Category Archives: Exploring New York City

One World Trade Observatory 285 Fulton Street New York, NY 10007

One World Trade Center

One World Trade Center from the 9/11 Memorial Pools.

Day Three Hundred and Seven Attending ‘Grad Alley’: My last event as a Grad student before Graduation from NYU May 14th, 2024

I still can’t believe that all things come to an end.

On Friday, May 17th I graduate from Graduate School at NYU. It has been a long ride since October 2019 when I came on campus for the first open house. The there were those dozen Zoom meetings during COVID preparing us for classes when they resumed. I thought the campus would never open up again and then it did when I entered in September of 2022. It figured that was the semester my boss gave me three classes to teach. Talk about a balancing act with three classes to teach and four classes to take.

Still here it is a year and a half later and this adventure has taken me from Washington Square Park to Paris, Prague, Abu Dhabi and Dubai with stop overs in Palermo and Punxsutawney, PA. That trip to see the groundhog really changed me.

Then came ‘Grad Alley’, our last official event before graduation. On an extremely gloomy night with a storm approaching, I headed in Manhattan for my last day of being a student before graduation. I almost did not head in because the threat of rain. I waited until almost 4:00pm and nothing and I thought ‘what the hell, there is free hot dogs involved’.

There was much more than that and I ended up having a wonderful time. I wish more colleges did something like this. This was a great to spend a great night in the City and my last night as a NYU student.

The Undergraduates in front of the fountain in Washington Square Park. They had graduated that afternoon.

Grad Alley at 5:00pm at the start of the event.

The crowds were huge as I guessed that everyone else thought the way I did, throw caution to the wind. It looked like everyone had a blast. There was all sorts of campus entertainment, games, music and especially the food. Campus foodservice did an excellent job supplying the food and drinks.

Me getting in line for the first Cotton Candy I have eaten in a decade.

The entertain was excellent. The professionals knew how to perform for a crowd. The first person I watched was the Electric Violin player. She was great!

The electric guitar player that evening.

She was excellent and knew how to engage the crowd. She played the classics and then the pop tunes. She kept it going for three sets.

Keeping going through the second song.

This street fair wrapped around the southern right corner of Washington Square and two full city blocks of entertainment and food.

The crowds just kept growing for that early evening.

The man on stilts played games with the crowd.

There was a lot of great entertainment all over the place. On top of the people on stilts playing toss with students, there were mimes amusing parents and jugglers having a ball showing how it is done.

This young woman was throwing things up and around.

As I made my around the blocks of tents I stopped in for hot dogs, soft pretzels, cotton candy, grapes and trail mix, bags of chips, the ice cream carts for eclair ice cream bars and ice cream sandwiches, popcorn and soda. I stopped figuring out how much I ate after the second ice cream bar and soft pretzel. This is when I am in high heaven. I love ‘Carnival food’. I have not eaten things like this in so long that I really enjoyed it. “Junk Food” is very underrated.

The tents of food and entertainment by Washington Square Park.

After my several snacks, I stopped to see the entertainment and that was enjoyable. The first stop was the wonderful jazz music of the 9th Street Stompers playing all the Cole Porter and Count Basie classics.

The guys did a wonderful job and I could see that they had been playing for years. It was fun to hear songs from the well known Broadway shows.

The group kept all of entertained and it was hard to see at times because the crowds were so large. I was able to get this picture in during a quick lull.

Then I walked around to where everyone was playing carnival games but the lines were so long, I said to myself that there was other things to do. That’s when I stopped over to see the NYU Cheerleaders perform.

I can see the reason why we did so well in sports. Our cheerleaders do such great a great job and use such great music for their routines.

A video of our cheerleaders performing:

The NYU Cheerleaders

After another round of snacks (I am sorry but those soft pretzels and caramel corn were so good!), I walked around some more and then stopped to listen to the NYU Songwriters perform. These kids were really good.

The NYU Songwriting Program

Candice singing about being a “Strawberry Shortcake”

Video on Candice singing “I’m a Strawberry Shortcake”. She was really good:

Evan singing “An Echo of my Own”. Here is the video on the song. He did a great job:

We went into ‘Ho Down’ mode when this cowboy sang some classic tunes and then his own country music.

