Weekly Photo Challenge: Seasons

A very unexpected blossom from our White Star White Magnolia in the middle of February!

A very unexpected blossom from our White Star White Magnolia in the middle of February!

Every spring I look forward to seeing the one flowering tree I have behind my house come into its own.  With just a bit of nudging, my glorious White Star White Magnolia bursts forth before any other of its kin have even awakened from winter slumber.

Our damaged tree that doesn't know what season it is!

Our damaged tree that doesn’t know what season it is!

But not this year.  You see, winter in our place of residence, Knoxville, Tennessee, was just downright warm: higher than normal temps in December followed by bursts of January winter with spring-like interludes sprinkled willy nilly onto the calendar.  And February couldn’t make up its mind either.

Damaged by frost, our White Star White Magnolia that bloomed too early.

Damaged by frost, our White Star White Magnolia that bloomed too early.

Our White Star White Magnolia was confused.  Buds browned out.  Gentle petals drooped and then dropped. And not a single branch on the tree could decide what season it was even on a week-to-week basis.

But today is different.  A few remaining, unscathed buds opened, albeit ever so slowly — as if they wanted to test the air just a wee bit to see if conditions were right for revealing  their tender green middles.

An unseasonable beauty!

An unseasonable beauty!

And then the gentle rains came, bathing those few-and-far-between tendrils in luscious spring-like drops.

A rain-drenched bud ready to open.

A rain-drenched bud ready to open.

Who knows what season this is?  Certainly not our White Star White Magnolia.

A rare bit of morning sunlight on our unseasonable but beautiful White Star White Magnolia blossom.

A rare bit of morning sunlight on our unseasonable but beautiful White Star White Magnolia blossom.

For more great WordPress photos, check out the Weekly Photo Challenge: Seasons.

Posted in Gardens, Photography, Tennessee, Weekly Photo Challenge | Tagged , , | 24 Comments

“A triumph of human dignity”: The 9/11 Memorial Museum

Sleek buildings greet visitors as they approach the 9/11 Memorial Museum in NYC.

Sleek buildings greet visitors as they approach the 9/11 Memorial Museum in NYC.

We don’t know many New York City visitors who don’t have the National September 11 Memorial Museum at the World Trade Center on their must-do list.  In fact, it’s at the top of many lists of places most people want to see — not because it’s a tourist attraction but because it fulfills this one desire we all have: to honor the nearly 3,000 victims of the attacks on September 11, 2001, and February 26, 1993.  And honor them it does.

Tall monoliths reflected in a steel and glass wall outside the 9/11 Memorial Museum.

Tall monoliths reflected in a steel and glass wall outside the 9/11 Memorial Museum.

The visitor brochure calls the 9/11 Memorial Museum a “a triumph of human dignity.”  And even when you leave the subway to approach the plaza surrounding the museum, you get the sense that this is big.  Really big.  At first, you see construction at ground level — a new transit station, buildings being completed, cranes and yellow tape marking off places you can’t and should walk.  But when you look up — and you will — you are rewarded with a spectacular view of steel and glass marvels of modern architecture.

Squarely inside the plaza, we moved toward where people were gathered around massive pools of water to read names of victims etched in the peripheral walls.  And we weren’t the only ones talking in whispers.

Awesome view from plaza beside 9/11 Memorial Museum

Awesome view from plaza beside 9/11 Memorial Museum

Names of victims frame pools outside the 9/11 Memorial Museum

Names of victims frame pools outside the 9/11 Memorial Museum

A cityscape frames the pools of water at 9/11 Memorial Museum.

A cityscape forms the backdrop for the dramatic pools of water at 9/11 Memorial Museum.

We wondered how so many people in line could fit inside the museum.  But we soon found out.  Four floors provide vast, open exhibit space for artifacts, salvaged materials, and memorial photos.  And we were amazed at how that space impacts visitors as they look upward and all around.  You move at your own pace while taking long looks at the remains of a disaster that touched us all.

View from above of salvaged artifacts and tributes to victims

View from above of salvaged artifacts and tributes to victims.

