Saturday/ last day in New York City

I tried one more time to get into the 9/11 Memorial, but the only slots available were late Saturday afternoon, and I didn’t make it back there to go inside.  (At the base of the tower a group of 9/11 conspiracy theory believers were making their case. Man! Give it up).  Late morning in Manhattan there were gusty winds, with showers in the afternoon.  I learned on the news two tornadoes touched down at the edge of New York City! — but no serious injuries were reported.

Here’s a day-time view of the Freedom Tower (One World Trade Center), now at 105 stories, already making it the tallest building in Manhattan. The steel frame has topped out; the spire of glass and antenna still has to follow.
The main entrance of the New York Times building on 8th Avenue (52 floors). It’s fairly new : completed in 2007.
I had to go check out Grand Central Station’s main entrance (Park Ave and 42nd St). It was one of the pictures of New York City in my ViewMaster (disk with slide show pictures) many, many years ago !
The Chrysler Building is not far away, on Lexington Ave and 42nd St. It is an Art Deco style skyscraper, and is surrounded by several other very, very fine examples of art deco.
Art Deco on Lexington Ave – and no, this is not the iPhone Apple, it’s a different Apple.
The corner of the same building (I couldn’t get enough of the Art Deco). I am not sure if the silver metal cladding on the building on the left is old or new.
The Stars and the Stripes on a lamp post on 42 nd Street.
This is a food vendor on a street corner by Bryant Park.
This is about 8 pm on Saturday night after a downpour, looking south over the trees in Bryant Park at 42nd Ave. Yes, that is the Empire State building (on 34th Ave).
A closer look at the Empire State building’s top, this is from 36th st and 6th Ave.
This is close to Herald’s Square where Macy’s is, a designer studio from what I can tell. I am having trouble keeping the raindrops off my camera lens.
A night time shot of Grand Central Station’s facade. Shortly after this it started raining hard again, and I went back to the hotel.

 

Friday/ Korea in New York

Our training is complete, three-hour exam and all (three essay type questions, and what a shock to write an exam in long-hand pen on paper!).  Here are some pictures from my Friday night walk-about.

This is an old entrance (still used) for Macy’s flagship store on Herald’s Square at 34th Ave. The first store (I believe it’s this one) opened in 1858, and the famous Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade have been sponsored since 1924.  (Is this not a scene straight out of the recent Sherlock Holmes movies?).

 

The small Korea town with a dozen or more restaurants on 32nd Ave is called Sam Ship Iga.
As one could expect, lots of Korean people on the street in this area.  And no doubt one will find excellent Korean barbecue inside this restaurant on W 32nd Ave.
Another restaurant sign on 32nd St. Am I in Shanghai? In Korea? No, it is right here in New York City.
This is a few streets up from 32nd Ave, around 39th Ave. A young Chinese couple (I am assuming they are Chinese) is just leaving the Szechuan Gourmet restaurant.

 

Thursday/ the New York Public Library

The New York Public Library is just over a century old and with 53 million items in inventory its size is second only to the Library of Congress.  One wonders how many of the books are available on-line .. it must be just a matter of time?

Here is the main entrance of the Library on 5th Ave, at its time of construction the largest marble structure in the United States. The building occupies two blocks between 40th and 42nd streets. Check out the two stone lions guarding the entrance.
This sign with a picture of a library lion is inside of the NYC PwC office building.
Here’s a Gray Line bus full of sight seers. The Book of Mormon musical advertised on the bus tells the story of two young Mormon missionaries sent to a remote village in northern Uganda, where a brutal warlord is threatening the local population. Naïve and optimistic, the two missionaries try to share the Book of Mormon, one of their scriptures—which only one of them knows very well—but have trouble connecting with the locals, who are more worried about war, famine, poverty, and AIDS than about religion. [Details from Wikipedia]

Wednesday/ midtown Manhattan

It was a long day at the office and we went out for dinner, so I did not have too much time for gallivanting around New York City and gawking at the buildings and the people !

