

But as with all traveling adventures there are delightful discoveries as well as disappointments over unmet expectations. Overall the city didn’t thrill me the way it did that first visit. It seemed dirtier. Of course big cities are dirty but it was REALLY dirty. They must have pressure washed the whole city last time before the Republican convention as I just don’t remember it being this filthy. I also didn’t encounter the same level of crazy celebrity worship where movie stars are literally cheered on the streets. It is the city of lights but in many ways it is a city of darkness.
Onto the highlights:
Supermarket shopping. On arrival in the city we headed straight to Fairways to stock up on groceries. Saw Richard Kind (The Station Agent) and what seemed like half of the residents on the Upper West side as the place was packed out on a Friday night. We also checked out Whole Foods (nicknamed Whole Paycheck) I have been wanting to visit this place for a long time and unfortunately Wilmington is too small to justify a branch but here’s hoping. 9 different sushi chefs, a fresh salad bar including seaweed salad, cheeses, meats, salmon jerky, NZ lamb in every cut imaginable, vahlrona in chunks, an olive bar (a whole bar just for olives!), grilled summer fruits, a full line of soy products and gluten free items. In other words it is a foodies wonderland!
FAO Schwarz. Have you seen the movie ‘Big’ where Tom Hanks plays chopsticks by jumping on an enormous piano in a toystore? This is the place. Lucy and Auntie Kat even had the chance to play on the piano! 3 floors of wall to wall toys so no imagination is required. We had a super fun time poking around the doll nursery, lego, games, soft animals and toddler books. The highlight was dining at FAO Schweetz the in-house café stocked with lots of kid friendly menu items. Lucy had turkey and cheese ‘handwiches’ (sandwiches shaped as hands) whilst the rest of us had pleasant soups and sandwiches. But the really awesome part is dessert. Katrina had a massive banana split whilst Andrew and I (with a little help from Lu on the vanilla ice cream) had ‘The Volcano’. A solid chocolate volcano crater filled with ice cream, covered in whipped cream, surrounded by crushed oreos, waffle cones, m&ms and gummy bears. Then the waitress pours hot fudge sauce and hot butterscotch sauce over the volcano and erupts it open with a mini rake and knife. It was then served with extra sauces as well as warm marshmallow fluff. Enough said.
Onto the highlights:
Supermarket shopping. On arrival in the city we headed straight to Fairways to stock up on groceries. Saw Richard Kind (The Station Agent) and what seemed like half of the residents on the Upper West side as the place was packed out on a Friday night. We also checked out Whole Foods (nicknamed Whole Paycheck) I have been wanting to visit this place for a long time and unfortunately Wilmington is too small to justify a branch but here’s hoping. 9 different sushi chefs, a fresh salad bar including seaweed salad, cheeses, meats, salmon jerky, NZ lamb in every cut imaginable, vahlrona in chunks, an olive bar (a whole bar just for olives!), grilled summer fruits, a full line of soy products and gluten free items. In other words it is a foodies wonderland!


MoMA. Housed in a new architecturally beautiful building. Looking through a 3x3 square window on the 5th floor you can see a 3x3 portion of a walkway on the sixth floor, a 3x3 window on the 3rd floor (directly below the walkway) and look onto the concourse. These windows provide insights into slices of life occurring on other floors. We saw lots of Picasso, Chagall’s ‘I and the Village’ and a small Dali as‘The Persistence of Memory’ was on loan. But the highlight was Monet’s ‘Reflections of clouds on a lily pond’ and ‘Agapanthus’. Scouted out some cool purchases in the Design shop across the road where all things beautiful + practical live. Unfortunately high price tags accompany these items but it is amazing what the human mind can imagine and then create.