Survivors' Stairs near the Tribute Walk

Survivors’ Stairs near the Tribute Walk

Mosaic wall with quote: "No day shall erase you from the memory of time."

Mosaic wall with quote from Virgil: “No day shall erase you from the memory of time.”

Salvaged wall from World Trade Center

Salvaged wall from World Trade Center

We stopped and stayed for a while in the space known as In Memoriam where visitors can stand or sit to view videos and listen to recordings by family members as they remember their loved ones.

Wall of photos -- part of In Memoriam

Wall of photos — part of In Memoriam

Artists — from schoolchildren to the world-renowned Red Grooms — provided interpretations of the tragedies with tapestries, collages, canvases, quilts and more.

At the end of our tour, we stood silently as we viewed wreckage — raw, open, mangled metal forms — that once were serviceable vehicles and supportive beams turned by fire and the weight of collapsed buildings into twisted, almost unrecognizable forms.

You might think that we would leave depressed.  And we were saddened by what we had seen. But this whole endeavor – the collecting, designing, displaying, and memorializing — contributed wholly to the mission stated in the visitor information: to “bear solemn witness” and to “honor the victims.”  It does all that and so much more.

A tribute to America in 9/11 Memorial Museum

A tribute to the strength and resiliency of America: 9/11 Memorial Museum

For more information:

The National September 11 Memorial Museum at the World Trade Center, 180 Greenwich Street, New York, NY 10007; 911memorial.org

Recommended:  Download the apps and guides: http://www.911memorial.org/apps prior to your visit.

Boomer Travel:  Most of the Memorial Museum is easily accessible for all, but lines can be long.  Also, be prepared to stand inside for entry into some of the popular areas. The Museum is wheelchair accessible with manual wheelchairs available on a first-come, first-serve basis.  The Audio Guide is VoiceOver compatible.  Large print materials are available at the desk.  Service dogs are welcome.

We’ve compiled our remembrances from a December 2015 trip to New York City under the Travel Series heading:  Christmas Holiday 2015.  Hope you’ll join us in reliving good times in the Big Apple!  — Bert and Rusha

Posted in Boomer Travel, Christmas Holiday NYC, Destination, New York, Travel | Tagged , , , | 15 Comments

The joy (chaos? panic?) of American Girl NYC in December

Moms, daughters, and dolls lined up to get into American Girl NYC

Moms, daughters, and dolls lined up to get into American Girl NYC

American Girl Place New York never was at the top of our list of stores to see in December or any other time, for that matter.  But when your granddaughter has asked Santa for Grace Thomas, the Girl of the Year 2015, and you’re within walking distance of 609 Fifth Avenue, you have to go there.  Right?

And we were hardly alone.  In fact, if you are even the least bit claustrophobic, you may want to steer clear.  After all, there’s nothing more panicky than crowds of well-dressed women (and some men) with cute little well-dressed girls in tow holding dolls wearing the exact same outfit as their owners.  There was a rush on the sidewalk where we waited to get in. (The store holds only so many at a time, we were told.)  And then there was a rush on each of the four floors to find the right doll and the right outfits — Better hurry, they get snatched up unmercifully — all in the name of sweetness and love, of course.

Yes, you can have a custom doll to look just like the little girl who wants one.  Truly Me, they're called, and you can order them at americangirl.com

Yes, you can have a custom doll to look just like the little girl who wants one. Truly Me, they’re called, and you can order them at americangirl.com

The Girl of the Year section loomed large.  Grace Thomas (2015) likes Paris and baking, so imagine cute sweaters, berets, travel luggage, and a whole kitchen with eensy little baking utensils.

The Girl of the Year 2015 section at American Girl NYC.  This was Grace Thomas's home for the holidays!!!

The Girl of the Year 2015 section at American Girl NYC. This was Grace Thomas’s home for the holidays!!!

It could have been overwhelming were it not for catchy displays and tireless employees. Store clerks were helpful.  So very helpful.  And moms, too, directed us to related things we just had to have — desk, matching pj’s, and a “special” on an ice skating outfit.  Little kids, noting our indecision, showed us what they liked so we could put that on our credit card, too!

