A few days ago, I returned from a FABULOUS trip to one of my favorite cities to visit with family and friends while seeing Fall foliage!

Although my trip to New York started ominously with an unexpected overnight stay in Dallas due to thunderstorms and a canceled flight, everything else was FANTASTIC.

I spent meaningful time with wonderful friends and family, saw gorgeous Fall foliage and beautiful flora, enjoyed Hadestown on Broadway, wandered through museums, gardens, and Central Park, ate lots of ice cream, drank several Manhattans, and played with photography.

Instead of creating a day-by-day blog, I decided to group my posts and photos into these categories.  ❤️

Visiting friends and family is one of the biggest reasons I love New York.  Although I took many photos of friends and family, I’m choosing not to post those photos. Instead, I’ve sent what I feel are the best of those photos to the people themselves.

Here, though, are a few photos others have taken of me!

Storm King Art Center

 

 

Longwood Gardens – much appreciation to those who put up with me and my camera!

 

Eating one of MANY ice creams!!!

 

Walking home on the Sunday night of the NYC Marathon, I saw a few people cheering on the final marathoners at Mile 25.9.  Of course, I had to join in!

There’s nothing like a good Manhattan!  Not only the borough of New York City but also the beverage!

At several Elks Lodges across the country, I’ve ordered a Manhattan.  Some have been pretty good, some not so good.  Sometimes the bartender has needed a lesson in how to make the drink (“I’m a beertender, not a bartender.”). Other times, the drinks have been expertly crafted.

While in Manhattan, I decided to drink Manhattans – and review each drink and experience.  🙂

My first Manhattan was at Tessa Restaurant. I went there on my first Friday in NY.  Given I was solo during the Friday dinner rush, I had to sit at the bar rather than a table. Two of the three people (all friends) sitting next to me were second year med students and their friend, who the day before broke his wrist biking in Central Park, is a second year law student.  The drink itself was really good!  Not too sweet and very tasty.

 

A few nights later, I went to Harvest Kitchen, where the food was excellent but the Manhattan was a bit boring.  I learned, too, that I prefer a straight up Manhattan rather than on the rocks.  My server was a young man from Albania who had been in NY for less than a month. He was on Maui for two years and lost everything to the wildfire. He came to NY to replace his identification, visa, etc, and is working at the restaurant to support himself while in NY. 

 

On Halloween, I chose NOT to watch the parade in Greenwich Village. Although I used to like crowds, I now prefer to avoid them due to COVID and other germs – and the risk of terrorism.
Instead, I walked to Broadway, enjoying the many kids in costumes trick-or-treating at the local businesses.  That evening before seeing the excellent show, Hadestown, I went across the street for a bite and a Manhattan at Hurley’s Irish Pub. I had quite the multi-cultural experience! Mediterranean food (hummus) and an American beverage in an Irish pub! The drink tasted good and didn’t feel very strong…until it did!  Manhattans tend to hit about 20 minutes after I finish the last sip.  I know NOT to order that second drink.

 

The daughters of one of my best friends now live and work in NYC.  With their busy work and school schedules, the best time for us to get together was for happy hour.  At The Horny Ram, I got to not only catch up on their fabulous lives but also have another Manhattan!  This beverage was not my favorite.  Although it had a good cherry, it was mild tasting and a bit boring.  The conversation, though, made the total experience wonderful!

 

I had my final Manhattan on my last night in the City.  My mother’s best friend’s son (my “fifth brother”) and his wife met me in the city at Legasea, so we could have dinner and chat.  The food was delicious, the conversation wonderful, and the drink okay.  For the first time, I considered ordering a second drink, but (wisely!) chose not to.

 

My findings: 

1) Straight up Manhattans are better than on the rocks.

2) I would absolutely return to Tessa and Hurley’s for a Manhattan.

3) Further research shows that although other cities have drinks named after them, having a Manhattan in Manhattan is the BEST!

With Adriana, the professional photographer I toured with in Cusco, Peru, I began learning how to take street photos of people.  As she told me, New York is a great place for street photography!

