Veterans Day Parade Part 1

Posted November 12, 2007 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Events, Manhattan, Mid-town, Parades

As NYC dot gov predicted, the 89th Annual NYC Veterans Day Parade did kick off at 11am.  Nowadays, I’m suspicious of that site’s accuracy as earlier posts have indicated.  But the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month is the marker of the end of “the war to end all wars” and the paraders were more accurate in their timing than the old name for WWI.

I showed up early to get a place near the reviewing stand.  I was at 41st Street and 5th Avenue, right across from the New York Public Library.  Fifteen minutes before the start of the parade, it was nearly deserted.  Nearly…there was me and an official parade filmer.  The picture below was thirty minutes into the parade so there is a little bit of a crowd. 

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But, at that point, there had only been one set of marchers.  The parade started at 26th Street and, like all NYC parades, it takes a while to get 15 blocks.

The first set of marchers is usually cops on horses.  Not this time.  The first harbingers of the march were motorcyclists.  Lots of them.  And, actually, the first of three sets.

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With groups like this, I always think of the Marine Corps toy drive.  Just one of those images in my mind.  There were a bunch of these guys, almost all of the Vietnam Vets from what I remember.

But, along with the cycles, they did have at least one vintage car.

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The day had a bunch of motorcyclists and vintage cars.  Those were some of the most enjoyable parts.

Right after the six traditional “cops on horses” came…more motorcycles.  These were the Patriot Guard Riders.

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Lots of them, too.

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But they didn’t have a vintage car.  Nosirreebob.

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The first contingent of WWII vets walked past.

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They were followed by the usual group of dignitaries.  Every parade has to have a set of these guys.

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But it wasn’t the “usual” group.  Look closely and you’ll see NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg toward the right-center (between the tall Black guy and the White guy in fatigues).  Huzzah to you, sir!  No special fanfare for him and no huge group of “the select” around him.  This is the most informal and most exposed I’ve seen him.  Well done, your honor.

The next group was an Andrews Sister-style act.  They were singing “Don’t Sit Under the Apple Tree With Anyone Else But Me”.  I think they timed the song wrong to get to the reviewing stand so they had to keep repeating the stanza, but it’s been so long since I heard it and maybe I thought the song was a bit more complex.  Nevertheless, they had good voices and they did set a nice tone to the atmosphere of the parade.

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And then the traditional “big flag” display came by.  It was a BIGGGG FLAG.  It was from the World Trade Center and carried by Ground Zero volunteers.  After they came by, they started a “wave” that I have to say was impressive (and I’ve seen a lot of these).

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Every parade needs it traditional “men in skirts”.  I really love bagpipers.  I have to admit that when they are played by men in pants, it loses something.  And these guys were really well dressed.

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They were followed by a vintage firetruck.  With veteran riders, of course.

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One of the few commercial groups then showed up.  The Veterans Post News group was preceded by an honor guard.

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Afterward, one of the cool parts of the parade:  vintage army vehicles.  First came a “Duck“.  These were used in WWII to cross waterways.

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It had a number of vets on it, but this guy caught my eye.  I like to think he spent a lot of time in one of these things.

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And then there were a number of duece-and-a-half transport trucks.  The name stands for a two and a half ton truck.

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And a bunch of jeeps and hummers.  All of them filled with vets and their families.

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And then this monster.  All I can remember of it is that it was an ammo carrier of some sort.  Just a huge truck.  Obviously, a lot smaller than a modern semi, but it just seemed so big.

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There’s lots more to the parade, but that’s for later posts.

Just an overall statement about the parade.  I’ll fill in more in future posts, but I’d have to say that there wasn’t a lot to really be happy about in the parade.  The WWII vets are well advanced in years, now.  Hey, it’s been 52 years.  You look at this and wonder how much longer they’re going to be in these parades.  A few will hang on for a long time, but the generation is definitely fading.  Just a few walked it.  Most were bundled into vehicles, and a whole lot of them were in enclosed vehicles, some with tinted window.  That’s just the way things are, and they did great things and have every reason to be proud of what they did, too.

I can’t blame them for not walking.  It was a bitterly cold day and those of us watching were freezing.  My coat was too light and I could barely write any notes.  We were enthusiastic watchers, though.  But so few of us.  You’ll see that the crowds were pretty poor.  Also, at least three times during the parade people came up to me or to people next to me and asked what was going on.  They didn’t even know it was Veterans Day.

-H

Veterans Day

Posted November 11, 2007 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Administrative, Events

I did go to the NYC Veterans Day Parade and will cover it in a later post.  But for today’s post, a remembrance.