It’s 7.30am and I’m sitting in the lobby waiting for my colleague to walk over to the PwC office. The rain gods smiled on us : dry while we walked over with a big downpour soon after that!
It is so easy to find one’s way with the phone’s GPS and maps. Just plug in the address you want to go to and presto! This is midtown Manhattan, the area directly below Central Park.
A little city park called Bryant Park is close to the hotel. This is a cityscape view from within the park.
This is Times Square, 42nd St and 7th Ave. Check out the New York Police Dept’s Tokyo-style police box right there on a strategic street corner.
There is a Hard Rock Cafe in the historic Paramount building, just off Times Square.
The police on horseback seem to be very popular tourist attractions !

 

Tuesday/ arrival in NYC

It’s been a long day since I got up at 4.00 am Seattle time to make my 7.00 am flight.  We left Seattle a little late, and there was light rain in New York City when I arrived, but everything went according to plan.    I had dinner with a colleague and then we went for a short walk to Times Square.  We also went down to the World Trade Center site. The 9/11 Memorial had already closed, though.

This is the Airtrain shuttle that runs between the Newark Airport terminals. I am on my way to the Newark Airport train station to catch a train on the New Jersey Transit system to NYC Penn Station.
On the NJ Transit train on the way to NYC Penn Station with very old industrial age structures flashing by.
Here is the main schedule board inside Pennsylvania (Penn) station in New York City.
At the Marriott Residence Inn on 6th Avenue. ‘All pets much be checked in’ would be better, not? Fido cannot check himself in with a ‘woof!’.
The McDonalds by Times Square is right up there with all the other gaudy neon signs and displays.
The corner of 7th Ave and 42nd Street.
The tower at 1 World Trade Center has 3,000 construction workers on site everyday, says a sign there. It is expected to be completed in mid-2013.

 

Monday/ planes and trains to New York City

I leave very early Tue morning to go to New York City to attend a training course set up by my firm (yes, the old dog can still learn a few new tricks).  I will arrive at Newark Liberty airport, and I need to get right into Manhattan.  I will take several trains to get there :  Newark Airtrain shuttle to the Newark Airport station, the New Jersey Transit to Penn Station in Manhattan, and then the New York subway train to get me to two blocks of the hotel.

The United Airlines website’s New York City picture.
The sprawling New Jersey Transit system. I start at Newark Airport station. And it’s good to know ahead of time there’s a Newark Penn Station and a New York Penn Station, and they are NOT the same!
Once in Manhattan, the New York subway will whisk me where I need to be (well, I make it sound easier than it is. Sometimes it takes a little time just to find out which exit to the street level to take!).

 

Sunday/ the Japanese Garden

It was just too perfect a day not to go outside for a walk, and so I did.  I walked down from my house to the Japanese Garden, adjacent to a much larger park called the Washington Park Arboretum.  It’s no more than a mile or so.   The pictures are all from inside the Japanese Garden.

I walked from the blob to the square, not much more than a mile. There’s a steep embankment where the street goes by Japanese Garden, so I had to walk northwards by it and then backtrack to get there. On the way back I got ‘tired’ (codeword for lazy?) and caught the bus on 24th Ave to take me back up the hill to 16th Ave!

 

Saturday/ Bumbershoot 2012

I always look for the posters for Seattle’s annual music and performing arts festival called ‘Bumbershoot*’.  This one was one a newspaper box on the street.
*Bumbershoot means umbrella! Bumber- (alteration of umbr- in umbrella) + -shoot (alteration of -chute in parachute).  First Known Use: circa 1896. [source: http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/bumbershoot].

Friday/ a blue moon is not blue ..

.. it is simply the second full moon in a calendar month, and they come by every two or three years.  So this Friday most of the world had a blue moon, but not everyone.  For earthlings that live in the far eastern parts of the globe such as New Zealand, the full moon came on Sept 1.  (Japan’s blue moon came in at 10.58pm on Friday night, so with an hour to spare).

I thought of the Blue Moon beer from Golden Colorado on Friday night (I have been at the brewery), and sure enough, here is a print ad that they ran. The Blue Moon is a Belgian style white beer.

 

Thursday/ the driest August

We still have blue skies here and dry weather here in Seattle’s late-summer, with mild day temperatures (68°F/ 20°C).  In fact, it is clear that August 2012 will the driest in Seattle history with less than .01 inch of rain to show.  (Information from http://cliffmass.blogspot.com).

