Tag Archives: harlem

Avoiding Arrest at the United Nations and Falafel Fun Times, New York, May 2012

18 Sep

Tuesday May 8th – After yet another sleepless night filled with a snoring soundscape and nightmare visions of mice scampering through my suitcases, I decided to sleep in again; it was the only way I could get uninterrupted sleep for a couple of hours! I eventually crawled out of bed at around 10 and had a shower before going down to the cafeteria just in time to get my free breakfast bagel and fruit. The weather, once again, looked pretty ratty, and I grumpily munched on my brekkie as I searched for somewhere to sit in the common room to consider my options for the day.

As luck would have it, Hicham was sitting there with his laptop, also trying to figure out what to do with his day. I knew that I wanted to visit the United Nations, but had no other inspiration; Hicham knew that he wanted to visit Columbia University, but had no other inspiration. Perfect! We decided to team up for the day. It had never even crossed my mind to visit Columbia University, so I was happy to go along for a taste of the unexpected.

So, after finishing breakfast we grabbed our jackets and umbrellas and started walking north along Amsterdam Avenue in the direction of the university, into the Morningside Heights area. At around 112th Street my eyes were shocked by the appearance of a MASSIVE cathedral. And I don’t just mean ‘rather big’, I mean MASSIVE. It turns out that we had just encountered The Cathedral Church of St John the Divine. Now, I didn’t know much about this place at the time, but apparently this cathedral is the biggest ‘something’ in New York/the world. I say ‘something’, because there is some dispute as to what exactly it is the biggest of. The general consensus is that it is the largest Gothic cathedral in the world. It also seems accepted that it is the largest cathedral in New York City. There is some disagreement, however, about it being the largest Anglican cathedral in the world… but let’s just say that it is AMONG the largest Anglican cathedrals in the world!!! Whatever the case, it’s big, and it sticks out like a sore thumb, plopped down in the middle of northern Manhattan as it is. We loitered on the steps for a bit, considering a visit, but it looked quite imposing, the doors were closed and we didn’t want to step in uninvited as tourists. So, after admiring its grand, curvy, granite exterior, we trotted onwards and upwards.

Roughly bounded between 113th Street and 123rd Street to the north and south, and Morningside Park and Riverside Park to the east and west, Columbia University is one of those brainiac think-tanks of legend. I’ve grown up with it on the periphery of my knowledge of well-respected educational institutions. Their ‘notable alumni’ list reads like a who’s who of politicians, scientists, economists, journalists, actors, writers and everybody else who’s ever done anything cool, and also includes none other than the current president of the United States, Barack Obama.

Giving A Speech At Columbia University… Or Am I?
New York, May 2012

Hicham and I started at the Low Library, which looked a bit like a miniature Pantheon (and which, as it turns out, is not actually a library any more…!). Avoiding the visitor centre, we snuck into the central area of the building and, to our delight, found one of those fancy lecterns that are used to give official speeches and talks, complete with ‘University of Columbia In The City of New York’ emblazoned across the front of it. Checking that nobody was around, we climbed the stage and made pretend speeches to our imaginary audience of adoring fans; my theory on crunchy peanut butter and its role in the world of quantum physics and neuroscience was a hit! Jumping down off the podium before the men in white coats showed up to drag us away, we tootled around the campus a bit and made our way to the economics/business area. Hicham was looking for some info on how much it would cost to do an MBA at Columbia… when he found out and told me, I nearly choked. It was into the tens of thousands and I’m pretty sure that someone would have to be a multimillionaire businessman (or willing to mortgage off their souls and/or their first-born child) before even enrolling in something like that. Blimey!

Leaving the university, we headed northwest to Grant’s Tomb. It’s a big ol’ stone edifice, built to honour the Civil War general, Ulysses S Grant, who eventually became President of the USA. My historical knowledge of him is sketchy, to say the least, but I know he was on the side of the Union/the north, and I know that he kicked some serious ass, and that he had a formidable beard… although I guess that was common for those days. The most striking thing about the tomb is the fact that it is fronted by an avenue of trees… a nice bit of greenery in a concrete jungle. We decided not to go in; had Grant been a hero of mine I might have succumbed, but as it was I just wanted to keep wandering. We headed downhill, towards the river, taking a brief stroll through Riverside Park. I watched with glee as squirrels bounded around in the brush, enjoying the trees and the sense of calm.

We followed the wide steps down, down, down until we hit the edge of the riverside freeway. I can’t remember which of us made a joke about being all alone in the woods, and at the mercy of a knife-wielding serial killer, but I remember that I was silly enough to feel the hair rise on the back of my neck for a moment or two. I’m pretty sure Hicham was too, but being a dignified kind of guy he’d never admit it. I assured myself that the crunch, crunch I could hear from ‘over there’ was in fact a squirrel, not the heel of an inbred redneck with a harelip and a machete approaching his prey… I DO remember, though, that we ended up “challenging each other to a race up the stairs” (read: giving ourselves the excuse to run like scared rabbits out of the woods), huffing and puffing about how much fitter each of us was than the other, but both very relieved to be out of the undoubtedly all-too-close cousin-marrying clutches of the next Jeffrey Dahmer. We were both thoroughly shamed when a jogger came pelting up behind us, at twice the speed we had been going, and barely out of breath. Sigh!

We kept walking northwards, first under the subway line and then back out to the river again, passing a place that bore the sign of the ‘Cotton Club’. Now, correct me if I’m wrong, but I thought that the original Cotton Club closed years ago…? If so, this place was playing on the infamy of a name, and to be honest I would not be dragging my backside out to the arse-end of nowhere late at night to see if this place was indeed the real deal. If it’s the real Cotton Club, well then, I missed an opportunity, didn’t I?

