Although I went in yesterday (June 8), I would not call that my first day, since it consisted of sitting/sleeping on a bus for around ten hours, catching a taxi to a distant relative’s place at Queens, eating dinner, and sleeping.
In case you were not aware, New York City is having a record-breaking heat wave right now. From what we (parents and two family friends, along with myself) saw at Times Square, it went over 100 degrees Fahrenheit (around 37-38 degrees Celsius)! The humidity didn’t help much either.
Anyway, the day started off with heading out to Central Park to meet the family friends. Walked around there a bit, then proceded to head along Fifth Avenue.
The first stop was the Apple Store sitting at the intersection of Fifth Avenue and East 59 Street. The store is actually underground and all what you see at street level is a glass cube with the Apple logo hovering above a glass elevator and a spiral staircase that goes around it to the sales floor. I poked around with a Macbook Air – it is quite light and thin, but my original opinion on it still stands. Too many sacrifices and too big for my tastes. I’ll stick with my Thinkpad, thanks. I also took the opportunity to look at some of the iPhones. Funny thing is people have apparently used those display iPhones to log onto porn sites. Oh crazy people.
We proceeded to head south along Fifth Avenue, going into various stores with stuff way too expensive for us to buy just to enjoy the free A/C and carry on.
We ended up having some lunch at a Chinese place serving Shanghai food. It wasn’t bad.
More going down Fifth Avenue afterwards. We saw an Anglican church, Saint Thomas, partway down and noticed there was a woman eating a pretzel on the steps, despite a sign up top saying “Please do not eat food on the steps. Thank you.”. Yay for people not paying attention.
We then quickly went through the Museum of Modern Art on the ground floor and the gift shop, since we wanted to see more. Of special note there is that there was a fan-based pendulum swinging around just over the second floor. As I watched it, it came close to hitting people walking through. So asking for a lawsuit with that..
We then came across Saint Patrick’s Cathedral. It’s a fairly beautiful building, being a cathedral and all. Going through it reminded me of some other cathedrals I came across when I went to Germany for World Youth Day in 2005.
Moving on, we reached Rockefeller Plaza. It looks pretty amazing with all those flags around and the NBC news studio nearby.
Our next stop was the New York Public Library. Holy crap this place looks amazing. I had to have my bag checked at least four times (once going in, once going into the research library, once going out of the research library, and once more while leaving). I guess they don’t want people smuggling away things that cannot be borrowed.
We then made our way across to Times Square. So many screens with so many advertisements and stuff. Quite a crazy place and cars moving in an interesting traffic pattern.
Afterwards, we headed over to Gyu-Kaku in East Village for dinner with our family friends and their daughter, who’s studying in New York for a short while for summer. Gyu-Kaku is kinda like Shabusen (for the Vancouver readers), except it only focuses on the BBQ bit and has a very large sake list (4 pages worth). I wanted to do the sampler, where they give you 3 types to try out, but since no one else was drinking, there wasn’t much of a point. Oh well.
Afterwards, we just headed home.
Some miscellaneous notes on the day:
- Pedestrians here don’t really care about the signals. If it looks open, they just go for it. At the end of the day, I’ve just followed their lead.
- I have never seen so many taxis going down a street in my life.
- Speaking of taxis, these taxi drivers are some of the most aggressive drivers I have ever seen.
- I would probably be scared shitless driving through Manhattan. I’ll stick to getting around by subway.
- I seem to really enjoy trains. The subway was fairly pleasant to ride. Makes me want to break out the SimCity 4 and play around with city building and traffic management again.
Tomorrow: South Manhattan.