This combination traffic light/ street lamp pole is on the corner of Roy and Broadway.

 

Wednesday/ a house wrapped up in cloth

This is an old house close to 15th Avenue and Republican Street that is now all covered up in embroidered and knitted cloth.  It used to be a second-hand and antiquarian book store.  If the house is meant as a public work of art, no mention of it is made on the fencing around the house.   And it’s about to start raining every day here in Seattle – better take the cloth down before it becomes bedraggled with rain water, no?

The front of the house, steps and porch and all covered in embroidered (or knitted) cloth.
Here’s a Google Streetview shot. It’s the house behind the white picket fence,  right next to the Coastal Kitchen restaurant on 15th Ave.

 

Tuesday/ talking up a storm

So the Republican National Convention started a day late .. tropical storm Isaac passed by on the west of Tampa and became a Category 1 Hurricane as it made landfall in New Orleans.   The countdown to the USA presidential election now approaches 60 days, and most polls show president Obama in the lead in the ‘battleground’ states, though.  (The winner of each state gets a number of ‘electoral college’ votes, and first to 270 wins the election).

This map from weather.com. 12 inches of rain will obviously make a lot of trouble for the Gulf Coast, but once the storm has moved up to the Midwest, the rain from it could actually bring some relief to drought-stricken areas.
Here is New Jersey governor Chris Christie delivering his keynote speech at the Republican National Convention on Tuesday night.
.. with Republican nominee Mitt Romney and his wife Ann listening.
Here is a map I found on politico.com .. looks like Pres. Obama is slightly ahead in almost all the ‘battleground’ states.  Bush-Gore (2000) was 271-266, Bush-Kerry (2004) was 286-251 and Obama-McCain(2008) was 365-173. What will 2012 bring?

 

Monday/ the many forms of Scrabble

I love my Scrabble on my iPad.  I had time on Sunday to haul out my other Scrabble sets as well.   As far as I can tell there are no on-line versions yet for my Afrikaans edition of Scrabble, or the German one I bought in Vienna some years ago.   And check out the Japanese word game I bought just recently.

This is Scrabble on the iPad. You have to give it all you got to beat the ‘CPU’ machine like I did here.  OK, I’ll confess : ADNATION – (botany) the adhesion of different plants – I had the Scrabble program find for me. The computer built GLOBEFISH around ‘LO’ but check out my own 7 letter word : MISSPENT.
This is German. My German vocabulary is very shaky, so I’m kind of limited to 3 and 4 letter words !
Here is my Afrikaans Scrabble set. They used to be available in wooden tiles, but lately only in plastic.
It looks like Scrabble, and it has pretty pictures, so never mind that it will take 6 months of intense study of the Japanese language to play – I had to have it as a curiosity. I guess one can use the cheat sheet, even though you will not know what word you are building. These are katakana characters. Japanese also has hiragana and Latin charaters (called romaji).

 

the week-end

This is the back of my house, on a beautiful late-summer Saturday evening in Seattle. The happy faces in the picture have not had their burgers, apple pie and ice cream yet .. but they will soon. (We are all happy because I made it up into the picture without knocking the camera over, or falling onto my face as I ran around the table).   Nothing like having guests over to motivate one to clean your house and fill up your fridge with some beer and food, and so that’s what I did !

That’s me in the Kanto Lemon shirt (a lemon-flavored milk drink from Japan). Clockwise from me are Bill, Paul, Thomas, Bryan, Dave, Gary and Ken.
And here is the apple pie : every bit as tasty as its looks. We say ‘as American as apple pie’ even though apple pie as we know it today were already made in the 16th century in England !

 

 

Friday/ Tampa’s uninvited Convention guest

The 2012 Republican National Convention is set to start on Monday in Tampa, Florida .. or will it have to be canceled due to Tropical Storm Isaac set to arrive there just in time to make for a lot of rain and wind? And did you know that in the politically-charged and possibly protest-filled streets around the convention center, water guns will be strictly prohibited? Concealed handguns, on the other hand, will be perfectly legal.  Republican Governor Rick Scott refused a request from the police to issue an executive order prohibiting the transportation of firearms in downtown Tampa during the convention.