Highway underpass, West Harlem
New York, May 2012

We noticed streams of police cars coming up the slip road from behind the club, one after the other… either that’s the police car holding yard and it was shift start time, or something funny was going on! We walked out to the West Harlem Piers Park off 130th Street, and once again I was sad that the weather was so cloudy and crap. It’s not much of a pier, but the view on a sunny day down the west side of Manhattan would have been a corker. A couple of local girls were sat having a very intense conversation; I think one had just found out that her boyfriend was a cheating bastard. I wanted to pat her on the arm but figured that it was probably best not to touch emotionally unstable strangers! We sat for a little bit, stretching our aching legs (which had been walking for at least 2 or 3 hours by this point) before walking back to the subway line and following it along until we found a station. By this point, the subway was no longer a ‘subway’, and was in fact overground, which is not terribly unusual outside the main downtown areas of Manhattan.

Blending In To The Crowd At Grand Central Station
New York, May 2012

Soon afterwards we were disgorged from the subway into Grand Central Station, and we followed the human traffic into the main draw of the station: the Main Concourse. Grand Central Station, to me, is the New York of old; stately tunnels with carved archways, commuter rail lines leading to points beyond the five boroughs, the American flag hovering over a giant hall, and people scurrying from here to there at breakneck speed. The clock in the centre of the concourse is familiar from a zillion movies (if you’ve seen Madagascar, this is where the animals get caught before being shipped out) and the trio of arched windows on each end smacks of old-time elegance. The turquoise ceiling is patterned with gold representations of stellar constellations, and the windows on the sides keep the place bright and airy. We stood in respectful silence for a little bit, snapping the odd photo, before being approached by an eerily wide-eyed girl who asked if we wanted her to take our photo. We gratefully said yes, so she took one very quickly (it was at a wonky angle and actually cut off the flag that Hicham had asked her to include), and then started jabbering about how she was actually in the middle of a job interview (!) where she had to approach people and talk to them… and then she ran off. Hicham and I shared an eyebrow-lifting moment, watching as she disappeared into the crowds. I wonder what on earth the interview was for, and how approaching us qualified her to do ANY job. She didn’t really talk to us, so what was she meant to find out…? I’m guessing sales, but who can tell?

Me and Hicham at Grand Central Station
New York, May 2012

We walked up the stairs and were surprised to find an Apple store, right there in the middle of the station, no walls to separate it from the open-air arch of the concourse. Talk about prime retail space; I dread to think what the rent would be for a store like that. And yet… think of the exposure. Even if they don’t sell much from the store, the fact that every day, thousands of people passing through the station see the giant Apple logo hanging up there is in itself a marketing coup. Genius.

We left the station, exiting onto the street and passing the shoe-shine stands. Both of us were wearing open shoes, so sadly there was no visit to the shoe-shiner that day! We were walking along 42nd Street, heading to the East River, when it started to drizzle. Eurgh. Poor Hicham’s flip-flops were rubbing and I have to say we were pretty miserable. Damn the rain! I was starving by this point, too, and I don’t make good company when I’ve got the hungers, so I dropped into a little bakery that just happened to be nearby… how convenient! The place was called ‘Baked by Melissa’, and all they sold were cute-looking mini cupcakes. They were 3 for $3, so I chose one ‘mint chocolate chip’, one ‘chocolate chip pancake’, and one ‘mini of the month’, which was triple chocolate fudge (which was by far the best). I offered Hicham one but he gallantly turned it down, and I snaffled them in about 0.3 seconds. Sugared up, I was ready to continue.

We finally reached the United Nations complex, windswept and slightly damp, but in one piece. The first thing we noticed was the giant row of flags lined up against the edge of the complex, and we followed those to the visitor entrance, which was surrounded by a few sculptures (my favourite was the gun with the knot in it) and semi-permanent security screening areas. We spotted some South American men in traditional costume; Hicham approached them and it turns out they were visiting from the Amazon.

All our bags and belongings were scanned and searched before we were able to enter the main building; I was VERY aware that we were being closely watched and that if one building was going to have some crazy-ass security in place, it would be here. We entered a surprisingly dull-looking entrance area, lined on one side by portraits of all the Secretary-Generals of the UN – including the current incumbent, Ban Ki-Moon. All of them were smiling benevolently except for one called Kurt Waldheim who, quite frankly, looked a little bit threatening. Later research tells me that he was a Nazi soldier who allegedly tried to cover up his military past… did the painter know this and perhaps try to convey it in his painting? Either way, it looks like he spent his time as UN Secretary-General honorably…

Hicham and I booked ourselves onto the next guided tour (one does not simply wander about the UN by oneself, unfortunately), and he rested his feet while I investigated the exhibition in the foyer, which was an interesting display on the voices of the Holocaust. There was a video playing witness testimonies from war crimes trials, as always compelling but disturbing. Eventually, our tour was called, and we were equipped with security badges and high-tech headphones so that we could hear the voice of our guide clearly, no matter how far we wandered from the group. What a great idea! I could really have used that as a teacher – no more voice fatigue!! Our first stop was the United Nations Security Council, where all the ins and outs were explained to us. The basic function of the council is to keep the peace, settle disputes, and take action where necessary. On one hand I was in awe, and on the other hand I was a bit, well, disillusioned. I mean, this is the same council that has been unable to stop the bloodshed in numerous countries (Syria currently foremost in my mind) and was overridden by Bush for his witchhunt in Iraq. I just had to tell myself that it probably stopped a billion or so other potential ‘disturbances’, and of course we never hear about the successes because the wars never happen… or so we hope!

Both of us took a bunch of pictures and were so tied up in it that we barely noticed that our group was leaving… before we knew it, they had slipped into a lift and disappeared. Panic hit; here we were, strolling around a highly secure area with cameras… and Hicham could not find his security card. I had mental images of both of us being shipped in manacles to Guantanamo Bay; not exactly the way I had hoped to return to Cuba! Thankfully our guide came out looking for us before I felt the need to burst into tears in the hallway; I resisted the urge to hug her knees and thank her for my freedom!

