Posted tagged ‘Battery Park City’
Going Somewhere? (Hudson River Morning)
December 11, 2012Prettyscape
August 17, 2012One Tip To/Of Manhattan
July 18, 2012Sounds of Stillness (Summer begins in downtown NYC)
June 2, 2011Full summer here now. I wake up to a kind of thick stillness in the air and somehow, clearly perceptible in that stillness and yet not really disturbing it, is the sound of a lawn mower.
It all seems absolutely, perfectly, summery.
And then, I think, lawn mower? You’re in New York City!
Okay, there are parks down here. There is even a little parkish-sort of area (with tress photographed above) just outside my window.
Still, probably not a lawn mower.
A weed whacker?
(I swear it’s not just a truck idling.)
And now (I’m listening harder), I suppose it could be some kind of construction somewhere. The WTC site a couple of blocks away is the obvious choice.
But I kind of hate to think that I am confusing the sounds of the upcoming Freedom Tower with a lawn mower.
So, let’s just say that full summer is here now; that I wake up to a warm, thick stillness in the air that somehow overbalances a bunch of city sounds in a way that seems completely unlike the see-saw of stillness/sound in Winter, Spring, Fall. (When, by the way, I usually have my bedroom window closed.)
Hmmm…….
Let’s just say that I wake up and it’s really warm out.
(Above is same photo/drawing “posterized” with Photogene app.)
Old/New Source of Alternative Energy (Heat) – The Hot Water Bottle
January 4, 2010I’m all for solar power, wind power, and other renewable alternatives to fossil fuels. But during last night’s bitter cold, which was especially frigid in Battery Park City (where I live), the prow of the stationary ship which is Manhattan, I discovered an eminently traditional, and yet not fully tapped, form of alternative energy (i.e. heat). The hot water bottle.
Seriously. It was terrific. Better than wool socks. (Maybe not as good as a nearby warm body, but warm bodies don’t necessarily put up with cold feet other than their own.)
As a caveat, I should say that I keep my apartment relatively (my kids say, ‘extremely’) cool (my kids say, ‘freezing’) in winter. Besides trying to keep my carbon footprint to a toeprint, I find hot air heat too dry. This means that I basically turn all the heat off at night. (Okay, so maybe my kids are right.)
But last night called for measures beyond wool socks, a down comforter, and even a nearby warm body.
I have to confess to a past prejudice against hot water bottles, their rubbery exteriors so (potentially, at least) slimy and nubbly. Besides my innate repugnance, my only personal experience with hot water bottles was in Mussoorie, India, a town in the foothills of the Himalayas, bordering Rishikesh (the hang-out of Maharaji Mahesh Yogi the Beatles’ guru) and Dehra Dun (a favorite locale of Rudyard Kipling).
Mussoorie, though a very nice town, probably sounds more romantic than it is, at least when you are there alone, as I was. It was green, hilly, and, on the small main road had a small boy who ran alongside a single thin wheel which he propelled with a stick. On a clear day, there was a tower you could climb where you could supposedly see Tibet. (I was not there on any clear days.)
Other than that, all I remember about Mussoorie is that it was very cold at night and that in my guest house, a remnant of the Raj, guests were distributed hot water bottles after dinner. These, a sickly blue green, were covered in a worn crochet of thick bright red and purple yarn; up by the corked top was a dog-eared yarn flower.
My memory of these hot water bottles is somewhat muddled by the baths in that same hotel. The tubs were portable, small and tin, just about big enough for a squat. When I came back to the hotel in the late afternoons, there was, next to the little tin tub, a very large aluminum tea kettle coated in an even larger quilted tea cozy. Though the water in this kettle was close to boiling (depending upon when one came back to the room), there was only enough to fill the very cold noisy tub to the depth of an inch or two. I remember taking all baths in at least one wool sweater.
Unfortunately, the crochet-covered hot water bottle and the tea-cozy-covered bath water became inextricably linked in my mind. As a result, I always thought of hot water bottles with a shiver from the waist down.
Until last night, that is, when my husband, in response to the buzzing cold of my feet, found a dark red hot water bottle in the back of a bathroom cabinet, and filled it up to the brim.
What a revelation! My own little heat pillow. My own little adjustable portable hearth. At virtually no cost! Using minimal fossil fuel!
Okay, so, it sounds silly. But it also seems a useful paradigm for reducing U.S. energy consumption. Heating one small actually used space, as needed, instead of the nonstop heating of a whole apartment, or house. A helpful idea even when oil has not yet gotten back up to $100 a barrel. (News alert—it went over $81 today.)
No crochet required.
ps- if you prefer paintings of elephants to hot water bottles, check out 1 Mississippi by Karin Gustafson.
USS New York
November 2, 2009The USS New York sailed by Battery Park City this morning, an LPD-21 (whose name, I believe, means something like “landing platform deck”) stopping opposite the World Trade Center site. My camera didn’t work (or I didn’t know how to work it on a brisk morning), and settled for holding my shivering dog under my jacket, so I only have the “artist’s rendering” above.
The ship, in honor of New York, is made in part (probably extremely small part) from steel from the World Trade Center. The Hindu-temple-like stupas at the front are missile defense systems.
Bagpipes played the Marine corps anthem “From the Halls Of Montezuma”.
Fire boats sprayed blue and white water. (Their spray in the morning light, with the Statue of Liberty and huge grey ship in the background, and Hudson rippling on all sides, and ferry boats, and police boats, and little coast guard rubber style boats, was really quite beautiful.)
Eleven helicopters were counted.







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