least.  It then instantly closed up around behind her.)

The parade itself isn’t one of the impressive ones that NYC can generate.  Instead, it has a much “homier” feel despite the fact that there are a lot of politicians and a lot of sponsors to the event.  The one item that you can’t ignore in a Chinatown parade is the confetti.  It’s everywhere.  Near the reviewing stand, they had some fan-like devices that occasionally would shoot it into the air.

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It didn’t happen all that often, but it did thrill the crowd when it went off.

Usually, the confetti was sent out by people in the parade using a variety of handheld launchers.  The fact that it was a windy, windy day meant it was terrific.  I don’t think there was a moment that the sky wasn’t filled with the stuff.  It doesn’t come out too well in the photos, but here’s a taste.

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It was wonderful.  And at times a bit disconcerting.  Sometimes the confetti was more in the form of streamers and you’d find two and three foot strands floating down.  At one point, some fell around my neck and I was getting ready to pull it off when it tightened on my neck (not particularly tight, but noticable).  I couldn’t figure it out, but it turns out the guy behind me was draping it and some other around his own neck and he was pulling mine in a way that it pulled at my throat.  No, I wasn’t almost throttled or anything.  Just one of those moments that you don’t expect.

The place was jammed.  It was beyond jammed.  It was one of those NYC crowds that, at times, you can’t even move your arms.  Just a sea of humanity with each and every one of us trying to get just a slightly better view.

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In the above picture, you may notice the guy has a cigarette.  It just seemed so out of place.  But later in the parade, of all things, some guy next to me started smoking on a pipe.  I haven’t seen that in years.

The parade itself lasted a little around 90 minutes or so.  There were a number of floats.

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There was the occasional odd character.  The bearded guy in a dress showed up, but this time his outfit was definitely Chinese in character.  (No picture this time as I only caught a quick glimpse of him.)

About midway through the parade, the crowding became extreme.  And not in a good way.  I don’t know what was going on although I saw a larger than usual stream of people behind me at one point.  Nevertheless, the press of the crowd more than doubled.  It was to the point that I couldn’t push back with more than a little and I was almost being forced off my feet from the swell of the crowd.  The cops started shouting out for people to move back and not to press forward.  But they weren’t anywhere near me.  In fact, I wasn’t sure what the meant by “back” at that point.  I had to re-plant my feet at least three times as I was pressed into the people in front of me.  After a few minutes, the pressing lessened significantly…and I pushed forward to a better spot than I had before.

So, the parade had three things of interest to me:  the crowds, the confetti, and the dragon dancing.  This post hasn’t had any of the dragon pictures.

That’s for another post.

-H