Where all the big decisions are made – The United Nations General Assembly
New York, May 2012

We rejoined our group at the United Nations General Assembly – the large hall where the magic happens. We took seats in the viewing gallery. Tones of austere green and brown abounded, and the olive-leaf-and-globe UN logo took proud centre stage. All member nations, no matter how small, get their vote at the General Assembly. They are arranged in alphabetical order from the right of the President, and at each session the alphabet is rotated. So, for example, one session will have Azerbaijan next to the President, but the next session will have Bangladesh, and the next will have Cuba, and then D, E, and F will get their turn, and so on. It’s a nice way of observing equality. There were niches and nooks and dials for translators, and I was just dumbstruck that I was actually here in this international powerhouse.

Reluctantly leaving the General Assembly, we were taken on a little tour of the UN’s global objectives, and shown some of the things they wish to avoid or eradicate. A display of land mines creeped me out, as did a terrible photograph of a van in Angola that had basically been torn to shreds by gunfire. A man rested against a wall nearby which was strewn with bullet holes, casually cradling a giant gun in his lap with his leg up. That picture shows everyday life for this man. How lucky we are, and how easy it is to forget that.

Moving on, we saw something that I had read about when I was quite young, and which had caused me some distress at the time. I read Paula Danziger’s ‘Remember Me To Harold Square’ when I was about 10 years old, a rip-roaring pre-teen tale of a young girl living in New York. Her parents send her, her dorky little brother and a (conveniently) handsome young male friend of the family on a scavenger hunt around New York City during the summer holidays. Thinking about it now, that book probably had a lot to do with my adult love of New York… hmmm. Revelations! 😀 Anyway, Kendra, Oscar and Frank (ridiculous names, thinking back on it now) spend weeks exploring the city, and one of their tasks is to visit the United Nations building. She goes on a tour and sees an exhibition featuring the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. I was interested enough to do some reading about it at the time, and what I read, as a 10-year-old, absolutely horrified me; stories of burned bodies and total destruction which, I’m pretty sure, gave me nightmares. Thank god we didn’t have the internet back then or I would have been subjected to thousands of images and videos, too! One of the things that Kendra mentioned seeing on her UN tour was a statue which was salvaged from a cathedral in Nagasaki. And, walking around a corner at the UN, I was surprised to see it with my own eyes after so many years – Saint Agnes, clutching a lamb. The front looked old and a bit battered but relatively unscathed, as apparently the statue had fallen on its face. However, the rear of the statue was a twisted mass of molten, scorched rock; can you imagine temperatures so high that they melt rock? And can you imagine that heat roaring through your living room one Thursday morning, swallowing up and burning everything and everyone you know? Something like 80,000 people died in one go. Eighty THOUSAND. And that was just Nagasaki. Not to mention all the injured, and (I suspect) all the people damaged by radiation for years afterwards. Bloody hell. Eighty thousand. It feels so detached from modern man, something that savages would do in the dark ages, but it was only 67 years ago. American soldiers dropped bombs that killed thousands upon thousands of civilians. It’s no surprise that the Japanese largely retreated from international tourism until the 70s and 80s; I would have been shit-scared of going anywhere if a foreign country had exercised its right to blow hundreds of thousands of my people to smithereens. It puts the 3000 victims of September 11th into perspective a bit. We’re just lucky that Japan hasn’t developed a thirst for revenge, quite frankly, or we’d all be screwed. Maybe that’s why America is so frightened of anyone else having nuclear power, seeing as they were the only government to have actually used it on others in warfare. Honestly, I was disturbed. Once again, I thanked my lucky stars that I was born in a different place and time.

Continuing our tour, we learned about the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, covering issues from torture to education and from slavery to culture, religion, childhood and motherhood. We also followed a display of the UN Millennium Development Goals, which basically covered the improvement of the aforementioned human rights, along with equality, sustainability, child mortality and disease management. It was inspiring; one can only hope that the world keeps working towards these goals. Every little helps. I can’t help but be a cynic, though, and suspect that most people are too busy looking out for Number One to really give half a second’s thought about the millions who are out there suffering. And hey, I’m not blameless either. You come out of a place like the UN questioning what YOU do to make your world a better place for others who are less fortunate than yourself. I think a lot of us have some real soul-searching to do, and a realignment of government and social policies wouldn’t hurt, either. (Understatement of the millennium!)

Somehow I don’t think I’d ever pass the height regulations to be a UN Peacekeeper!
New York, May 2012

I got to try on a UN Peacekeeper’s helmet, which was lots of fun but it was too big for me – both literally and figuratively speaking. However, I was particularly inspired by the School In A Box initiative. A paltry sum of money (less than we might spend on dinner out, for example) buys a metal box filled with all the basics for a classroom in a remote or underprivileged area. The inside lid of the box doubles as a small blackboard, and contains everything from a solar-powered radio, chalk and notebooks to paint that can be used to convert any wall into blackboard space. I was also happy to see them mention http://www.freerice.com , an initiative from the World Food Programme that I’ve always encouraged my more advanced students to use. It’s a simple word game, and for every answer you get correct, 10 grains of rice are donated. Not bad, eh? And for so little effort on our part. If you’ve got a few free seconds, go and play. 🙂

A veritable feast set out at the United Nations
New York, May 2012

Anyway, we finished our tour and my head was buzzing with all the awesome ideas I’d just seen. It was raining outside and they were ushering people outside as fast as possible because the complex was closing. True to our sneaky style of the day, we spotted something being set up and wandered over to have a look, deaf to the calls of “Please leave the building now!” It turns out that those men from the Amazon that we encountered earlier were part of a larger delegation which had come to the UN for some sort of show and demonstration, and they were setting up a stage and a display of traditional food in a colourful pattern on a raised platform. FOOD! Both of us were starving. We must have looked pretty pitiful because one of the guys who was setting up ushered us over and asked us if we wanted to try some of what they were laying out. And – what a surprise – we DID want to try it! They had a few different types of mega-corn (the kernels were about 3 times the size of the corn I usually see), some of it roasted, some of it toasted (or maybe dried), and a baking tray full of soft mushy corn that was delicious. They also had beans, and we had a good go of everything before thanking our gracious host and scarpering before the security guards (who were already eyeing us suspiciously) realised we weren’t supposed to be there.