I am telling you I want to see the kid in Nashville because he will shock all the southerners with his talent. NYU produced a talented cowboy who could lead the ‘Texas Two Step’. His original songs were terrific.

Getting some Churros before they were all gone. I am not sure who in NYU food service was running the show but they did a terrific job! There was plenty of food for everyone.

Then it rained for about fifteen minutes and that really thinned the crowds. It did not even rain that hard but the crowds cleared out. I just pulled out my umbrella and continued to listen to the NYU Songwriters perform. I really enjoyed this.

All good things come to an end and 8:00pm rolled around. Before I left, I had another hot dog (the ladies gave me a double hot dog and I thanked them in both English and Spanish) and soda and stopped to eat. That’s when I saw the line for pictures with ‘Lady Liberty’ disappear. She had real patience as I finished up eating. She could not have been nicer and we took a great picture and had a nice talk.

Justin with Lady Liberty.

With all that food in me and still humming some of the NYU Songwriters tunes, I decided to walk back to Port Authority. The rain had stopped and it was a warm night. I stayed long enough to see the campus wrap things up pretty quickly.

All good things do come to an end even after a wonderful evening in Manhattan. Even pass 8:00pm, people were still milling around.

As I walked up Broadway (my favorite route), I passed the Empire State Building lit for our graduation. I can not believe that I have been part of this for the last two years. It is still surreal to me.

The Empire State Building lit for NYU Graduation

I still can’t believe that I am done and will be graduating on Friday night. A year and a half has gone by so fast. The travels through Manhattan have taken me to Paris, Prague, Palermo, Abu Dhabi and Dubai. In a year and a half, I have seen the world and then some!

Passing through the NoMAD neighborhood on my way home.

It was a great night and a lot of fun. I could not have imagined that I would have had this much fun on my last night on campus but this being my fifth time to college and my third graduation ceremony I will be attending I am becoming a pro at this.

‘Grad Alley’ was a great time and the best way to spend my last day as a student at NYU.

Wish me luck at Graduation!

Read about my graduation from NYU!:

https://mywalkinmanhattan.com/

Zazzy’s Pizza 73 Greenwich Street New York, NY 10014 Closed this location August 2024)

The pizza at Zazzy’s is flavorful and delicious!

Zazzy’s Pizza is really popular with the NYU students.

Bamboo House Chinese Restaurant 1509 Lexington Avenue New York, NY 10029

The meals here are delicious.

Day Three Hundred and Five Achieving 2500 hours status at Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen and Volunteer Luncheon April 22nd, 2024

Me at Holy Apostles on my banner day

Justin Watrel at Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen on April 19th, 2024.

I have been volunteering at Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen (HASK) since September of 2003 ( I have mentioned this in many of my blogs) and it has been a wonderful and very humbling experience. I have clocked in many hours since I started and have seen many volunteers come and go along the way. On April 19th, 2024, I finally reached my reach goal and achieved the 2500 hour status.

This had always been a goal of mine since the first Volunteer lunch I attended back in 2003, my first year of volunteering at HASK. I always remember the pride that everyone felt when they achieved their 500, 1000, 2500 and 5000 hour awards at that lunch.

In the old days (pre 2008 meltdown), the 500 and 1000 hour award winners got a beautiful plaque, the 2500 hour winners got a engraved clock and the 5000 hour winners got an beautifully engraved silver bowl. We have not done those things in years but there is still that sense of accomplishment when we hit those milestone hours. I felt it at the recent Volunteer lunch in April 2024.

I have been volunteering at HASK since September 30th, 2003. It was the wanting to help the volunteers who were assisting at the piles downtown after 9/11. I had just moved home from the island of Guam and wanted to do something to help the effort in New York City. That and as a Culinarian and Hospitality Major, I thought I could put my cooking skills to some use for the 9/11 effort.

At that point though, Mayor Bloomberg had closed the piles to volunteers and machinery took over. So the volunteering was over. The Italian restaurant downtown, which had been supplying all the food for lunch and dinner was shutting down from feeding volunteers. The owner told me he no longer needed anyone but suggested I volunteer at a soup kitchen which there were a few in the City that needed help. The economy sucked at this time and they were all busy. A year and a half later after settling in at home, I looked into volunteering again.

