Saturday, September 10, 2011

days like this...

are why we'll keep going back again and again.




i started the day off kissing central park trees right on the lips.



richard made some new friends in the subway.



we enjoyed a stroll around bethesda fountain.





made our way to the loeb boathouse to eat brunch, but were accosted by disgruntled
employees on strike who would pretty much not let us in.



i was p.o.'d, my friends.  and that's putting it lightly.  i was not kind to the stupid
employees, but that's where richard balanced our little marriage out that morning.
he was very kind and rushed me to the nearest eating establishment in the park.



it's amazing what a little food can do for a girl's attitude.



happy wife, happy life.



we then made our way back to the boathouse (avoiding the picket line so that
i didn't have to go to the slammer for murdering someone on our vacation) to
rent a boat and set sail on the lake.
richard was a natural.  kind of.



if you don't look too closely at the water, it really is beautiful!
we'd walked around the lake on our first trip, but it was so fun
to see everything from a different perspective.





i only rowed for a minute because i was getting us absolutely nowhere,
but it was a blast just to be out on the water laughing and talking with
my best friend.



it was sure nice of the city to have these watering holes around the city
seeing as it was bloody hot and insanely humid.  pretty sure i didn't stop
sweating the entire time we were there.



slice #2



my first, but not my last, cannoli.



we just missed the opening of the new world trade center memorial, but we did
make a trip to the tribute gallery at ground zero.  it was a very touching and
emotional experience, and it was like stepping into a time machine that took us back
ten years.



there was a timeline that included quotes of people and victims involved in the
attacks, as well as video being played of what things were like at the trade centers
before 9/11.  it was kind of crazy to walk through this little museum with strangers,
crying with them.  we didn't talk to each other, but i felt close to them because of what
we were experiencing together.



some things that were found in the rubble - much of it was from gift shops, stores,
and offices in the towers.  everything still had ash and dust all over it.



part of one of the buildings



do you remember in the days after the attacks how people would make
posters with their loved one's information on it because they were missing?
i remember watching people just waiting at ground zero, looking for their friends
and family members, crying with my parents while we watched the news.
they had walls and walls of those posters in the gallery.



fdny uniform



there was a room that held small tributes made by friends and family for the victims
of the attacks.  lots of pictures, letters, mementos.  all of it was very touching.



oragami cranes that were made and sent to nyc from school children in another country
to tell the community that they cared about their hurt.


i'm really glad that we got to experience and learn more about that big
part of our nation's recent history.


found some sweet sculptures around the corner.




made our way to chinatown where we tasted a bit of fried plantain
and octopus from a street vendor.  it pretty much just tasted like
old fry oil.



mosied over to little italy for some pastries from my favorite bakery, ferrara's.



then headed to our go-to hole in the wall, sal's...



where richard enjoyed one meal to stay...



and one to-go.



we jumped on the train to brooklyn to go to coney island, but the minute we
got there black clouds rolled in with some killer wind and rain, so they closed
the place down.  perfect timing.

so we got on the train back to manhattan and found ourselves seeking refuge
from the storm in a trendy little chinese restaurant that we had absolutely no
business being in.  remember on date night when tina fey and steve carrell go to
that restaurant where they stick out like sore thumbs?  that was us.
and just like in the movie, we loved every minute of it!

they asked if we had reservations.  no.  so they showed us to the corner ha!
the lights were super low, and red!  and the music was crazy loud w/ lots of bass.
people were ordering some crazy drinks from the bar that you can see right behind me,
but not us.  we stuck w/ water, which i'm sure is why our waitress loved us. 
or maybe it was the fact that we only went there to order an appetizer.  hmmm...





the food network has a show called 'the best thing i ever ate,' and on one episode
they showed these egg rolls that were mucho crunchy and wonderfully delicious.
well, we liked them a lot, but we loooooved the lobster cream cheese
sticks to the left better.



much better.





while we were inside the snooty-patooty brasserie, the weather gods
smiled on us and the rain stopped.  so we headed down to walk across
the brooklyn bridge. 





the perfect end to a fabulous day and night in the greatest city in the world.




2 comments:

Joni and Rico Adams said...

PERFECT day!! NY is bloody hot in the summer and I just melt. When I spent my nanny summer there I had bangs. I don't see how people do anything but short hair in that city.
Needless to say I'm horribly jealous of you guys. I haven't been back in over a year. Withdrawls. Major withdrawls. The next time I go I will introduce the baby girl to the wonder that is manhattan :)

Sam and Melissa said...

Man, I so hope we can go there with you guys some day. By the way, that red haired man of yours looks dead sexy in shorts and a row boat. (this is sam by the way, which might even be weirder than if my wife said that but oh well, he's hot!) We really miss you guys!