From the UN we walked back to Grand Central Station, and Hicham and I parted ways; he went walking, and I went back through the hallways to the subway to go back to the hostel for a little bit, before I was due to meet Calvin.

Later that evening, Calvin and I met at The Hummus Place (on Broadway, between 98th and 99th Street). Calvin had told me to choose our dinner and I really fancied a good, crunchy falafel. As it turned out, Calvin had never tried hummus OR falafels before, so it was a lucky pick! We had a veritable feast of falafels (greenish in the middle, full of herbs, mmmm) with fresh warm pita, babaganoush, labneh and hummus with whole chickpeas, and it was EXCELLENT. Almost as good as the stuff I had in Jordan! ;P It makes my mouth water just thinking about it. It also came with something that I think is called za’tar – a green herby, bitey mix that you put with all the other good stuff! We tore at the pita with gusto and there was barely a morsel left on the plates – quite an achievement for two fairly small people! AND, not to be defeated (and not really ready for the night to end), we decided to go in search of dessert afterwards as well!

Calvin surveys our sweet, chocolatey feast at Max Brenner, Union Square
New York, May 2012

Calvin had heard of a chocolate cafe that he wanted to try, and I am NEVER one to turn down chocolate, so off we went, in the direction of Union Square. As it turns out, this chocolate cafe was none other than the inimitable Max Brenner, an Israeli company that has already seen great success in Australia… and I daresay that the loads of hard-earned wonga that my friends and I throw at it at every opportunity has helped with its success somewhat! The menu in the States is far more extensive than the one in Australia though, so I was happy to find that I could still find something new and different. It was past 10pm, but the place was PACKED; Calvin and I managed to get the last table for two while larger groups waited. Subdued lighting, chocolatey-brown decor and ridiculously cool loungey music made for a VERY comfortable atmosphere. Our neighbours were totally crackers (or at least, the girl was; her awkwardly loud chatter and sudden outburst of “SO YOU WANNA COME TO GUATEMALA WITH ME?!?” was greeted with open-awed shock from her male counterpart), but we ignored them and focused on the task at hand – dessert. We ordered, and when it arrived it was like heaven had come to the earth. We had a ‘Sharing Fondue’, although I reckon that – despite its monstrous size – we could have easily polished off one each out of pure greed! The dish included a tutti frutti waffle (a waffle covered with mixed berries and ice cream), brownie squares, banana tempura, milk chocolate and white chocolate bars with crunchy bits inside, chocolate fondue, fresh strawberries and bananas, marshmallows, and a chocolate sauce on the side. HOT. DAMN. The whole thing was also accompanied by a mini barbeque grill, complete with blue flame, upon which we were instructed to toast our marshmallows. Dear Lord. It was amazing.

When the cheque came, it was in a little pencil tin embossed with the words “Money for Life. Chocolate for the Soul.” Awesome. We had to basically push-start ourselves off the chairs to get moving, weighed down as we were with falafels and chocolate, but once we got rolling we were okay. We had a quick look around Union Square, but it was a bit rainy, so off we went, home to the hostel, to catch up with Hicham and Karen and anyone else who was around in the common room. What a day!

Thanks for stopping by,

Tara.

Gospel Music and Here Comes The Sun, Do-Do-Do-Dooooo!!! New York, May 2012

11 Jun

Sunday May 6th – Calvin had heard of a great place to have a gospel brunch in Harlem, so he and I arranged to meet up on Sunday morning to go and listen to some great music. He had met a woman in a bank who had introduced him to a gospel singer, and it was through this connection that he found out about Epiphany’s Cafe.

So, early-ish on Sunday morning, we made our way uptown on the subway. The weather was STILL grey!!! As we exited the station, we were unexpectedly swarmed by thousands of cyclists on the Five-Borough Bike Ride… not something we had expected!!! They took a long time to pass us, and luckily there were a lot of cops around to direct the traffic.

We kept walking and came across a MASSIVE queue that snaked around the corner of a block, along the block and then down another corner. Everybody in it was clutching guide books and daypacks. Both of our hearts stopped when we thought that MAYBE this was a queue for the place we were going to, but a quick stop to talk to one of the people waiting told us that the queue was for the Abyssinian Baptist Church service. Crikey. I had previously thought about visiting the Abyssinian Baptist Church for a Sunday morning service but this queue tells me that it’s already turned into… well, into a bit of a freakshow. I had always wanted to go to a gospel service but I didn’t want to feel like I was a spectator pointing fingers at the zoo, if you know what I mean; I felt a bit uncomfortable about viewing a religious service as a tourist attraction.

Not to say that I won’t be doing something similar at some point in the future, but it had never quite sat right with me. And seeing this queue, I just thought, bloody hell. There will be almost as many tourists as there are worshippers there. I was glad that we were going to a cafe. I don’t need to be inside the church to enjoy the music. And, as Sonya (the singer we met that day) ended up saying, “The church is inside you; you don’t have to be inside the church.” As someone who believes in a god but not necessarily organised religion, this sat very nicely with me.

We trotted past the queue and found Epiphany’s on a nearby corner. One of the many things that was nice about spending time with Calvin is that he was just as organised as I was. He had a map with our destination on it and he had a route in his head; I didn’t have to know where we were going, I just went. Often when I’m travelling, I’m alone so I always have to know where I am, or if I have company the people I’m travelling with generally leave it up to me because I have a good sense of direction and a good idea of where we’re headed. So in this case it was quite refreshing (and, I have to say, quite relaxing, too) to share the reins with someone.