Even the lines had a charm of their own.  How often do you converse with five-year-olds and their dolls while waiting to fork over your next paycheck for dolly things?

So, Bert's at the end of the line, patiently waiting to pay.  Did he mind?  Did I ask?  "It's what's you if you're a grandparent," I told him.

So, Bert’s at the end of the line, patiently waiting to pay. Did he mind? Did I ask? “It’s what’s you do if you’re a grandparent,” I told him.

With the nicest clerks anywhere, we paid to have the goods shipped home rather than carry them through the subway.  (Who knows what that cost.  It was worth it.)

With infinite patience, the cashiers at American Girl made the sales and offered shipping -- music to our ears!

With infinite patience, the cashiers at American Girl made the sales and offered shipping — music to our ears!

And then we explored the top floor where we heard there were parties goin’ on.  That’s right.  Genuine tea parties.  And luncheons.  Where gatherings of women and little girls and cute American Girl dolls sit at tables while waiters rush around serving tiny, tasty sandwiches and pink lemonade.

Moms, daughters, and dolls (see them in their special chairs attached to the table?) wait to be served at American Girl NYC.

Moms, daughters, and dolls (see them in their special chairs attached to the table?) wait to be served at American Girl NYC. 

Of course, if your dolly needs a “do,” you could get her one.  Right there.  In the windowed room overlooking Fifth Avenue.  Who wouldn’t want that?

Hair styling for dolls is just part of the fun at American Girl NYC!

Hair styling for dolls is just part of the fun at American Girl NYC!

We were amazed.  No, that’s an understatement.  The phenomenon of American Girl had never confronted us, the parents of two sons who were content with G. I. Joe’s and Transformers during their boyhood years.

So we did a little research when we got home, looking to see just what this AG thing was all about.  And here’s what we found.

  • Begun in 1986, American Girl is devoted entirely to celebrating girls.
  • With headquarters in Middleton, Wisconsin, American Girl operates 21 retail stores with 2,400 employees (except during the holidays when there are over 5,000).
  • Over 27 million American Girl dolls have been sold since 1986.
  • The AG catalog ranks as the largest consumer toy catalog in the U. S.
  • Over 72 million people have visited the American Girl retail stores.
  • American Girl’s charitable giving over the years has topped $100 million in cash and products.
American Girl dolls lined up in the windows on Fifth Avenue, New York City

American Girl dolls lined up in the windows on Fifth Avenue, New York City

So, yes, we put American Girl Place on our places-to-visit list when in NYC.  And you should, too.  In addition, if it ever becomes a public company, we’re buying stock!  This many little girls and their moms can’t be wrong.  It’s joy, chaos, and Christmas spirit rolled into one not-to-be-forgotten American Girl experience.

For more information:

American Girl Place — New York, 609 Fifth Avenue at 49th Street, New York, NY 10017; http://www.americangirl.com/retailstore/new-york

Posted in Christmas Holiday NYC, New York | Tagged , , , | 8 Comments

Weekly Photo Challenge: Time

IMG_5155

At our home, we celebrate the passing of time with birthday celebrations.  Not fancy.  Not big to-do’s.  Just simple family dinners ending with cake and a song.

But it’s this little tradition that we’ve all come to love — the cake with the askew candles placed by a granddaughter, some off-key singing, and then the make-a-wish-and-blow-out-the-candles routine.  All with a little assistance, of course.

In the big scheme of things, perhaps, there may not be a better way to celebrate time than with the traditions of family.

For more entries in this week’s Weekly Photo Challenge: Time, click here.

Posted in Travel | 13 Comments

Weekly Photo Challenge: Vibrant

Winter is “full on” in Knoxville, Tennessee, where we live, but already we long for the vibrancy of spring.

If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?

“Ode to the West Wind” by Percy Bysshe Shelley

Field of daffodils, Knoxville, TN

For more entries in the WordPress Weekly Photo Challenge: Vibrant, click here.