While participating on a walking tour of Brooklyn for a ‘Trends in Retail’ class at the Fashion Institute of Technology (where I am an Alumnus), I saw on our volunteer board on campus Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen and decided to volunteer the next week. The was September 30th, 2003.

I have seen many changes over the years going from a small buffet line to a massive one created before COVID and then after the closing of the line on March 13th, 2020 and the pivot to outside takeout service. Now we only have outside take out service, sandwich drop off and pantry service, where people order their groceries with us and pick them up when they ‘place the order’ with us on site and pick them up while they are there. It’s a new system that seems to be working well.

In between my last semester at NYU, where I will graduating with my Masters in Global Hospitality Management on May 17th and my classes I have been teaching at Bergen Community College this semester, I have been volunteering more between classes. That’s how I finally finished the 2500 hour goal. I by no means will be stopping. There is now the 5000 hour goal to accomplish but it is that sense of joining all those other volunteers who achieved that goal and that sense of pride of giving back to a City we love so much that makes it worth it. Please note that I did not get the clock but with cellphones no one really uses them in the house anymore. One more thing to dust. It’s just that sense of accomplishment that means so much to me.

The lunch was really wonderful. We started off with a very inspirational talk by Reverend Anne, who talked about the pride of giving and then our Volunteer Coordinator Steve talked about the people who accomplished the milestone hours.

The volunteers who accomplished milestone goals. I entered the 2000 hour plus category. My name proudly added to the listing right in the middle of the listing.

Reverend Anne giving her inspirational speech that afternoon.

The volunteers at HASK enjoying the talk that afternoon just before lunch was served.

The lunch was a lot of fun and the food delicious.

The table was set with fresh salad, rolls and a dense Chocolate cake for dessert.

The Buffet line had Mushroom Ravioli, Roasted Broccoli, Stuffed Chick and Fish entrees and vegetables. The food was plentiful and wonderful. Everyone really enjoyed the lunch that afternoon.

The Mushroom Ravioli

The Roasted Broccoli

The Stuffed Fish entree

The Stuffed Chicken entree

The rich Chocolate cake for dessert.

It wasn’t the food that meant so much to me that afternoon even though lunch was really good and the Stuffed Chicken delicious, it was joining that rank with the people who had achieved so much that afternoon and whom I respected for their work at HASK. That sense of us giving back to the community that meant the world to me.

The irony is that the person I so much wanted to be like, Oswaldo, who I met on that first day volunteering and who achieved his 500 hour award at that first luncheon I went to twenty-one years ago, was there that day at this luncheon. I had not seen him since our Pre-COVID days and was now only volunteering on Wednesdays, when I was teaching class. He now only volunteers on Wednesday mornings.

When I reminded him of our years of volunteering together and that first Volunteer Lunch years ago, he just laughed and also wondered where the time had went. He also noted when I brought up the achievement of the 2500 hours and the clock, he laughed and said he did not know where his was anymore.

I guess we all go full circle in life. Like I said, I do not need a clock to mark this milestone. I am just proud that maybe I am making a difference in people’s lives. Whether a person is homeless, working poor, disabled or maybe a new immigrant to this country and to New York City, I am helping them to achieve their dreams as well. A place to rest and eat can give anyone a breather is always a helping hand. Isn’t this what God wants from us in the ‘Platinum Rule’? Treat those as they would want to be treated?

As I look forward to graduation from NYU and a new chapter in my own life, it is another sense of accomplishment along with my Masters that makes me feel fulfilled and humbled. This is how we grow and change in life.

Plus now I have another 2500 hours to accomplish. Maybe they will bring that silver bowl back some day!

Workshop Dominique Ansel 17 East 27th Street New York, NY 10016

The entrance to Workshop Dominique Ansel at 17 East 27th Street.

The gooey and delicious Crispy Molten Comté Gougére.

The DKA Brown Sugar

The Tartan Flambee

Day Three Hundred and One Seeing the Solar Eclipse at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden April 8th, 2024.