We arrived at Epiphany’s, which turned out to be a nice little dark box of a cafe. It was pretty packed, so we shared a table with another couple until some other people cleared out and we got a table of our own. What a lovely way to spend a late morning and an early afternoon! The singers were Sonya Rogers and the Gospel Gems (all in their choir outfits), accompanied by two young men on a keyboard and on a drum kit. They sang a bunch of my favourite gospel songs along with a few lesser-known ones. It actually surprised me how many of them I knew; I guess a lot of gospel has sort of entered the ‘modern musical vernacular’. We beamed when they sang ‘Oh Happy Day’, shimmied to ‘Down By The Riverside’, stamped to ‘When The Saints Go Marching In’, clapped along to ‘This Little Light of Mine’, and sang along to ‘Go Tell It On The Mountain’. These three women had the most powerful voices, and what a vocal range! While we listened, we chose from the small menu to eat. We had waffles with a coriander-cream cheese dip, and some sort of corn twists with capsicum dip. The food was a bit ‘meh’, but we weren’t there for the food, and the music more than made up for it. We ended up staying for two sets just to hear our favourites again, and Sonya made a point of coming up and saying hello to us, as she remembered Calvin from the previous day. She just seemed like such a lovely lady; I was very happy to spend my Sunday there.

THE SUN!!! Where have you been for so long?!?
Outside the Chelsea Market,
New York, May 2012

Afterwards, we were still a bit hungry so we decided to head down to the Chelsea Market for lunch. Then I heard that Calvin had never been to the High Line Park, and that was that! We had to go, even if the weather was sucky! When we exited the subway station at 14th Street, though, something wierd happened. I could feel… warmth on my skin. My jumper felt a bit too hot. And then we realised… THE SUN WAS OUT!!!!! After days of grey skies and mist and rain, it was SUNNY! This prompted a short period of insanity where we pranced about in the middle of the street, waving our arms in the air, taking pictures of each other and the blue sky like kids on a Christmas morning when Santa was feeling particularly generous! SUN!

We raced into the Chelsea Market and bought some bread from Amy’s Breads, which we gobbled down with soup, and then fast-tracked it to Fat Witch where we each picked a brownie to take on a little ‘picnic’. Calvin went for the original, seeing as it was the first time he’d tried them, and I bought a Caramel Witch: the normal dense, kickass brownie but with a gooey thick layer of caramel through the middle. Nom nom nom!!!

The tantalising selection at Amy’s Breads, Chelsea Market,
New York, May 2012

We went full pelt out the front of the markets and entered the High Line on 14th Street. It was just beautiful up there. The sunny days made all the greens brighter and the wooden tones more glossy, and we had a ball. We wandered around until we managed to stealthily nab one of the wooden bench beds from a departing couple, and we spread out, kicked our feet up and stuffed ourselves with brownie goodness. Then, bloated with chocolate, we just sat there in the sun, soaking up the Vitamin D and watching the crowds go by. BLISS! Believe it or not, it eventually got too hot to just keep sitting there, so we went for a little walk in the direction of uptown. First stop was at the People’s Pops cart, where they were selling home-made shave ice and popsicles. The guy behind the counter had a giant block of ice and was shaving it by hand. Standing in the queue meant getting sprayed by flecks of ice… which of course wasn’t a problem on a hot day like that! I ended up ordering a raspberry and basil popsicle stick, which was heaven. It was basically just thick pureed raspberries, which meant the popsicle was lumpy and seedy and tasted damn good. Calvin got a strawberry and rhubarb one, which also looked amazing, and had actual pieces of rhubarb in it!

People watching was priceless that day. I laughed my ass off at a few sweet, dorky guys trying to pick up chicks:
Guy #1: Hey ladies, whatcha up to?
Girls: Not much, you?
Guy #1: (flustered) Me? Just chillin, chillin.
(Girls leave)
Guy #2 (turns to Guy #1): Chillin?!? You idiot.

The High Line in all its glory, surrounded by buildings and signs,
Chelsea, New York, May 2012

Poor guy! We also wandered past a child, probably about 4 years old, curled in the fetal position on the ground next to a bench, screaming blue murder. She was screaming so much that her face was beetroot. I glanced around for a parent and found him immediately, sitting on the bench and staring at her in disgust with his chin in his hands. He glanced up at me and rolled his eyes! Talk about disinterest; I wonder if she does that sort of thing often. He certainly wasn’t doing anything about it this time; I guess he’d just given up! Calvin and I found this whole scene incredibly funny and laughed all the way up to 23rd Street! We watched the butterflies and the birds, stopped for a break in the viewing window over 10th Avenue, and passed the High Line Zoo, a little art installation where someone has hung black and white polystyrene sketches of animals across the roof of a building. We walked all the way to the northern end of the High Line, where the next section is being developed; I wonder if I’ll ever see the ‘final product’.

Calvin and I take up our recliner seat and watch the crowds go by,
The High Line, Chelsea, New York, May 2012

From the High Line, Calvin and I walked to 8th Avenue and then went our separate ways. I can’t remember where he was going, but I was heading for the Hoboken Arts and Music Festival. I figured it would be a chance to eat some good food, hear some good music, and possibly drop in on Victoria at the Yankee Ferry. I had a couple of bus tickets already, which Charlie and I had left over from our little stint in Hoboken, so I thought I’d make good use of them. I walked to the Port Authority, where the buses are supposed to go every 20 minutes, and I ended up waiting nearly two hours for a damn bus. I HATE waiting for buses; it just feels so hopeless. Because if one doesn’t come, you have to figure out whether to hedge your bets – if you leave, one might turn up just as you get out of sight. But if you wait, and nothing’s coming… or maybe you’ve already waited an hour, and you’re already late anyway, so you would be totally writing off that time if you left… it’s a terrible dilemma. Every morning in Brisbane was a nightmare for me, because I stood at my stupid bus stop waiting for my useless, overpriced bus to come, and it never EVER came when it was supposed to. Never, in all my years of living in the same place, did I ever get the bus that the timetable told me to expect. Ugh.