Posted in Photography, Weekly Photo Challenge | Tagged , , , , | 11 Comments

Weekly Photo Challenge: Optimistic

If you’re in retail, you already know that it takes a certain amount of optimism just to stay in the game.  But add to that a cold December in New York City, a temporary tent, and goods that only big-city residents (not tourists) would carry home, and you have a renewed appreciation for those who remain optimistic enough to attempt selling goods outdoors in winter.

A rainbow of fresh pasta from this bundled up salesperson.

Fresh pasta at a sidewalk market, NYC

Anyone want fresh seafood from Long Island?

Seafood vendor, NYC

And someone was optimistic that a dog owner (of a big dog!!!) would want these bones.  Ya never know.  Put ’em out there.  Somebody’ll buy ’em.

Dog bones for sale in NYC

And optimism extended all the way to Chinatown.  Who wouldn’t want chestnuts just so they can roast them on an open fire?

Chestnut vendor, Chinatown, NYC

For more optimistic photos, check out the Weekly Photo Challenge: Optimistic.

And for more on New York City in December, check out our travel series: Christmas Holiday NYC. 

Posted in New York, Photography, Travel, Weekly Photo Challenge | Tagged , , , , , | 18 Comments

Five ways to spend less in (of all places) NYC!

Spend what you can or pay the recommended price of admission -- it's just one way to save a bit when seeing the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC.

Spend what you can or pay the recommended price of admission — it’s just one way to save a bit when seeing the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC.

You know it.  You just do.  Going to NYC will cost ya! (Well, to tell the truth, traveling anywhere has its unavoidable expenses and serendipitous must-have purchases.)  But there are things you can do to ease the financial pain.

Enjoying the sights of Chinatown costs little -- unless you're shopping for folks back home!

Enjoying the sights of Chinatown costs little — unless you’re shopping for folks back home!

When we decided (on a lark, I might add) to trip off to the Big Apple in December to get into the Christmas spirit, we knew we had to be budget travelers.  Oh, sure, you say.  Stay on a budget during one of the busiest seasons in one of the most traveled places in the U. S.?  But cut corners we did.  And here are some tips that worked for us.

1. Do your homework on transportation.

First, take a look at airline flights if that’s how you’ll get to NYC.  Once you click onto an airline, enter the Flexible Days arena.  There you’ll find flights that can be half the cost of flying on a busy weekend in and out of the city.  If you have the luxury of flexible flying, you can save a bundle, and that’s good news for retirees, casual travelers, and last-minute tourists like us.  (Our weekday Delta departure and return from Knoxville to New York’s LaGuardia was $173.00 compared to the over $300 and $400 flights on the weekends.)

Delta Airlines Flexible Day rate

And do a bit of research, too, on ground transportation from the airport to your destination.  We were directed to Carmel Limousine Service by the owners of the apartment we rented, and, despite some not-so-favorable reviews on the web, the limo and driver couldn’t have been more accommodating or affordable.  Other sites to check are Uber, Lyft, and the Super Shuttle (which could add numerous stops depending on who’s in the van at the time).  Just enter your destination, time of day, etc., and do a bit of comparing.

carmel mobile app

2.  Think about lodging and location.

Of course, if you’re only visiting NYC for New Year’s Eve, you may want to stay near Times Square.  But if you want to blend in with the locals, experience some of the neighborhoods, and stay in quieter locales, look for alternative lodging.  We found an apartment on the Upper West Side near Central Park with positive ratings on TripAdvisor, but other sites may also have just what you’re looking for:  AirBnB, HomeAway, or any of the B&B sites like bnbfinder.com, bedandbreakfast.com or bbonline.com.

The advantage?  You can save money and see another side of the city by staying in the ‘burbs, so to speak, where you can avail yourself of what the area affords permanent residents.  Our apartment with one bedroom with queen bed, kitchen and newly remodeled bath cost $170.00 per night, a far cry from what we’ve paid before to be near the theater district and Times Square.  Plus, our owner/manager knew the city well and shared invaluable tips on transportation, eating, sightseeing, etc.

