Tuesday 27 August 2013

Start singing the blues....

I'm leaving today...



I was in NY for 3 days on my way back to Blighty

The first day I finally found the highline which Sarah and I missed last autumn, its amazing how the park on the line has lead to more investment in the surrounding area with lots of new residential buildings advertising themselves as having views of the Highline.





I walked back along the Hudson River park 
Water wheel installation.... Slightly disturbing as its keeping time via the tides til the end of the earth by absorption into the sun as it dies....

That evening i met up with some other people staying in the hostel and had a night out in the meat packing district - not entirely sure where we went, but it was fun!

The second day I dragged my hangover to a 7 hour bike tour of the city - starting at Union Square - Washington pops up a lot as he was inaugurated as first president when New York was the first capital of the United States.


Then to Greenwich village stopping at the Stonewall Inn, symbol of the gay liberation movement, interestingly the mafia used to run the bar - paying off the police but also exploiting the clientele with overpriced crappy alcohol (like home brew!)


We then went down the Hudson River path to Battery Park City and Ground Zero where World Trade Centre one has recently been completed (not fitted out yet though). 


From here we headed into the financial district seeing the Stock Exchange and Wall Street, 



Then we headed into China town cycling past funeral parlours to get a tasty and cheap lunch.


After lunch we headed over the Brooklyn bridge, around Brooklyn heights to ensure we had views from all angles and then back on the Manhattan bridge.



A saunter around the lower east side lead us back to the bike shop. I then stopped with a couple of the ladies for a cup of something cold and chocolaty and ridiculously decadent!

Before heading out to the airport I got a chance to see the city from the water and the Statue of Liberty - thanks to the free state island ferry!



Wednesday 21 August 2013

DC - Greenbelt and DuPont Circle

I flew from Chicago into BWI where Jess picked me up and drove me to Julian Court (Greenbelt not Camden) to meet the kids and have dinner with the family.

After meeting Venice, Elizabella, Frankie (the cat) and Stanley, Jess and I stayed up catching up on the last few years and eating some of her lovely Union Jack tart!


The next day Jess and I headed out with Venice and Elizabella to the Museum of Native Americans, where Venice was spellbound by the starlight ceiling and the native american tradional stories about the star constellations and we all had fun in the interactive imagiNation exhibit.

Traditional dress for children - very cute!

View of the Capitol #1- from the museum

That evening the family headed out for dinner at Franklins - which has a store with an old style toy shop - lots of choice for the girls, but found something to satisfy everyone from Yasmyn to the baby.

The next morning after a classic Jess driving tour of monuments - we headed to the trendy thrift shops and restaurants on 14th street, where we had lunch at the Pig. The lovely Kyle gave us free drinks whilst we munched on brain sandwich - not for the faint hearted lol!

Thursday we headed over to Baltimore for that Maryland staple - crabs - on the deck by the inner harbour. It was so hot that we treated ourselves to gelato that melted everywhere - it wasn't just the kids that were covered - doh!

Friday we met up with Kim (Jess's sister) and my friend from Turkey, Nicole for lunch at Stanley's restaurant in historic Annapolis, which is the state capital for Maryland and is old and quaint - very pretty! It kind of reminded me of English country towns - it had a similar high street of old red brick buildings and well preserved heritage signs etc - apparently Starbucks weren't allowed to ruin this!

After filling our bellies with sushi and sake, we found a free beer tasting and checked out Pussers - the last time I was there was black Wednesday before Thanksgiving - with all the drinking I had to ask, is Friday the new funday?

Nicole and I did an evening walk of the monuments and the White House - so I actually got to see them close up and get some pictures:

White House at night

WWII monument


Lincoln

Saturday morning Nicole and I went stand up paddleboarding on the Potomac by George town for her friend Lauren's birthday, and then we went to Baked and Wired for a brunch of quiche and dirty chai lattes (dirty = espresso, very yummy!)



That afternoon we managed to tick off pedicures, the Museum of American history and the East wing of the National gallery of Art.

View of the Capitol #2

Nicole giving Mercury a run for his money.

View of the Capitol #3

Cupcakes and wine by the rooftop pool were preparation for a night out - we headed to Table for dinner for Lauren's birthday and then to Passenger for drinks after.

Sunday Nicole and I headed back to Eastern Market to browse the flea and food markets. We then walked back to the Capitol - view 100?! 


Yummy corn :)

More views of the Capitol - now from all 365 degree angles!





We went back to the National Gallery of Art to check out the Ballet Russe exhibition that we missed in the East wing the day before. Definitely worth it - the fusion of art, design, music and dance is amazingly presented and you really get a sense of how avante garde the Ballet Russe was.

The next morning I was off on the bus to NY....


Saturday 17 August 2013

Sunny Chicago!

..Having flown Spirit airlines (they had to divert to refuel before landing!) my Chicago adventure started with another interesting experience - the guy I was meant to be Couch surfing with at the weekend had double booked... but he had space mid week, so I had to hastily rearrange my hostel stay. 

The hostel was located by Wrigley fields the Chicago Cubs stadium and one of the oldest in the country. The L ride there showed something which looked particularly unique to Chicago to me - lots of covered wooden balconies and stairs out the back of the buildings, apparently sometimes fatal for partying students when not maintained, but they looked cool for BBQs and just catching some rays :)


The next day I caught up with my couch surfing host, 'Michael' and we grabbed a quick bite at M burger - very good for fast food! Then we headed to Brown Elephant in Boytown, a thrift shop, to check out any hidden gems on sale for $5 (there were none this time!)