My Dad in his B-66 Destroyer (he piloted the RB-66 reconnaisance and, later, EB-66 electronic warfare versions of that since-retired jet).

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My brother in front of his C-130 in Germany.  1979.

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-H

Too Early for the Today Show

Posted November 10, 2007 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Celebrity Points, Manhattan, Mid-town

When I was at Rockefeller Center for the Olympic Men’s Marathon Trials, I decided to stop by the Today Show in case they were broadcasting from outside.  They weren’t.  I’ve never understood their process for organizing the crowd but that’s probably because I keep coming to it from the wrong direction (that is, from the north).  They have a double lined fenced in area with the entrance at the far south.  That means you have to go around the outer fence to enter and then go around the inner fence to get to a decent viewing area.

Here’s what it looks like when there’s no one out broadcasting and there’s no sign that they ever will for who knows how long.

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The did have the TV on and decent audio being broadcast to the crowd.

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They did do something that I thought was really nice.  When the commercials came on, they muted the sound.  I like little things like that.

The traditional Today kind of viewers were there.  That is, sign carriers.

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Actually, I was one of the very few there without a sign.  I only stayed about five minutes, though.  And never saw a sign of the actual broadcasters.  I’m sure they eventually came out.

The one other time I was at the area for the show was when they were doing an outdoor broadcast and I barely missed it (they finished their talk and went inside in the same time it took to get through their crowd control fencing).  Someday I may actually make it there.

-H

New York City Marathon Part 3

Posted November 9, 2007 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Events, Manhattan

This is my third and last post on the 2007 NYC Marathon.

Finally, the men started to arrive.  Just like with the women, they were preceded by motorcycles and a truck bearing the time, in this case 1hour 24 minutes and 50 seconds.  The women had reached this point at 1 hour 32 minutes and 16 seconds into their run.

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In the end, the fastest woman (Radcliffe) took 2:23:09 to finish the race and the fastest man (Martin Lel of Ethiopia) took 2:09:04.

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Lel is the runner in the blue shirt directly behind the motorcycle windshield.

And the male runners started coming on quickly.  The fastest few men weren’t as dominant as the fastest women.

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You could almost see the crowds starting to grow by the minute once the men came.  It seems that the crowds were more interested in seeing the quantity of runners rather than the quality of the best.  That’s probably not a fair characterization, but it was on my mind because it seemed that the crowd grew so quickly after the first groups had passed.

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One of the runners is apparently named “Deacon”.  I can’t read the other.

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During this short period, this wheelchair racer came by.  Talk about a tired person!  This guy was obviously exhausted, but kept going.

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And there were still women runners coming by.  But at this point in the race, the running crowd just started to swell and so did the viewers.

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The picture below is the crowd right behind me shortly before I left.

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A lot of the runners started making signals of some sort:  waving, raising hands, high-fiving the crowd, and so on.  They never said anything.  Not a word that I heard.  I can’t blame them; in this run, talking is way too difficult after 17 miles and a lot further to go.

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I really didn’t want to stand there for several more hours, so I decided to leave and walk southward along the route just to see the crowd and what else was going on.

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In the 15 or so blocks I walked, the crowd was thick and all craning their necks.  Or taking a shortcut to watch.

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At one point, I found myself taking a high spot, too.

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There were a couple of bands playing along the route.  That was very nice and folksy.  But I was tired and had seen all that I really wanted to see.

-H

New York City Marathon Part 2

Posted November 8, 2007 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Events, Manhattan

I’ve already covered the wheelchair portion of the race.  However, you must understand that once the runners started coming, that didn’t mean the wheelchair racers weren’t around.  In fact, they kept popping up here and there for as long as I watched the race.

As we ended the last post:  the first runners were on their way.  The initial heralds were motorcycles.  And then this car with the time at the 17 mile mark (1 hour 32 minutes).

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Then the runners themselves.

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From what I understand, these two are old competitors and started and ended the race pretty much like this.

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Their names are Paula Radcliffe, from Britain, and Gette Wami, from Ethiopia.  You’d think the taller one (Radcliffe) would have the advantage, but it appears marginal.  They apparently ran neck and neck up until almost the very end, where Radcliffe pulled ahead.

It took a couple of more minutes before the next runners came up.

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And then they started coming in earnest.

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Some seem to have name tags in addition to the number.  This is “Moeller”, I’d guess.

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And then “Begay”.

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And then “Eap”.

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And they just kept coming.

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The next was a favorite of mine.  I call her the “bouncing hair woman”.  It was just flying all over the place.  She moved smoothly but her hair was in another dimension.

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And then, 23 minutes after the women first started by…the men started to arrive.

But that’s the subject of another post.

-H