3.  Get a MetroCard.

Because we needed transportation to all the museums, parks, and department stores (We wanted to see the windows, after all!), our apartment owner gave us the best piece of advice for saving money:  Buy a one-week MetroCard for $31.00.  With the price of one subway or local bus ride costing $2.75, we knew we had a bargain with unlimited rides for seven days for only $31.00.  (Be sure to check the MTA site for more info on how and where to buy, use, and reload.) The side benefits can’t be stressed enough:  on-time subways offer expediency, and buses let you see the city from the comfort of your seat — without the hassle of driving yourself!!!

Subways were our friend! Punctual, safe, nearby. (Image credit: Wikimedia Commons)

Subways were our friend! Punctual, safe, nearby. (Image credit: Wikimedia Commons)

4.  Watch what you eat!

Now if you’re a foodie hoping to traipse through the city in search of highest rated restaurants and chefs, skip this section.  You’ll have to map out your locales, hire drivers or use your MetroCard, and pony up for foie gras! But if you’re more interested in sightseeing than eating, pace yourself.  First, eat only two meals a day.  If you’re staying where breakfast is free (like the national chain hotels usually), then dig in and enjoy the savings.  Eat a big dinner in early evening.  But even if breakfast isn’t free, consider cooking if you have a kitchen or eating a continental breakfast in your room.

Eat local: Jason's Pickles on the Upper West Side

A meal at Jason’s Pickles on the Upper West Side will fill you up for the day!

Second, head to the local convenient store/neighborhood market for fresh produce, baked goods, quick snacks, or precooked items.  It’s fun to see what’s served locally (and how much food costs in a different part of the country), and you’ll save money over those restaurant prices, too.  If you’re lucky, you may stumble onto a sidewalk market — usually on the weekends — where you can do the farm-to-table thing right in the big city!

5.  Strike a bargain at the museums.

Our apartment manager gave us another tip that even some of our friends who live in NYC didn’t know:  you don’t have to pay the recommended prices for tickets at museums subsidized by the city of New York.  If you see Recommended Price at the admission booth, you can offer less to tour the museum.  Museums such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the American Museum of Natural History, The Cloisters and many others will take what you feel you can afford to pay.  Other museums (like Guggenheim Museum Soho, Museum of American Folk Art, and Snug Harbor Cultural Center) are free every day.  (Click here for the complete list.) You can also weigh the option of passes such as CityPass, the New York Pass, or New York City Explorer Pass that bundle multiple sites for one lower price.

Inside the stately Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC

Inside the stately Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC

Don’t forget:  Some of the best things in NYC really are free — visiting St. Patrick’s Cathedral, talking to vendors in Bryant Park, watching food handlers in Chinatown, creating an avatar at Macy’s, and strolling through neighborhoods.

What you spend on a trip to NYC is up to you!  Hope you can use one or more of our ideas, but please feel free to add your tips below for how to see NYC on a budget.

And check out other posts in the Christmas Holiday NYC series.  Thanks for traveling with us!!!

— Bert and Rusha

Credit:  Image of subway from Wikimedia Commons

This post has been linked to Monday Escapes #27.  Check out the other great posts on My Travel Monkey and Packing My Suitcase.

TingNewBlue

Posted in Boomer Travel, Christmas Holiday NYC, New York, Travel | Tagged , , , , , , | 25 Comments

Oh, that building: New York Public Library, Stephen A. Schwarzman Building

Schwarzman Building, New York Public Library

Schwarzman Building, New York Public Library

Although we’re book lovers through and through, we don’t make it a habit to visit libraries wherever we travel.  But maybe we should.  Now that we’ve seen the New York Public Library’s Stephen A. Schwarzman Building, we’re curious to know what’s inside other libraries.  Or perhaps it just doesn’t get any better than this.  After all, the Schwarzman Building seems to have it all: Beaux Arts architecture filled with museum quality artwork, detailed frescoes, marble stairwells, and much, much more.