A beautiful butterfly! The High Line, Chelsea,
New York, May 2012

Anyway, waiting at the Port Authority for that damned bus to come (I think there were supposed to be 4 or 5 while I was waiting) conjured up all the same frustrations I used to get every day on the way to work. And unfortunately, by the time most of us had figured out that maybe we couldn’t be bothered after all, the stairway up to the bus platform was blocked with people – so even if we had wanted to leave, we couldn’t. When a bus finally did turn up, I was frazzled and in a terribly grumpy mood. I was one of the lucky ones, though; most of the crowd had to be left behind because the bus was full. I was very, very thankful at that moment that I was not still staying in New Jersey; at least if your bus doesn’t turn up in Manhattan, you can walk or get the subway. If you live in Jersey and your bus doesn’t turn up, well, you can hardly just swim across the river, can you?

My delicious raspberry and basil popsicle from People’s Pops on the High Line,
New York, May 2012

So the bus came, and I got on it, and it took me to Hoboken, New Jersey. And would you believe it? The festival had ended at 6 o’clock. Had my bus come on time, I would have at least made the last hour or so, but as it was I turned up just after six when they were clearing up all the food stalls, markets stands and stages. I was spitting with fury! Damn buses!!! And what kind of music festival finishes at six o’clock, anyway? I decided to try to salvage something of my afternoon and have a look around Hoboken, which I’d intended to do when I was staying there but never found the time for. I walked along the main strip; most of the shops were shut, but the cafes and bars were open and I have to admit that a lot of them looked pretty enticing. The main drag was filled with beautiful old triple and quadruple storey townhouses, painted in various shades of cream, blue and brick, so the place looked like it had been preserved pretty well from its original era. A lot of the bars were playing music like Pearl Jam and Guns’n’Roses, which tells you something about the demographic of the people living here… all of a certain age! From the main street I took a walk out along the waterfront and the main pier, which totally lightened my mood and made the whole trip worth it. Because from here, on a little point, on this glorious blue-sky day, I had the most amazing, crystal-clear view of Manhattan from top to bottom; from the snazzy buildings of the financial district to the brown-brick edifices of northern Harlem, I could see it all. Visibility was amazing. I couldn’t help but do a little happy jiggle dance, it was so pretty. It’s a shame more tourists don’t try to make it over; the view is priceless and it’s really not that hard a journey… if your bus runs on time! So I stood for a while, enjoying the breeze and the view and watching the locals come and go. People walking with their children, kids roaring around corners on their little tricycles or scooters, a young man just sitting quietly and appreciating the view. It was great.

The stunning Manhattan skyline from Hoboken, New Jersey,
New York, May 2012

When I finally decided to head back, I found my way to a bus stop and found that the bus driver who dropped me off in Hoboken was the same one picking me up; it had taken all that time just to get his bus turned around in the traffic snarl caused by the festival!

I went back to the hostel on the upper west side, and found that my room mates were now all Brazilian. A couple of about my age, and a family of three (two parents with their teenage son). With the money they were spending on the hostel, I wondered why they didn’t just get a hotel room. Anyway, I said my greetings and then went for dinner at the Malaysian Grill… again! I had a really spicy char kway teow, sniffling my way through the chilli, and then went back to the hostel common room, where I met up with Calvin and a young Moroccan Frenchman called Hicham. We spent the evening swapping stories about our days and using the (annoyingly slow) internet. Karen joined us later in the evening, having been out with an older Brazilian woman that she met on the walking tour. Karen spoke not a word of Portuguese, and this Brazilian woman spoke barely a word of English – beginner, at best – but they seemed to have had a nice day. She asked about our plans for the next day, but she and I had very different ideas about what we wanted to do so I said I’d join her in the evening if I didn’t have something else on.

Much later, all of us finally decided to call it a night. I went back into my room and was hit by a wall of sound. My belief that the family should have got themselves a damned hotel room was reinforced when it turned out that the father, the mother AND the son all snored like freight trains, joined with harmonies by the man from the couple. Shitballs, I was angry. I was angry because the girlfriend from the couple must have known that her boyfriend was a foghorn, and with two of them they could easily have got a hotel room or at least a private room in the hostel, for about the same cost. I was also angry because the teenage boy kept waking up and could hear his own father snoring – even huffed and got angry at it and stuffed his head under his pillow – but for some reason had never thought to suggest that a private room would’ve been a better idea, so as not to inflict the honking on strangers. This is why I simply do not like mixed-sex dorm rooms. When women snore (and god knows, I’m sure I’ve been the culprit on the odd night, especially in cold weather), they just tend to be quieter than fat late-middle aged Brazilian men!!! Ugh. I tucked myself in and tried to block out the noise… and then I heard the scampering. Just quiet at first, and then clearer when there was a lull in the drone of the snorers… and I thought, oh no. I flicked my personal bed light on (one of the snorers grunted) and peered under the bed. I shook my bags around, and that’s when I noticed that a hole had been nibbled in my toiletries bag. Upon closer inspection under the bed, I found a half-eaten cookie and a couple of gummy bears, all of which had human-sized tooth marks and teeny-tiny nibble marks on them; a product, no doubt, of the teenage boy snacking in his damn bed when clearly there are signs all over the place that say that NO FOOD IS ALLOWED IN THE BEDROOMS. And little mice had taken advantage of this clumsy pig’s lacklustre grasp of hygiene. There, in the middle of the night, to the soundtrack of the fat snorers, I had to clear up that little shit’s mess and hope that the mice would not come back. I had read on Trip Advisor that there were mice at the hostel, but I figured that as long as I had clean room-mates it wouldn’t be too much of a problem. Apparently, having clean room-mates was too much of a problem.

