My trip to the city was paid for by my daughter. For those who wondered where I stayed, it was at the Marriott in Mid-town and my daughter used her many points to pay for the overnight bill. My daughter figures that we walked an average of 20 blocks each day...but I think it must have been more. My ankle did not give me pain although my daughter showed due concern. My issue was just the old joints and muscles that reminded me I must slow down. Actually, if I kept walking I was fine. Once we sat for an extensive time to rest on a Central Park bench both on the Saturday and the Sunday, moving again was a real challenge. Those of you who are my age realize how your joints fill with lactic acid when you have moved extensively and then refuse to move smoothly after extensive rest until you have forced the walk for another 10 minutes through the stiffness and pain and finally you return to the normal walking mode.
We paid for taxies as the day progressed and the deadines to be somewhere else were closing in on us, and these came to an average of about $8.00 each time.
The very first visit we made was to the Metropolitan Museum of Modern Art because I have been to N.Y. City only twice and never to this museum. Most of my relatives are not into museums and I have given in to their interests on prior trips. But Mother's Day was mine! We saw only a tiny part of this HUGE museum. We saw the Egyptian special exhibit which was not nearly as romantic or exotic or dusty as when I wandered the museum in Cairo many years ago. But it was very informative.
Then we visited the Dutch gallery, saw some Vermeer, and of course, Rembrandt. Then a short walk to see the Degas collection. With over two million works housed here there were so many artists we missed, but we had the audio and those paintings that we actually studied were rich in audio description. For lunch we ate at the museum 'wine bar" and had just a salad and wine. The waiting area was filled with shadows and light and created a feeling of magic as if stepping back in time.
We waited in the lunch line next to an elderly woman who was alone and nicely dressed. We got to talking and she explained that she lived near the museum and came often. When I perused the entire collection in the brochure I realized she could come every day for years and years and never really catch up. She must have had lots of money because living off of Central Park is not for the middle class and for a brief time I was envious.
After lunch, my daughter wanted to peruse the flea market at Hell's Kitchen and this was certainly a dramatic change from the atmosphere at the Met. It was like going from the Palace to the market place in a medieval city. She likes to look at antique costume jewelry. There was lots in the way of junky treasures sitting on folding tables under plastic tents, and even those old pieces that were most intersting could be priced over a hundred dollars unless you were a good bargainer. We looked at clothing, purses, hats, kitchen ware, lamps, 'antique' books, and junk without definition. I thought about those men and women who sat each day selling this stuff and wondered if, indeed, it supplemented their disability or social security income. I also thought about the many prior owners of all of this stuff. Had they passed on and their relatives sold this stuff or did they sell it because they needed the money? Or was this stuff found in dumpsters along the streets of New York? We did not buy anything.
This flea market was in sharp contrast to the antique store on 5th Avenue that we had walked through. Every piece in the antique store was thousands of dollars even though it was at a marked down price because of the store's closing. I looked at the jewelry and mused (out loud) about what had occurred to force the owners to sell their diamonds and emeralds and rubies and works of art. The nephew (mentioned in the prior post) chuckled and told me not to be concerned. Most of these people were trading up for larger pieces of jewelry he said. I keep forgetting about the 1%. I am so out of orbit with these folks!
We ate that evening at A Voce – the Columbia location, a new Italian restaurant that had a write up in our hotel's brochure as one of the top ten new restaurants in the area. We were impressed because there are hundreds of high end restaurants in the area to write about. Alas, I was disappointed in the food. Al dente was too chewy and nothing was exceptional in my estimation, other than an exceptional 'by the glass' wine list. Neither of us finished our expensive meals, but I did not complain as this was my treat from daughter.
Sunday's activities in the next post...so you can skip this blog for a while if following someone's boring travel is not to your tastes.
We paid for taxies as the day progressed and the deadines to be somewhere else were closing in on us, and these came to an average of about $8.00 each time.
The very first visit we made was to the Metropolitan Museum of Modern Art because I have been to N.Y. City only twice and never to this museum. Most of my relatives are not into museums and I have given in to their interests on prior trips. But Mother's Day was mine! We saw only a tiny part of this HUGE museum. We saw the Egyptian special exhibit which was not nearly as romantic or exotic or dusty as when I wandered the museum in Cairo many years ago. But it was very informative.
Then we visited the Dutch gallery, saw some Vermeer, and of course, Rembrandt. Then a short walk to see the Degas collection. With over two million works housed here there were so many artists we missed, but we had the audio and those paintings that we actually studied were rich in audio description. For lunch we ate at the museum 'wine bar" and had just a salad and wine. The waiting area was filled with shadows and light and created a feeling of magic as if stepping back in time.
We waited in the lunch line next to an elderly woman who was alone and nicely dressed. We got to talking and she explained that she lived near the museum and came often. When I perused the entire collection in the brochure I realized she could come every day for years and years and never really catch up. She must have had lots of money because living off of Central Park is not for the middle class and for a brief time I was envious.
After lunch, my daughter wanted to peruse the flea market at Hell's Kitchen and this was certainly a dramatic change from the atmosphere at the Met. It was like going from the Palace to the market place in a medieval city. She likes to look at antique costume jewelry. There was lots in the way of junky treasures sitting on folding tables under plastic tents, and even those old pieces that were most intersting could be priced over a hundred dollars unless you were a good bargainer. We looked at clothing, purses, hats, kitchen ware, lamps, 'antique' books, and junk without definition. I thought about those men and women who sat each day selling this stuff and wondered if, indeed, it supplemented their disability or social security income. I also thought about the many prior owners of all of this stuff. Had they passed on and their relatives sold this stuff or did they sell it because they needed the money? Or was this stuff found in dumpsters along the streets of New York? We did not buy anything.
This flea market was in sharp contrast to the antique store on 5th Avenue that we had walked through. Every piece in the antique store was thousands of dollars even though it was at a marked down price because of the store's closing. I looked at the jewelry and mused (out loud) about what had occurred to force the owners to sell their diamonds and emeralds and rubies and works of art. The nephew (mentioned in the prior post) chuckled and told me not to be concerned. Most of these people were trading up for larger pieces of jewelry he said. I keep forgetting about the 1%. I am so out of orbit with these folks!
We ate that evening at A Voce – the Columbia location, a new Italian restaurant that had a write up in our hotel's brochure as one of the top ten new restaurants in the area. We were impressed because there are hundreds of high end restaurants in the area to write about. Alas, I was disappointed in the food. Al dente was too chewy and nothing was exceptional in my estimation, other than an exceptional 'by the glass' wine list. Neither of us finished our expensive meals, but I did not complain as this was my treat from daughter.
Sunday's activities in the next post...so you can skip this blog for a while if following someone's boring travel is not to your tastes.