June 24, 2005
Got up early enough to get out before the worst of the heat (in theory!), and headed downtown to Manhattan Mall, for some last minute shopping… We stopped off once or twice along the way, for shopping (and browsing!).
Afterwards, we decided to see the Flatiron Building before we left - wow, it was getting hot! We didn’t take any pictures, as there was scaffolding & black netting all over it. Headed into Wendy’s for a long, cold drink (much needed!), then uptown to Tiffany’s.
Tiffany’s was fabulous once again - sparkly, shiny things. I didn’t get to see as much as I’d have liked to, but the things I did see were just gorgeous =) Unfortunately, there wasn’t so much as a teaspoon I could afford!
We dropped by the Sony Experience, took photos of the huge Spiderman in there, but had to get out pretty quickly, as it was closing up for a private event. Now we’re back at the hotel, cooling off!
June 23, 2005
We’ve been getting through our itinerary at quite a rate, so we took a break this morning, and didn’t get out of the hotel til about half ten, when we headed for the USS Intrepid. It’s apparently the fourth US navy ship to carry that name - a decommissioned aircraft carrier. There’s also an ex-BA Concorde, and USS Growler - a submarine. Plenty of US propaganda, but also lots of general aircraft’y things - including one or two you could climb into =)
After lunch there, we headed to Macy’s for a brief (fruitless) shopping trip, and then on to the American Museum of Natural History. That was fun indeed, but tiring! Plenty of dinosaur skeletons, and exhibits of anthropology of most of the continents (Europe was noticeable by its absence, but what can you do? =))
Central Park was a nice cool wander, although we were definitely flagging by then, and we were glad to get to our final destination, the Guggenheim Museum. It really does look like the old multistory carpark in Dublin Airport! A bus from there brought us back to the hotel, to freshen up - now it’s time to head out to Carnegie Hall =) Yay!
June 22, 2005
Well, it’s been a *long* day! We arrived a little too early at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, so we headed down the street, to see the New York Stock Exchange (Wall Street), and took photos - including some of the guards (police? I’m not sure) outside, armed to the teeth! Then we made our way to the hole where the “Twin Towers” had stood, for yet more photos.
We got back to the Fed in plenty time for our tour, which was only ok - but the vaults of bullion were fairly impressive! The security around the whole place is unbelievable! They don’t hold private accounts - only with other banks - and it doesn’t cost anything to store gold there. It has the largest stock of free gold in the world, 98% of which belongs to foreign central banks, most of which was deposited just after WWII. The transaction charge (to move gold into, out of, or between vaults) is 1.75USD/bar, and has been since 1924.
After the tour, we headed down to the South Street Seaport Museum, and wandered around for a bit. It was getting seriously warm, when we headed back uptown. Colm thought he knew where the theatre was, so we spent fifteen minutes walking uptown until he finally looked at the tickets (for the address), and another fifteen walking back - by then, a queue was forming, and we waited for the doors to open.
The show was fantastic - go see it! The accents were ridiculous, the humour definitely not something that would translate to Germany! One of the main characters was Leopold Bloom, but no one else seemed to get it when he asked “When will there ever be a ‘Bloomsday’?” =) Oh well…
After a stop off at the NYPL again, this time to see inside (it’s beautiful), we’re back in the hotel, feet up, taking it easy for a bit. We’re getting through our itinerary at a good rate, so hopefully we’ll have a chance to sleep in tomorrow morning =) Yay!
I’ve put up a few more photos covering our trip to the UN building, a few from the Empire State Building and some outside NYPL. Just to prove it’s really there, there are some photos of the Gilmore Girls.
We’ve covered a lot in the last two days, and the weather has been seriously hot. It’s hard to believe how much energy it can take to walk even just a block or two.
I’ve been finding that New York isn’t portrayed very accurately in the Marvel movies. Liberty Island, and the statue are nothing like how they are portrayed in X-Men. For a start the flame is much smaller, and there’s no wall at the edge of the Island, it’s a fence. Though the visitors center does have the pieces of Iron that Magneto is fond of.
Time’s Square doesn’t have a huge, pompous, upper-class turn-of-the-century residential building with a neo-classical balcony where Spiderman’s arch-enemy (and best friend’s dad of course) might live. Nor does Manhattan have an L-track which inconvienently terminates in mid-air. Can’t say I’m suprised.
Well - the Cyclone was a long subway trip away, but well worth it! Poor Colm nearly got screamed out of it, by me, as we went up, down and around the curves. There were, as he put it, some “interesting” G-forces, and plenty of stomach-lurching drops!
It was Colm’s first time on a rollercoaster, and I suspect he’ll never go again! Coney Island was fairly run-down overall, and the rollercoaster (wooden) seemed rather rickety indeed!