Sigh. Tantrum over, I climbed into bed and vowed to kill them all tomorrow. Surely I could use sleep deprivation as an excuse? Ha ha ha ha ha!!!

Thanks for stopping by,

Tara.

P.S. For those of you worrying right now, all of the Brazilians survived their stay in my dorm room. No Brazilians were harmed in the making of this blog. I promise. Ha!

Racist Belgians and Fried Chitlins, New York, May 2012

24 May

Friday 4th May – Staying in a hostel has its upsides and downsides. On the down side, you have to share a room with strangers (who often end up having the strangest of habits), get woken up (or kept awake) by snorers and late arrivals, share a bathroom with pigs, and keep all your stuff locked up tight. On the up side, hostels can offer a great social programme and save you a wad of money. My reasons for staying at the hostel were a mix of the two; my budget didn’t stretch to 2 months staying in a place by myself, and I really wanted to take advantage of the social aspect of the hostel before spending 5 weeks in relative solitude in an apartment on my own.

To this end, I booked myself onto a number of walking tours at the hostel, and today I took part in the first of them. The tour was called ‘Historic Harlem’, and was led by an old gentleman called Ed. We all met in the lobby of the hostel, and that’s where I first met Calvin. I didn’t know it at the time, but Calvin and I were going to end up spending a lot of time together over the next week, and he would become a fabulous travel buddy, and a good friend. Our first interaction happened when Ed asked Calvin if he was Japanese, and without thinking I said, “He’s not Japanese, he looks Korean.” Cue stunned looks all around. A lot of people say they can’t tell the difference, but as a language teacher and having spent a lot of time with people of both nationalities, I reckon I have a pretty good handle on it. As it turns out, I was right; Calvin is Korean. His English, though, is near-native and it was just freaking wicked to hear it; it gave me so much faith and hope for all my Koreans who struggle with their language acquisition! DO NOT DESPAIR MY LOVELIES! You CAN be great… if you work your ass off at it! 😉

Anyway, the tour started and we wandered towards the nearest subway station. Calvin was joined by JiSoo, a friend of his from Korea, and our little trio was joined by a girl from Hong Kong called Daion. The rest of the tour were mostly older folk who didn’t seem much interested in us, as they were travelling in groups or pairs. It usually seems that way; the ‘singles’ team up together.

A statue of Malcolm X at his memorial in Harlem,
New York, May 2012

We got off the subway at the highest point I have ever been in Manhattan; Broadway and 168th Street, Washington Heights… almost as far up as you can go! Our first stop was the Malcolm X Memorial on 166th Street. I admit that I know less about Malcolm X than I would like to. I remember that he converted to Islam, and I remember that he and Martin Luther King had different opinions on how equal rights should be achieved, but their general aim was the same. I remember watching the movie of his life when I was a kid and not really understanding most of it; I think it was at a Drive-In and I’m pretty sure I kept drifting in and out of sleep! Once again, I find another topic that I will have to read up on in the near future. Anyway, the memorial is in the cinema where he was killed in 1965. It is no longer a cinema, but the original lobby is intact. At first glance I was highly concerned, because all I could see when Ed pointed to the ‘Malcolm X Memorial’ was a barbeque restaurant (!), and I thought, “Eh what? They’ve turned the place where he was assassinated into a barbeque joint?!?” but luckily that’s only part of the building. In the memorial itself, there is a hallway and a small set of stairs, and at the top of these stairs is a very lifelike statue of Malcolm X himself, standing on a little podium and speaking into a microphone. I cannot imagine what it must have been like to be African-American at the time that Malcolm X and Martin Luther King were most prominent. The determination, the hope and the inspiration… quite something.

We kept walking for some time; we went through Sugar Hill, with its 19th century townhouses (and so named because of the ‘sugar’ – or money – that you needed to have to be able to live there) and we passed by some beautiful old worker’s townhouses (which now probably require more sugar than you can count to buy them). After that, we paid a visit to the Morris Jumel House, which is a beautiful old homestead that used to sit in amongst farmland, until urban spread turned it into a wooden oasis in the middle of multi-storey brick dwellings. It was built in 1765, and George Washington used it as his New York headquarters during the revolutionary war, I believe. Apparently it is now run by some sort of Republican Ladies Brigade (eep). I’m surprised they’re into it; the one-time owner, Eliza Jumel, was a lady of questionable virtue who married an older man for his money, and then after he died, she remarried another man who had apparently killed some sort of high-profile politician who is now a face on American money. Not quite the role model for ‘ladies who lunch’, is it? The plaque outside describes this woman as being ‘colourful’… ha ha ha ha ha! I can only hope that people refer to me as ‘colourful’ in a couple of hundred years…!

We strolled past Count Basie Place, and we made a stop at Duke Ellington’s old house – awesome! I was thrilled to learn that Ed did a bit of swing dancing in his day, and had even danced at the Savoy once upon a time… I am SO jealous. He was an interesting man, actually, and although he looked fairly old he must have been even older than he looked, because some of his memories go way back; I’m guessing in his late 80s or early 90s. He was a slow but steady walker, and doing a pretty good job of keeping up considering his age! He told us how his mother used to make him sleep out on the fire escapes in hot weather, to keep him cool, and how he and his friends used to hang out up there and throw peanuts on pedestrians. Cheeky little blighter!

All of us stopped at a place called Taza de Cafe for a break and a little drink. The man behind the counter was playfully insistent that we should eat something, and very persuasive, and the lady kept showing us all the baked goodies that she had, but I knew that lunch wasn’t far away – and that it was going to be a big one – so I just enjoyed my hot chocolate.

