Our third day in NYC begins at our regular coffee house, Culture Espresso for a great coffee and yummy breaky while we plan our day. Our first tourist stop was the “Ghost City Station" on our way to Brooklyn. This is a closed subway station that you will sometimes see photographs of, but can never really get to without staying on the train at the end of the line and you will go past it, but you have to be quick!
We make our way to Brooklyn where we head to "One Girl Cookie" for some Spiced Pumpkin Woopie pies and hot chocolate. So yummy, it's not a cookie and not really a cake, but it's soft and tasty! Next stop was the Brooklyn Farmacy & Soda Fountain for an egg cream soda! These are soooo good, creamy, fresh & and slightly tangy. Contrary to the name it does not contain egg or cream, it's a little milk, chocolate syrup and soda water which is mixed until frothy (check out this link for more info... here). Brooklyn Farmacy & Soda Fountain is still decked out like a 1920's drug store and sells all sorts of bottled, jarred & canned goodies, like bloody mary mixes, ice-cream sauces and other yummies. We grabbed a little lunch and drank our fresh egg cream soda before taking a VERY long walk (due to incorrect instructions from the soda jerk) to the Brooklyn Bridge and across to Manhattan. Once back on the island we walked though the Grand Central Station Market which is very much like a cross between an indoor Queen Vic Market and the Myer Food hall, and then headed over to the Midtown Comics for some t-shirts and comics.
It's time for some dinner and if you're looking for some great BBQ ribs then you have to check out "Rub BBQ". Served on paper plates with paper napkins and with drinks in plastic cups, the ribs are SO good and the chicken wings in American with burn your lips off!! Paper plates aside, the service was fantastic and the food great, but it was time to walk it off. So we headed down to the gay district of NYC (well one of them), which is Chelsea. I found it to be a really interesting contrast between New York's gay district and the Castro in San Fran. The Castro seemed to be busy no matter what time we were there morning or night and just hummed with friendly faces and constant smiles. Chelsea on the other hand was almost the complete opposite, with very few people around and it really seemed very small and quiet. As we were walking back to the hotel we did come across a little bakery which seemed to be very popular, called Billie's Bakery where I purchased a small spiced pumpkin cheesecake and David got a half kilo slice of banana cake! Without a word of a lie, the slice of cake was MASSIVE!!!
At this point we really needed to keep walking as we were FREEZING! So it was off to the International Centre of Photography back up in midtown. This was one of my major highlights in NYC and possibly one of the major highlight of the whole trip. One of the things I was really looking forward to in USA was seeing a great collection of photography, and until this point I'd been kinda disappointed. The Centre had three exhibits going when we visited, and we were lucky enough to have caught a free tour of all three just as we arrived.
The three exhibits were:
- Signs of Life: Photographs by Peter Sekaer
This was a really interesting exhibit for me, I found his strongest images where those of his portraits. He had a really great way of being able to connect with people and portray a very human and "real" story in him images. I found some of his architectural shots really captivating, especially those with great detail captured. He had a very good eye for being able to "document" details and a strong ability to create great stories in a very simple image. However, like a number of documentary photographers of his time, he wasn't above "stepping into the frame" and creating an image if one did not present itself. What I mean by this is, there's an image of a group of children fighting over something on the ground in front of the photographer. What had occurred was that Peter had seen these very poor children playing and had thrown a handful of pennies on the ground in front of him, thus "creating" the image he needed, showing how poor the children were and that they would fight other each other just to get a few pennies. Ethical? You decide...
- Harper's Bazaar: A Decade of Style
- Remembering 9/11
After an exhausting day; both physically & emotionally; it was time for room service dinner back at the hotel!
But then it was off to MoMA for some more culture, and again we were pressed for time so it was a real whirlwind tour with only enough time to whiz through the top two floors, before heading down to the third floor to the photographic exhibits. You could easily spend a full day in this centre of art. Of course we did lose 45mins having to wait for the cloaking service so we could check our backpack.
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| Welcome Seamus! |
Our second late day in NYC (and the USA), we began the morning with coffee followed by shoe SHOPPING! (Yeah I know, so gay!) I am pleased to announce that I have found my new range of comfortable and spunky shoes - Timberland! There are sexy work boots, comfortable runners and very classy dress shoes, all in the one range! But enough about shoes! LOL
It was now time to write postcards and blog entries, before getting ready for my birthday surprise Dinner & Show evening. After showering, shaving and sprucing up it was off to Broadway!
Dinner was at the elegant Barbetta, a 106 year old classic, elegant and stylish Italian restaurant. This place is so good that even ex-president Bill Clinton & Hillary Clinton eat here!! Of course we only found this out once we arrived at the restaurant, as the staff were being briefed about security for Mr & Mrs Clinton, who were to be dining here the following night. I find it a little rude that they didn't invite us to join them!! ;-P
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| Barbetta |
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| Secret Show Revealed! |
I'm so glad that David secretly brought tickets for this production. It was just Magical! The sets are fabulously elaborate, the music is so much fun and the story is simply wonderful. It was full of emotion and magic, just like almost everything Disney does. The actors were amazing and you can see just how much fun they were having doing the show as the audience was watching it. I would highly recommend seeing this musical production whenever and wherever you get the chance, because it is just Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious!! You really do come out of the theatre saying, "why didn't I have Mary Poppins as a nanny!"... Or maybe that's just me! :-) Needless to say this was a wonderful way to finish our time in NYC and a magical birthday present! Thank you my Love.
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| Empire State Building |
It was an express ride up to the observatory level due to the limited visibility and there was NO line at all. Once we arrived at the observatory level you understood what the term "zero visibility" really meant. It means you can see white. Yep just white.
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| Empire State Building |
Thank you to everyone that has followed us through the blog and on facebook, your comments and support have been great!
"Let the mind be enlarged to the grandeur of the mysteries, and not the mysteries contracted to the narrowness of the mind." - Francis Bacon