Many times during my two weeks in New York, I walked around and covertly took photos of others perambulating around the city.  The day after the New York City Marathon, I noticed that MANY people wore their marathon medals while exploring the city.  At first, I slyly took their picture – street photography. 

Then I remembered The 9:09 Project by Mark Parsons, in which the main character returns to the same place at the same time and ASKS if he can take a photo of people walking at that specific time and place.  That gave me the idea to ASK marathoners if I could take their photo.  I know, having WALKED ten marathons, that regardless of the time it takes to finish, anyone who completes a marathon – and especially those wearing a medal the next day – feels PROUD of their accomplishment.  As they should!  Other than one person, everyone agreed – often with glee – to have me take their photo.  One person asked why, and I told the truth – I’m new to photography and wanted to practice taking photos of people on the street.  The partner of another person asked me if she could take a photo of me taking a photo of her marathoner – something to add to their marathon experience!  Another marathoner told me he’s from Michigan and runs to raise money for cancer research at Memorial Sloan Kettering.

The stories, joy, and accomplishment they shared with me while I captured them with their medals made me feel so happy for them!

Marathoners

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Street Photography (non-marathon)

Greenwich Village – this reminds me of a Beatles album cover!

 

Longwood Gardens – I took a couple other photos of the boy in the red plaid jacket and sent them to the boy’s grandmother

 

Central Park saxophonist

 

Central Park – a photo of a photographer with fall colors and cityscape

Yep, there’s no way I can go to New York and NOT go to a museum!

This trip, I returned to The Whitney and explored, for the first time, two new museums. 

After reading the book, The Personal Librarian about J. P. Morgan’s personal librarian, Belle da Costa Greene, the Black American woman who was forced to hide her true identity and pass as white, I knew I wanted to visit The Morgan Library.

Around the corner from where I stay when visiting New York is the New York Historical Society Museum and Library, which I decided to happily explore this trip.

The Whitney

Untitled (PF.1016, Eucalyptus Grove), 1961, ink on coated paper on board

 

Untitled (FF.1211, Paul Lanier on Patterned Blanket), 1961, felt-tipped pen on paper on board

 

Untitled by Malcolm Bailey, 1969, acrylic on composition board. Malcolm Bailey based this painting on diagrams of a ship carrying abducted Africans to the Americas that were published in 1780 by an English abolitionist group.

 

Early Sunday Morning by Edward Hopper, 1930, oil on canvas

 

Music, Pink and Blue No. 2 by Georgia O’Keeffe, 1918, oil on canvas

 

Hart Island Crew by Kambui Olujimi, 2020, watercolor, ink, and graphite on paper.  Hart Island, off the Bronx coast, is a potter’s field that was run by the city’s department of correction until 2021. It has served as a burial ground for the city during numerous epidemics.  In the spring of 2020, as COVID-19 deaths overwhelmed the city’s morgues, incarcerated people were brought in to dig trenches as long as football fields, where coffins would be stack three deep.

 

The Morgan Library: Books, architecture, and art

 

 

 

New York Historical Society Museum and Library

Gallery of Tiffany Lamps

 

Enchanting Imagination: The Objets d’Art of André Chervin and Carvin French Jewelers 

There’s natural beauty and there’s also human-made beauty.

I enjoy the lines and surprises of good architecture.  These are some of the beauties I captured.

Grand Central Station

 

Views from the High Line in NYC

 

 

 

Little Island, a new, free public Park pier within the larger Hudson River Park

 

 

The Vessel, Hudson Yards, NY

 

While considering when to visit my friends and family in New York, I knew I wanted to experience the wonders of Fall Foliage.  This journey took me to several locations where I tried to capture the majesty of these annual colors.  Out of the HUNDREDS of photos I took, these are the ones that I feel best capture the beauty and variety of Fall Colors.  (I have a gazillion more photos of flowers and other beautiful subjects, but these pictures focus on Fall Colors…)

Storm King Art Center, located in the Hudson Valley

 

 

 

 

Central Park

 

 

 

Chelsea Mansion and Muttontown Reserve, Muttontown, NY

 

 

Chanticleer Garden, Wayne, PA

 

 

Longwood Gardens, Kennett Square, PA

 

 

Reeves-Reed Arboretum, Summit, NJ