That evening I caught up with Lori and Tony - friends of friends in Denver - and they introduced me to some of the downtown bars and local beer ;) as well as showing me the Millenium park and the 'bean' Anish Kapoor's Cloud Gate sculpture.




The following day was taken up with trying to move my stuff from the hostel to Michael's place - unfortunately he hadn't given me the actual address, so most of the day was spent in Dunkin Donuts using their wifi trying to locate the apartment and arrange to meet up with him... 

Eventually I found the flat and the keys and managed to dump my stuff with enough time to head back downtown to meet Lori and Tony for a sunset boat cruise. We had perfect timing - we caught the sunset and the Wednesday night fireworks!



(There were waves.... It was windy...)

Blue Cross Red Shield building lit up



I also learnt a great many interesting facts about Chicago - they reversed / rerouted the flow of the river from emptying into the lake to instead meet up with the Mississippi River and empty into the Gulf of Mexico. They did this as the amount of pollution in the river was contaminating the water supply from the lake - so as you may have guessed the people on the Mississippi weren't very happy about this! The river was meant to be so polluted at that time that it was self igniting and there was a crust on it that allowed pigeons to simply walk right across it - inspiration for Ankh-Morpork perhaps?!

Also it's not called the Windy City because its anymore windy than anywhere else, apparently it's because Chicago's politicians can talk the hind legs off a donkey and were nicknamed gas bags! 

The next day was my Bobby's Bikes Bites and Beers tour! We met up and headed off in hi-vi and sexy helmets to get deep pan pizza at Gino East, washed down with local beer. 



The story of pizza in Chicago starts with GIs bringing back the snack from Italy after the Second World War and the race across America to make this antipasti a main course. The route this took in Chicago was to make the dish deep like a proper pie. The crust is prebaked in a cast iron skillet and then filled with pizza toppings in reverse of normal - so cheese first then, toppings then the tomato sauce. This meant that the cheese protects the crust from getting too soggy from the sauce when loaded right up. And very good it is too, with flaky pastry and yummy cheesy tomato fillings.


We then cycled to Lincoln Park to taste some boutique cup cakes at Swirls cupcakes. 


We then headed to Murphy's for traditional Chicagoan hot dogs - no ketchup allowed!!! Instead they put pickles, pickled relish, mustard, hot chillies, tomato and cucumber. It was yummy!!



A couple of beers from Goose Island - local brewery and we were stuffed and ready to cycle the 7 miles back to the bike shop - a great tour!


At evening I went to the Couch surfing meet up Sheffield's bar with Michael and lots of other local Chicagoans as well as others visiting town - a great crowd, really friendly people and some good local beers too! 

However that evening was when it went a bit weird - my host Michael turfed me off the couch at 1am to sleep on the floor in the empty spare room, so his friends could come over... This wasn't the best move to ingratiate himself with me, you basically give up 24 hour access to your couch when someone is sleeping on it! So I didn't leave him any goodbye pressie as I would usually when I moved out back to the hostel.

Unfortunately he then decided that it was a good idea to proposition me on Facebook and just got unbelievably insulting and rude when I declined to respond - apparently I was the worse couch surfer he ever hosted (I lost the plot a bit in his long diatribe though - I think not buying him a drink, letting him cook breakfast in his own house and accepting his offer of a burger was 'taking advantage' - so I had to point out that he should not expect every couch surfer to sleep with him - I mean WTF, it takes more than a burger and some eggs to woo this girl, the minimum is a lot of drinks and some flirting lo!l).

After reporting him to couch surfing - remember he was meant to have someone else staying with him that weekend, another girl... I headed downtown for a self guided architectural walking tour, which accidentally stopped in Nine West... Well they had 30% off the sale items, so that was practically free, and my trusty New Look sandals had pretty much died from over use (thanks for them Jen!)

That evening the hostel was buzzing with the weekend crowd, including a bachelor party, and we went  drinking and dancing locally - I was showing my moves, including shaking my thing to Jump in the line (shake seƱora)! 



The next day my plan to get to Pilates in the park didn't happen - but I did manage to get to the John Hancock tower in time to see the Geico sky typers do their thing at the Chicago Air & Water show - truly spectacular when you are on the same level as them when they are loop-de-looping (it doesn't really come out in the pictures though)




That afternoon i had a matinee ticket for the Book of Mormon. I loved the show, a complete mix of the usual Trey Parker and Matt Stone irreverence and lots of cheesy broadway numbers! Highlights include  'Turn it off like a light switch' (about suppressing your feelings that are incompatible with the religion), 'Man up' (self explanatory!) and 'I believe' (that made up stories are the word of God etc). It was very funny and completely took my mind off my weird couch surfing experience.

I caught up with the hostel mob again that night and we went on a pilgrimage to Giodanos pizza for more deep pan action, running into Cubby beer on the way...


Later that night we went around the corner to a bar called Sluggers which is so named for the baseball/softball practice nets upstairs (as well as possibly for the duelling pianos!)

Sunday funday was a little lacklustre given that the coffee had run out at the hostel! We managed lunchtime beers with our local tacos, apparently Chicago is meant to be known for its Mexican food. We then headed to the beach, which was a little uninspiring given that swimming was difficult in thigh high water, before the Sunday night BBQ on the hostel deck. 


We also went to Lincoln Park to check out Stanley's bar where they had karaoke backed by a full band, but we got there too late to embarrass ourselves (luckily!).


The next day my hangover and I caught the flight to DC to catch up with the Goshorns in Greenbelt..