Chocolate. We sought out some amazing chocolate places despite the fact that we discovered that Lulu does not like it! Of course it was compulsory to visit the Hershey's store that stocks all things Reeses. Jackets, mugs, pillows, headphones, bowls, shirts etc all in trademark orange. And surprisingly Andrew didn't buy anything! We then headed over to the new ginormous M&M's store. Three massive floors of M&M merchandise. There was every colour imaginable. And anything that could bear a logo did bear a logo. It was marketing saturation at its upmost. On a more pleasant note we had a chocolate breakfast at Max Brenners. Waffles, marshmallow crepes and hot chocolates were the order of the day. Though Lucy (Shire hobbit) who was on her 3rd breakfast for the day restrained herself to toast. (She already had cereal at home followed by blackberries and raspberries at the Farmers Market in Union Square)


Disappointments:
Magnolia Bakery. Surprised at this listing? I was. Expecting great things of this bakery but there was only a small choice of cupcakes on offer that weren’t nearly as good as the recipe book allows. Don’t get me wrong, the cupcakes were good. But they weren’t awesome. And the recipes are awesome. So what’s the story? Don’t they follow their own recipes?
United Nations. Tourists can go inside the building if on a supervised tour. Tours do not allow children under 6 so we didn’t do the tour and so we weren’t allowed in (we knew this in advance so we weren’t disappointed). Children aren’t allowed due to safety concerns (for the children). What could happen in an office building? (apart from Dwight spraying mace in your face)
Ground Zero. It is a construction site full stop. Nothing to see, nothing to do. We visited on September 10 so there were some things happening to get a memorial pool set up for the next day even though the main service was not held here but further downtown. Lots of police around but really this is not a tourist attraction anymore. The TV channels showed documentaries all day about the architecture of the buildings and the recovery efforts to date. These were far more interesting than the actual site.
Magnolia Bakery. Surprised at this listing? I was. Expecting great things of this bakery but there was only a small choice of cupcakes on offer that weren’t nearly as good as the recipe book allows. Don’t get me wrong, the cupcakes were good. But they weren’t awesome. And the recipes are awesome. So what’s the story? Don’t they follow their own recipes?

Ground Zero. It is a construction site full stop. Nothing to see, nothing to do. We visited on September 10 so there were some things happening to get a memorial pool set up for the next day even though the main service was not held here but further downtown. Lots of police around but really this is not a tourist attraction anymore. The TV channels showed documentaries all day about the architecture of the buildings and the recovery efforts to date. These were far more interesting than the actual site.
And thankfully this trip there were no US Air horror stories. The only amusing incident was getting off the plane in Wilmington during a tropical downpour and running across the tarmac. We were soaked to the skin but thankfully not far from home.
And thus ends our NY adventure. If you’re interested in seeing more photos then shoot through an email and I’ll send you a link. There is much more to write but I have used more than my alloted time to type this so far so I'll leave the rest to your imagination.
5 comments:
Ground Zero was never intended to be a "tourist site" sorry to disappoint. quite insensitive of you
What is a tourist site indeed? A good question. I guess the words tourist site can conjure up some negative meanings ie hordes of tourists gawking at something and leaving rubbish behind. It can also mean travellers who seek out a place to marvel at its beauty or reflect on history.
Last year we went to the Sachsenhausen concentration camp in Berlin. I went underground into the autopsy room by myself (it was empty) and felt sick at the evils committed here. It was a moving experience to visit this 'tourist site' to reflect on humanity and the ability to commit evil. People visited the camp to remember what happened so that hopefully it will never happen again.
Likewise people visit Ground Zero to pay their respects to those that died, honour those workers that worked through the aftermath and reflect on life in general. It is a valid destination for tourists to travel to and want to see.
www.nyctourist.com lists Ground Zero as one of their top 10 all time favourite attractions to see in NYC. There were MANY tourists at the site on September 10 when we visited that were trying to get a glimpse of the site. There was also a lady there doing surveys of the tourists to gain their views on Ground Zero site being a tourist site.
Maybe the word tourist site isn't the right one but it is still a place for people to visit. The issue I was making is that for such a well known destination at the moment there is no place for memorial or reflection that we could find there. I now know that there is a museum there but disappointingly we didn't find any info on it until we got back and there were definitely no signs pointing us that way.
I could have kept on reading your transcript all day! Love the introduction to the bustling mayhem of NY.
MoMA is on my increasingly growing list of "to dos" should we ever make it over to NY so am thrilled you went there - got any shots of Lucy with rediculously large sculptures?
Am still drooling over the photo of the choc volcano...I'd fly over just for that I think
Laura
Alas Lucy + Moma = screaming! So we did get a photo on the the 5th floor looking down into the new courtyard with huge steel sculptures but Lucy is screaming in it...
i did read the whole thing but was hard to go past the NZ reference... funny - that make more sense than the Shire reference about lucy.
Sounds like an awesome holiday. thanks for keeping us up to date...
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