Marble stairwell, Stephan A. Schwarzman Building, New York Public Library

Marble stairwell, Stephan A. Schwarzman Building, New York Public Library

Greeting us on our December 2015 tour were the iconic, loved-by-everyone lions known as Patience and Fortitude, named in the 1930s by Mayor Fiorella LaGuardia who said they represent qualities that all New Yorkers needed to endure the economic trials of the Depression.  Now these lions sculpted from pink Tennessee marble (See?  We knew there was another reason to love ’em!) are mascots of the library, their trademark likenesses emblazoned on everything from t-shirts to tote bags.

Patience (or is this Fortitude?) in front of Schwarzman Building, New York Public Library

Patience (or is this Fortitude?) in front of Schwarzman Building, New York Public Library

Beginning with a bequest from one-time governor Samuel J. Tilden (1814-1886) of $2.4 million, the idea of a place to “establish and maintain a free library and reading room in the city of New York” began to take shape.  After his death, two other libraries, the Aston and Lenox libraries were experiencing financial difficulties, so a revamping of their missions and a combination of assets formed the basis for a new organization: the Astor, Lenox, and Tilden Foundations. (Source: NYPL website.)

Second floor landing with painted ceiling, Schwarzman Building, New York Public Library

Second floor landing with painted ceiling, Schwarzman Building, New York Public Library

With the vision of Dr. John Shaw Billings, a noted librarian, and the engagement of a new architectural firm (Carrére and Hastings), the largest marble structure in the U. S. to date (and costing over $9 million upon completion) broke ground in 1902. And then on May 24, 1911, one day after President Taft dedicated the library on May 23rd,  30,000 to 50,000 visitors streamed into this new building, no doubt as impressed as we still are many years later! (Click here for more of the history of the New York Public Library.)

And lucky us — on exhibit while we were there (ending May 27, 2016) was a collection of prints, etchings, woodcuts, etc., belonging to Henrietta Louisa Koenen (1830 – 1881): “Printing Women: Three Centuries of Female Printmakers, 1570-1900.” Quite the collection.  Beautifully showcased.

An upstairs reading room holds portraits — some familiar, some new to us.

Filled with portraits: 2nd floor Reading Room, Schwarzman Building, New York Public Library

Filled with portraits: 2nd floor Reading Room, Schwarzman Building, New York Public Library

I stood and stared a while at native New Yorker Washington Irving since I had seen this very portrait in numerous 11th grade lit books from which I taught students (hopefully) to appreciate “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow” and “Rip Van Winkle.”

"Washington Irving" by Charles Robert Leslie

“Washington Irving” by Charles Robert Leslie (1820)

We were rather surprised, however, to see this portrait of Truman Capote by John Whitney Fosburgh among the “older” notables on the wall.

"Truman Capote" by James Whitney Fosburgh

“Truman Capote” by James Whitney Fosburgh (Oil on canvas, 1971)

Lest you think the New York Public Library is strictly for bibliophiles of a “certain age,” take a look at this area designed to hook kids on the joy of reading.  What fun to see Patience (or is this Fortitude?) fashioned out of today’s “it” building material:  Legos!

At the end of our visit, we grabbed one of the free postcards that any guest can have for the taking.

Free for the taking -- but just one of each per customer: postcards from the New York Public Library!

Free for the taking — but just one of each per customer: postcards from the New York Public Library!

Then we made our purchases at the bookstore.  Armed with pins imprinted with a Patti Smith quote — “Long Live the Library” — and tote bags for folks back home, we reluctantly left the building.

A return trip to NYC will warrant a return to NYPL.  After all, there’s always something new going on at a library.  And, with a building like the Schwarzman . . . Wow! what a place this is to see again and again!

For more information:

New York Public Library, Stephen A. Schwarzman Building, 330 W. 38th Street, New York, NY 10018; (917) 275-6975; http://www.nypl.org/locations/schwarzman 

Hours, directions, activities: http://www.nypl.org/locations/schwarzman

What you can do for free at NYPL: http://www.nypl.org/checkusout

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nypl

Twitter: @nypl

Instagram: nypl

To read more posts from our Christmas Holiday NYC tour, click here.