Eventually, we got back to Manhattan, and crashed briefly in the hotel, before heading out again to the Empire State Building. The online-tickets saved us *ages* of queuing, but we didn’t stay on top too long; between the ferry this morning, and the rollercoaster in the afternoon, Colm’s inner ear was convinced the building was swaying by several feet, side to side! In any case, it was fantastic, and beautiful up there - amazing to see how buildings that seemed huge from the street seemed so small from above!
A slow wander down 5th Ave, and a stop at the NYPL for photos, brought us back to the hotel, and it’s now time to crash - we need it by now! Tomorrow we’re going to the Federal Reserve Bank, and then to see “The Producers” - should be an exciting day!
June 21, 2005
Well, Hooters last night was cheap & cheerful - good food, good prices, and nowhere near as sleazy as could have been anticipated. Installed Tiger when we got home, and fell straight asleep - whacked.
Up bright & early this morning, and took the subway downtown. Unfortunately, we only discovered when we got onto the train that anything behind the first five cars wouldn’t reach the platform, at our stop. So after a few stations of getting out & running to the next carriage, the conductor called out to us, and told us which carriage to get into =) Made life a little easier!
Once we got off, Colm followed everyone else off the train & out of the station… I went back to look for directions, and we finally got headed in the right direction for the ferry to Liberty Island! After that, it was hurry-up-and-wait time, first for the tickets (which we’d ordered in advance), then for the security check - which was *weird*. You walked into a machine, stood on the right spot, it puffed air up your shirt half a dozen times, then you waited for the green light… Apparently, the air is meant to dislodge any explosives particles you might have on you - then the air gets analysed, to check. There was also the by-now-usual x-ray and metal detector.
The Statue of Liberty was fairly un-impressive, but I got some nice pictures. We had some fun taking photos, as Colm had forgotten the memory card from his camera (having taken it out last night, to put pictures online). So we both shared mine, swapping it from camera to camera (mine doesn’t have the features he likes, and his is too complicated for me!) - but we got all the pictures we wanted in the end.
Then, it was onto the ferry again, and over to Ellis Island. This was much more interesting, although throughout the whole museum there were only two mentions of Ireland - a picture of an Irish washerwoman/housemaid, and one of a Cavan family. Seemed a little scant, considering the proportion of US immigrants that came from our shores. But the museum definitely made the whole trip worthwhile. Just as we were finished, the ferry was pulling up, so we ran out and made it. By the time we got back to Battery Park, it was about one o’clock, and unbearably hot.
We made it back to Times Square for a Planet Hollywood dinner (it was *yummy*!), and now we’re back at the hotel, digesting for a bit before we head off to Coney Island, and the Cyclone rollercoaster! Yay!
June 20, 2005
Well, we ventured down to Chelsea after a rest, dropped by the Chelsea Market, where I got a gorgeous ‘cupcake’, iced like a sunflower! It was a slightly dingier neighbourhood - some of the houses had rusting “Fallout Shelter” signs by their doors!
Just about made it to the subway, with aching feet, and ended up going considerably further north than we’d planned! So back on to a subway going the other direction, and we dropped in to Central Park. We wandered around the reservoir for a while, then across to Central Park East and the Museum Mile… We didn’t get far along there (only saw MoMA, and didn’t go in), before we gave up, and spotted a bus (while we were en route to the subway station), which brought us back to Times Square.
One look at the admission prices in Madame Tussauds made us certain we weren’t that interested in waxworks really, and we went back to the hotel, for Colm to change shoes… Now we’re off again, for yet more food =)
Well - we’ve sure done a lot of it this morning! After a quick hotel breakfast, we started out at the Rockefeller Centre - it was fairly drab and disappointing, and really not much to look at. The weather fairly matched - as cool as it’s been so far, and a bit grey. We arrived at the New York Public Library too early to go in, but still managed to get some pretty photos. Then we turned around, and took photos of the Chrysler building - it’s gorgeous =)
The next thing was the tour of the UN headquarters - we went through the metal detectors, passed our bags through the x-ray machine, and headed on in to the building. It was an interesting tour - we saw the EcoSoc chamber, and the GA - the Security Council was in session, so we couldn’t go in there. We also saw a statue from Hiroshima, and landmines from all around the world. And on a lighter note, there were a number of gifts, from member countries, that were well worth a peek =) By then, it was roasting, and sunny - although the humidity seems to have dropped to much more bearable levels.
Bloomingdales was rather a let-down, but Tiffany’s made up for it with sparkle! By then, our feet were nearly walked off us, so we dropped by the tourist information place to find somewhere to eat, grabbed a bite, and now we’re back at the hotel, cooling off. Photos will be at the usual place soon =)
My photos from today are at http://gallery.nerdchic.net/nyc/… Enjoy! =)