Living like a tourist and riding on the topless tour

17 09 2008

It was a birthday present from the husband, and it’s been on the ‘to do while we live in nyc’ list for a while: taking the topless bus. After all, they parade those tourists right by our apartment window every week.

So on Saturday, we hopped on. And off. I like the hopping. In fact, we went into the office to collect our boarding tickets and negotiated some free extras along the way (2 sunset cruise tix, valued at $51 each. Nice.). Then walked the heck out of Times Square and the weaving bus line down towards Penn Station & the 34th street Macy’s instead. Good decision on our part, only took 3 stops to make our way to the top of the bus.

We hopped off at South Street Seaport and hopped on the bus to Brooklyn – a place we haven’t explored too much yet. There we hopped off at Prospect Park, designed by the same guys that did Central Park and a project they supposedly consider to be more successful. It was beautiful. We felt like we were out in the country somewhere… not in New York City. We walked a bit and ate a bit and found a cocktail and went in to some creative stores and all kinds of good stuff.

Fast forward … night bus tour. Next day, the Upper West Side loop that goes by our apartment, and into Harlem, and … we didn’t know this, down the same street where we’re going to move to (but not by the apartment – yay for less bus traffic by future windows). We rode that bus twice. Two different tour guides each with their own slant on the things we passed by. We even hopped off in Harlem and explored Dinosaur bar-b-que … awesome … and Fairway grocery (way better than we expected – deserves its own post) … and then walked home (from 125th to 86th) down Riverside Park which was lovely as the sun was just nearly setting and the river and park were awesome.

So … a great weekend, a lovely extended birthday-excuse to do something from the list, rich memories to savor.





Philharmonic in the park

17 07 2008

At least 100,000 people knew where the action was in Manhattan on Tuesday night: central park. This was the last free concert of the season on the great lawn of central park – and the NYC Philharmonic brought down the house & brought in the crowds.

Credits to Really Short - thanks for the pic!

Nice shot Smack!

Unlike the free concert over the weekend where 60,000 Bon Jovi fans clutched tickets & waited in forever lines to go through security body scans, shed backpacks and recycle water bottles before gaining their limited entrance to the park, this event was free and wide open for public enjoyment. And locals don’t mess around. Picnic blankets, lawn chairs, picnic basket backpacks are dug out of storage rooms and joined with brie, wine, champagne, grapes, sushi, deli delectables and the likes. Last year we learned the trick to find your friends on the great lawn: balloons. So we learned our lesson – C picked up an Elmo & a yellow smilie on his way home from work — and though the cell towers were crowded, Kelly + Dave + their long-lost friend, Marty + Natasha + their stranded friend managed to find their ways to our blanket where much merriment and listening enjoyment was made.

And what goes better after a philharmonic concert in central park then Fireworks!

YAY for NYC living. This is one benefit C & I will never forget — just being to walk outside our apartment, take a right & walk about a half-block into central park. In fact, at the aforementioned Bon Jovi concert, C & I realized we when we returned to our apartment that we could just open the windows and listen to the live serenade (which the city mixed with sounds of buses, passerby’s, and other rich city sounds).

Oops … almost forgot, anyone want a candy red grand piano?