 

Posted in Christmas Holiday NYC, New York | Tagged , , , , , | 21 Comments

Whitney to High Line to Chelsea Market: A newer New York

Traveling through the Meatpacking District of NYC to 99 Gansevoort Street, home of the Whitney Museum.

Traveling through the Meatpacking District of NYC to 99 Gansevoort Street, home of the Whitney Museum.

Mindful of our friends’ recommendations for what to see during our Christmas Holiday 2015 in NYC and loving art for art’s sake, we headed to the Whitney Museum following our usual routine:  look up address, find appropriate bus or subway, ride, get off, enjoy. But when we arrived where our guide book told us to go — 945 Madison Avenue — we found a closed building.  Shut, if you will.  Not a problem, we thought.  Just ask someone on the street.  And that’s how we found ourselves back on the bus headed to 99 Gansevoort Street in the Meatpacking District at the new Whitney Museum.

Map of the High Line in New York City

Map of the High Line in New York City

Designed by Italian architect Renzo Piano, the cantilevered building known as the Whitney offers 50,000 square feet of indoor galleries with 18,000 of it dedicated to special exhibitions.  This largest column-free museum gallery in NYC is a far cry from the original museum founded by Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney in 1930.  And with its position between the Hudson River and the High Line, the Whitney offered us an array of modern art as well as views of the area we would never have seen otherwise.

Whitney Museum in its new location in the Meatpacking District of NYC. Note the starting of the High Line with its row of trees in front of the museum. (From website: http://whitney.org/About/NewBuilding

Whitney Museum in its new location in the Meatpacking District of NYC. Note the starting of the High Line with its row of trees in front of the museum. (From website: http://whitney.org/About/NewBuilding

With art from names we recognized — Thomas Hart Benton, Alexander Calder, Peter Blume, Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning, Marsden Hartley, Edward Hopper — to artists we learned about the night of our visit, the Whitney amazes those well-versed in contemporary art as well as the casual observer.  Wide spaces, clean white walls, natural wood floors — all work beautifully, not only for giving each piece of art the space it deserves but also for allowing the efficient movement of spectators who want to view art up close AND far away.

But the evening outside was just as fascinating as the art inside.  Expansive porches allow guests at the museum to stand and gaze at buildings lit for the night, to watch people climb the stairs accessing the High Line, and to stare out at the Hudson River and watch the sun go down.

Sundown on the Hudson River as seen from the porch of the Whitney Museum.

Sundown on the Hudson River as seen from the porch of the Whitney Museum.

We, too, wanted to experience the High Line, but merely as a conduit to nearby Chelsea Market. Then we read more in our guide book about this pathway that was first an above-ground rail line.  In the 1980s, the last freight train on this line delivered goods to merchants.  But by 1999, Joshua David and Robert Hammond, hearing the outcry from residents to preserve the structure, founded Friends of the High Line to keep the railway and repurpose it for something else.  Planning and design work began, and by 2009, the first section of the High Line opened to the public as a scenic walkway.  Today, multiply plantings beautify the structure.  (See pictures on Flickr here.) And people enjoy walking the High Line as much for sheer enjoyment as to get from Point A to Point B. (Because it was dark, we have no pictures to share.  But here is an outstanding view from the Friends of the High Line website.)

Beautiful picture of the plantings along the High Line from Friends of the High Line website: www.thehighline.org

Beautiful picture of the plantings along the High Line from Friends of the High Line website: http://www.thehighline.org

We wanted to experience a walk along the High Line, but we were also on a mission:  to find dinner at Chelsea Market!  So, we climbed the stairs to access the High Line, walked a couple of blocks, and then climbed back down to find ourselves squarely in an industrial space filled with restaurants, vendors of quality goods, and people just roaming around — talking and eating, of course.  (Be aware of one thing:  there is little seating in Chelsea Market.  People order, stand at counters or take food out.  They enjoy the space for what it is.  We landed at a burger place simply because two stools magically became available!)