Thursday/ Doraemon travels the world

I am still opening my little souvenirs from Japan.  I found this world map with a set of Doraemon refigerator magnets in Tokyo, and felt compelled to buy it (because I think it is cute, not because I plan to travel to every country in the world!).   Doraemon is the intelligent robotic cat (from a manga series created in 1969), who travels back in time from the 22nd century to aid a schoolboy, Nobita Nobi.

Here is the background board with numbers for 50 countries, and a background panel for each. The USA is easy to figure out (No 39 -Empire State Building and Golden Gate Bridge), South Africa less so (No 22- a mountain or cliff, but that is NOT the famous Table Mountain from Cape Town).
And here are the Doraemons for each country. The United States Doreamon is dressed up in a Statue of Liberty costume, and the South Africa Doraemon has a Nelson Mandela shirt and a vuvuzela (well done!).

 

Wednesday/ expensive parking

I was running late for a meeting downtown and had to park near the Seattle library.  With no time left to search for parking,  I turned into a downtown parking garage; thought the parking would be similar to that for Pacific Place a few blocks away – $6 for 1½ hrs.  But no-o-o : 1½ hrs cost 17 big bucks.  Ouch – and oh well.   (Yes, I saw the rates on the board going in, but I couldn’t back out!).

Here’s a snap of the Seattle Public Library on 3rd Ave and Madison at lunch hour on Wednesday. All Seattle Library locations will close Monday, Aug. 27 through Monday, Sept. 3 for Labor Day due to citywide budget cuts.

 

Tuesday/ drink it gokuri

I could not get myself to throw this cool aluminum can in the recycle bin, so it came home with me all the way from a vending machine in Tokyo!  And what would ‘gokuri’ mean?  It is a Japanese adverb, roughly meaning  (drink down) gulpingly or noisily.

Suntory’s Gokuri Banana from Suntory comes in a screw-top aluminum can.

 

 

 

 

 

(The back of the can). Wao! It’s very good .. even if it’s only 15% real banana.

 

Monday/ sunset on Olive Way

I was just leaving the Half Price Books store on Capitol Hill on Sunday night when the sun was setting, etching out the Space Needle in the distance.  I tried to get a good picture with my phone camera, but the contrast between the bright sky and the dimly lit foreground was too great to get it all in one shot.  So here’s what you do: you take TWO pictures, and then use Photoshop to combine them.  Yes, it’s a little work, but didn’t the combined picture come out great?

This is the combined picture, with the Space Needle and apartment building nicely etched against the sky, and the foreground with the white wall properly lit.  There is also a Starbucks in front of the apartment building.
And here are the two original pictures. No foreground visible in the first one, and on the second one the bright background makes the Space Needle and building outline fuzzy. So I used the best of both!

 

Sunday/ resting up

I took it easy today, just resting up and reading the Sunday newspapers.  I did walk down eight blocks to Starbucks on Olive Way to have some coffee and a slice of lemon pound cake -as birthday cake! .. I will look to celebrate it later, such as next weekend.  One does not need a birthday for throwing a party, right?

This is Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney (right), with his running mate Paul Ryan, from a write-up in the alternative newspaper Seattle Weekly. As the writer Paul Constant says – Ryan is .. ‘the Republicanist of Republicans’ .. ‘anti-choice, pro-discrimination, anti-gay, anti-public education, anti-environment, pro-big business, anti-gun control and anti-separation of church and state’.
Not much new information about jet lag in this article from the NY Times, but they do confirm my experience that east-to-west travel is much harder to adjust to, than west-to-east.
Since I always struggle to recommend to visitors what sights to see or what to do in Johannesburg, I’m keeping this article from the NY Times Travel section.  (No mention of the terrible incident from last week at a mine 40 miles northwest of Johannesburg in which 34 miners were shot and killed by police during a violent protest). 
.. but I’d be very hesitant to say it’s OK for a foreigner on his/ her own to go attend a soccer match at FNB Stadium.