Thursday, October 25, 2018

Home Again

Another major retirement adventure has come to an end, and we're back in the UK after a wonderful last weekend of this trip in NYC with my sister.   Once again, we spent most of the time ambling around Joy's new neighbourhood on the Upper West Side - what a great place to live, only one block west of Central Park, and four blocks east of the Riverside Parkway.

Outside 'The Met', on 5th Avenue

Typical Street Vendor, Upper West Side



Fantastic Bookshop, Upper West Side


Halloween, Upper West Side

Night-time View to the West from Joyce's Apartment

Once again, we discovered 'new' places to eat brunch or dinner, including a great cocktail bar/restaurant called 'Hi-Life', with an eclectic menu offering, which attracted our attention by the 1936 Lincoln parked right outside, complete with a neon Hi-Life sign on its roof.   Very cool!






The Hi Life Restaurant and the 1936 Lincoln

We also managed to fit in a trip to The Cloisters museum and gardens (we just love getting around by bus in this City - so very cheap, at $2.75 each per journey, or cheaper still if you buy a monthly pass).   The Cloisters, nowadays part of 'The Met', stands right up at the northern end of Manhattan overlooking the River Hudson.   It is dedicated to European medieval architecture, sculpture and decorative arts, almost all of which was originally found in, or part of, monasteries, abbeys and churches in countries such as France, Germany, Austria, Italy, The Netherlands and UK, and all of which were collected by and brought over to the US in the early 1900s by American sculptor and art dealer, George Grey Barnard.   This enormous collection is now displayed in beautiful architectural settings centred around four different cloisters and gardens.   When Barnard offered the place for sale in 1924, financier and philanthropist, J D Rockefeller Jr, provided the funds that enabled the Met to purchase the museum and its collections for the country.   It's quite a place!














Several Views Inside 'The Cloisters'


On the (suddenly very cold!) morning of our last day of the trip (Sun, 21 Sept), we visited the incredibly stylish Neue Gallerie - one of the latest additions to 'Museum Mile' on 5th Avenue - devoted exclusively to early 20th century Austrian and German art and decorative art.






The Gift Shop and the Design Shop, Neue Gallerie
(no photos allowed on display floors)















In the (even colder!) afternoon, we joined a small-group guided tour, conducted by Heather, an acquaintance of my sister's, taking in many formerly overlooked (at least by us) interesting aspects of the wonderful Central Park. Unfortunately, for me at least, the sudden plunge in temperatures and the ferocious wind whistling around that afternoon left me really struggling later on, as we packed for the next day's early-morning trip to JFK airport,  to remember many of the details of what had, at the time, been a really fascinating tour.   Maybe, as my brain thaws out, those details will start to filter into my memory banks!














Several Views 
For now, though, time to unpack, do the laundry, and settle back into our cosy and very Merry Cottage world!

Sunday, October 21, 2018

We've Been Run Outta Town!

Not by any gun-totin' sheriff or badass desperado, but by small furry critters - mice!   In our cosy cabin in the woods in Intervale, we'd seen some evidence that they were around, in the form of small droppings here and there, but we'd neither seen nor heard anything, so were not overly bothered.  (Our other wildlife sighting here was much more exciting, though - a small black bear came ambling into view right beside the cabin, sniffed around a little and then headed down the bank to the riverside, where we lost sight of him.   We'd loved to have gone out and followed him, but there was always the danger that mummy or daddy bear were not too far away!).   Anyway, back to the mice.    On what should have been our penultimate, but in the event became our final night there, we were kept awake most of the night by the sounds of at least 4 or 5 mice skittering around on the wooden floorboards in both the living room, and even around our bed - yuk!   Several times we got up, switched on the lights and looked around, twice spotting mice dashing under cupboards or behind the sofa, and once, at around 4 o'clock in the morning, Andy successfully caught and threw one quite large mouse out into the freezing cold night.  Not sure if it found its way back in, but the skittering and other noises continued until sun-up, by which time we'd had enough.   We decided to pack up and leave then and there, rather than risk another sleepless night, and our Airbnb host readily agreed she should refund us not just for the night we would not be using the place, but also for the previous, practically sleepless night too.

Mouse!
So, we started our journey back towards New York a day earlier than planned, driving north-westerly and then due south, through some stunning scenery in the rest of the White Mountains of New Hampshire, into the Green Mountains of Vermont and then through Connecticut.   We travelled for quite a while alongside the massive Lake Champlain:  with a surface area of 490 sq miles, it's the largest lake in the US outside of the Great Lakes, and straddles the states of Vermont, New York and Quebec. At the southerly end of the journey, we travelled alongside the lazy, flat Housatonic River, and the whole journey, stopping for two nights in Middlebury and then Great Barrington, took us through huge tracts of gorgeous fall colours at the northern end, and some huge tracts of heavily wooded green space interwoven with hiking trails, small rivers and falls, and dozens more covered bridges as we neared the Big Apple.   On Highway 7, we stopped a couple of times for brunch at two very different, but still each both typically-American roadside diners:   Blue Benn in Bennington, in an old railway-carriage, very homesy, and full of quirky things, and Diner Luxe in New Milford, a fabulous, over-the-top Art Deco diner like something straight out of a 1950s Hollywood movie.   On the night that we left the cabin in the White Mountains, we stayed overnight in a very lovely old Inn in Middlebury, Vermont  - a university town in which, we'd only recently discovered, two of our colleagues from the Refugee Tales project, Anna Pincus of Gatwick Detainees Welfare Group, and Professor David Herd of Kent University, had been addressing a gathering of students about the RT project, only the previous evening, just about the time when we were beginning our mighty mouse battle!  Made us think that, had the mice taken the trouble to drive us out of the cabin just one night earlier, we could have joined the session in Middlebury and offered our support.



Two of Vermont




Two of Blue Benn's Diner





Four of Diner Luxe (and one Luxe Diner)
One More of Diner Luxe
So, now we're back in my sister Joy's apartment in Manhattan, for our final weekend of this trip, before we head home on Monday.   We've woken to a cold but bright and sunny morning, after dropping off our little VW Beetle yesterday afternoon, and are preparing to go walkabout once again, to explore more of her new neighbourhood.