You can find seafood, burgers, spices, cheese, etc., at Chelsea Market in the block long, block wide building holding 35 vendors, or you can just watch the people go by.  (And according to the website, about six million national and international visitors filter through the place per year.) It’s a venue to see, all right, and the food (a global mix, we’d say) is worth the wait — and the standing!

Vendors line the sides of this industrial interior at Chelsea Market.

Vendors line the sides of this industrial interior at Chelsea Market.

If you’re thinking of visiting NYC, take the route we found quite by accident — from the Whitney to the High Line to Chelsea Market!  And, yes, it’s worth the steps. After all, you can rest on the bus as you ride back to your lodging in the city, feeling proud that you’re now an art connoisseur full of good food from one of the greatest cities in the world!

For more information:

Whitney Museum of Art, 99 Gansevoort Street, New York, NY 10014; (212) 570-10014; whitney.org.

Friends of the High Line; http://www.thehighline.org/

Chelsea Market: http://www.chelseamarket.com/

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Trees of New York: Christmas Holiday 2015

Bundled and leaning on each other, Christmas trees are piled high at a street mark in NYC.

Bundled and leaning on each other, Christmas trees are piled high at a street mark in NYC.

 

Looking back on a trip extends the pleasure of travel for us, and that usually happens when we review the photos we took. Oh, sure, we have pics of famous sites — that’s the main thing we come to see.  But sometimes another subject surprisingly presents itself when we download pictures to our computer.  For our Christmas Holiday NYC — we noted an unexpected theme: trees of New York .

Now why we didn’t expect to see Christmas trees lining neighborhood sidewalks, we don’t know.  But we didn’t.  In our home state of Tennessee, Christmas trees are sold on large, open lots where firs and pines and spruces are fluffed out and nailed upright in criss-cross board tree stands, ready for purchase.

But in New York, where space is at a premium, trees snug up to one another as they lean against a wall or storefront.  And different is good.  Christmas comes in many forms, and we love seeing how holidays are celebrated wherever we go. Piles of leaning trees indicate something special to us: city folks love real greenery as much as we do!

Piled up at a street corner shop, Christmas trees wait for NYC shoppers!

Piled up at a street corner shop, Christmas trees wait for NYC shoppers!

We also noted another first-for-us sight:  branches and pine cones laid around tree trunks. Love this idea.  Why not use greenery to beautify sidewalks and parks? We could do this in our city, too.  It’s called recycling!

As you can imagine in a city the size of New York, Christmas tree sightings are frequent.  And here are a few of our favorites.

Rockefeller Center — where people took selfies or posed for others.  There’s nothing more magical than this iconic tree — it’s the big one, for sure!

Bryant Park — At the top of the ice rink, the tree anchors the space and adds color and cheer.

Skating rink at Bryant Park

Skating rink at Bryant Park

The Metropolitan Museum of Art — A towering tree of twenty-two cherubs and fifty-five gracefully suspended angels attracted a huge crowd.  They were all taking pictures of the tree and the Neapolitan Baroque Creche at the bottom surrounded by shepherds and their flocks, wise men, and adoring townspeople.

Baroque Christmas tree at Metropolitan Museum of Art

Baroque Christmas tree at Metropolitan Museum of Art

Townspeople neatly arranged at the base of the Metropolitan Museum of Art Christmas Tree

Townspeople neatly arranged at the base of the Metropolitan Museum of Art Christmas Tree

The New York Public Library — a floor-to-ceiling tree, elegant and expansive surrounded by a base of branches and pine cones.

The 2015 Christmas tree at Public Library of New York.

The 2015 Christmas tree at Public Library of New York.

And then there were others — random trees that caught my attention at just the right time for me to snap them with an iPhone!

So, yes, Virginia.  New York does do trees at Christmas.  Lots of trees.  From Rockefeller Center to tiny flats — it’s Christmas, and a traditional one at that.  Just different!

To read more about Christmas in New York, check out all our posts at Christmas Holiday NYC. 

 

 

 

Posted in Christmas Holiday NYC, New York, Travel | Tagged , , , , | 9 Comments