We wandered across the top of Jackie Robinson Park (Jackie Robinson was, I believe, the first African-American baseball player in the traditionally white league), from where there was a view across the river to Yankee Stadium. We walked along the promenade, enjoying the view, before cutting through a park and then through a housing complex that had been built by the Rockefellers for the poor. It was surprisingly beautiful inside, considering its boringly functional exterior; full of little green patches and scampering squirrels.

An unusual sight: an empty subway carriage (we were at the very beginning of the line),
New York, May 2012

Soon afterwards, we made our way to a subway station which was at the top end of the line; when we got onto the carriage it was entirely empty… not something I’d seen before during daylight hours! We got off at 125th Street, where our group started to part ways. Calvin, JiSoo, Daion and I had already decided to go for a big lunch together at Sylvia’s, a famous soul food restaurant on 127th Street – just 2 blocks from where we were. We were saying our goodbyes to the rest of the group when two of the Belgian women asked us where we were going. We told them, and they seemed a bit surprised. “You’re eating… in Harlem?” Uh, yeah. What’s the problem with that? They looked at each other with raised eyebrows. “Maybe we… maybe the food is not good.” I thought that they meant taste-wise, so I told them about soul food and what kind of things they might encounter, and they followed us to the restaurant. Then they started behaving in an almost panicky way, and scarpered. I found out later that they hadn’t wanted to eat in the restaurant because it was Harlem. Because it was run by African Americans. And, according to the Belgians, there is no hygiene in Harlem. WTF?!? I simply couldn’t believe it. When I found out, I wanted to go and confront them. Violently. Where the hell did they think they were? And who the hell do they think they are? People like that make me sick. Racist freaks.

Racist Belgian females aside, the four of us went into Sylvia’s and had a kickass lunch. We ordered up a veritable feast and ate up every bite. We ordered on the advice of our neighbours, who were eating all kinds of good stuff. Based on my experience at Amy Ruth’s, the others wanted to try fried chicken and waffles, so we ordered that. Then we looked at our neighbour and saw their barbeque ribs, and ordered that too. And then we chatted to a couple next to us who had come all the way from Texas, and they were eating chitlins. Totally clueless, we asked what chitlins were, and they said that basically it was pig intestines. All of us went, “Oooh, interesting!” which surprised our neighbours, as I suppose that they don’t normally get that reaction when they talk about tripe. I guess they didn’t figure that they were talking to two Koreans and two girls from Hong Kong, who are used to eating anything and everything! So, we ordered fried chitlins as well. Our side dishes were black-eyed peas, gumbo and candied yams.

Oh, what a meal. The waffles and chicken, I have to say, were not as good as Amy Ruth’s; the waffles were a bit cold and not very crispy, and the chicken wasn’t crash-hot. The chitlins were interesting; not very flavourful (more a result of the intestines than the way it was cooked, I think) but pretty good. The ribs were disgustingly good, with delicious sauce smothered all over them, and the gumbo was full of yummy okra. The black-eyed peas were great too, but the highlight was the candied yams – orange sweet potato with sugary, syrupy goodness… yum. After eating, I went to wash my hands and I met a woman from Chicago in the bathrooms; she said that the food in Chicago was much better and that I should go there to eat up instead! Still, I really enjoyed my meal at Sylvia’s, and the company was great.

The beginning of great friendships: Calvin, Tara and Daion after their feast at Sylvia’s, Harlem,
New York, May 2012

After our late lunch, Calvin and JiSoo went to the Museum of Modern Art while Daion and I went back to the hostel. I relaxed for a while before deciding to join the hostel’s evening programme, which included a choice between a night out at a nightclub or a night at a jazz club. I figured I would go downstairs and see what the crowd was like for both before making my choice. As I went downstairs, I found Daion there, and she was heading to the jazz club, which pretty much made up my mind for me. However, as the crew for the nightclub turned up I knew I’d made the right decision. They were all men, and they were mostly yobs. They were also mostly Australian, and they were already mostly half-cut. In the end, there were only four of us for the jazz club – me, Daion, Lew (an Australian gentleman from Perth), and an older Italian man whose English was fairly limited. We went around the corner to SaSa’s Jazz Lounge, which was much, MUCH smaller than I had expected it to be; just a sliver of a room without many places to sit except at the bar (which was full), and the band were set up near the entrance. It was loud. LOUD. My ears ached and I blinked every time the drummer hit the drum. The music was good, but not amazing. In the end, Daion bought and finished one beer, and we left. The Italian man had embarrassed the hell out of us by walking right up to the band, putting the camera within 30 centimetres of the saxophonist’s face (this in front of the crowd) and using a flash to take pictures. Good lord. Bad tourist! However, Lew looked like he was having a good time, and as it turned out I’d be seeing a bit of him over the next few days, too.

Daion and I walked back to the hostel and went to our respective dorm rooms. I found that the American girl above me had moved out and been replaced by an Australian guy. He’d had a bit of a rough ride; he and his friends had been going through America on their way to Europe when his appendix had burst. In the end, he had to stay behind in hospital while his friends went ahead to England. He had just been released from the hospital and was awaiting the all-clear from the doctor. All sympathy I had for him evaporated, however, when his phone rang in the middle of the night and he answered it in a very loud voice, complaining that he hadn’t been able to sleep because of the Spanish guy’s snores. And now, thanks to the Aussie guy, none of us could sleep either. Gah! (Plus, I would just like to mention that he was also a snorer… hypocrite!)

As I was lying there trying to get back to sleep, I thought I could hear some scampering happening on the floor underneath my bed. I had read that there were mice in the hostel, but so far had seen no sign of them; I put the sound down to my tired mind playing tricks on me, and tried to think no more of it. (Mouse story: to be continued…!)

And that was that for the day!

Thanks for stopping by,

Tara.