Also check out my blog on the blooming of the Gardens throughout the year and the many special events: Day Two Hundred and Sixty Two on MywalkinManhattan.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/11875

The crowds constantly watching at the full position the eclipse.

I went the Brooklyn Botanic Garden to see the solar eclipse that started at 2:10pm and was finishing up by 4:00pm on April 8th, 2024. It was a day of a lot of excitement all over New York City to sites sponsoring events.

The start of the eclipse at 2:10pm.

It was a mixture of clouds and sun that afternoon.

Originally, I was supposed to go to the Clermont State Historical Park in Germantown, NY for the event but we had a speaker at NYU that evening so I decided to change my plans when I saw that the Brooklyn Botanic Garden was having a similar event so I signed up there as well and would decide depending on the weather. It ended up being a very sunny morning and I wanted to go into the City to see the Eclipse. The first thing I wanted to do was eat lunch.

840 United Deli Corp. at Washington Street

840 United Deli Corporation at 840 Washington Avenue

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g60827-d27668782-r946476962-840_United_Deli_Corp-Brooklyn_New_York.html?m=19905

Because the gardens would not allow outside food to the event, I stopped at 840 Deli Corp. for a quick lunch when the other two take out places I go to in the neighborhood were both closed. One of the local construction workers suggested a Cheesesteak on a hero roll so that is what I ordered. What a good suggestion! It was delicious.

Before I left the little bodega cat walked away from me.

The selection of sandwiches and snacks here are extensive and you can get sandwiches in both roll and hero rolls, and they are sizable.

The selection of snacks and drinks.

The gardens were not opening until 1:00pm so I took my lunch to the steps by the Brooklyn Museum right around the corner from the entrance of the gardens. The sandwich was delicious and had such a nice flavor. Not quite a Philly sandwich but the guy did a really good job.

The steps by the Brooklyn Museum.

The Brooklyn Museum Cherry trees were in full bloom.

https://www.brooklynmuseum.org

The Cherry trees in front of the Brooklyn Museum.

I just relaxed, enjoyed the sunshine and really enjoyed the cheesesteak. It was great. Not quite Philly (no Cheese Wiz) but still good. I ate and just people watched. It was so nice to just sit outside and enjoy lunch and people watch. It is so underrated.

How could you not love a Brooklyn Cheesesteak.

This was the best lunch. It was nice to have a cheesesteak again.

Do not miss the Cheesesteaks here.

The Cheesesteak was great!

After lunch I got back to the gardens and got in line which went on and on after me. I got in line at the right time and into the gardens quickly and received my solar glasses (Thank you Warby Parker). Since I had about an hour, I walked around the gardens. Everything was starting to bloom, and the gardens looked dazzling.

The crowds entering the Cherry Blossom lawn as it just started to bloom. It will be in full bloom in about three weeks.

Walking towards the Japanese Gardens.

The Cherry Trees by both the Cherry Blossom Lawn and the Japanese Gardens were in full bloom and looked spectacular that afternoon. There was such a variety of colors.

The Japanese Garden in bloom with cherry blossoms.

The Japanese Garden was in full bloom with cherry trees and spring flowers surrounding the pool. The sunlight gave it a colorful appearance when it reflected off the water.

The small house by the pond in full bloom.

The Japanese Gardens made quite a show that afternoon and Mother Nature really shows here stuff at the beginning of the Spring.

The Cherry trees by the pool.

Right around the corner from the Japanese Gardens is Daffodil Hill where hundreds of yellow trumpet Daffodils were in full bloom and the contrasts of green and yellow made quite a sight.

Daffodil Hill

The beauty of Daffodil Hill at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden.

Before I staked out a place to see the eclipse at 2:10pm, I decided to walk around and see more of the gardens and take more pictures. Daffodil Hill was in full bloom and was just peaking since I was here last time. Hundreds of beautiful trumpet daffodils swayed in the window. I never get tired of staring at it.

The beauty of Daffodil Hill should not be missed when it is in full bloom.

My next stop was the Fragrance Garden. All the tulips were in full bloom, and it was a colorful show of various hues looking an elegant design.

The Fragrance Garden in full Spring bloom and was a rich variety of colors and scents.

The fountain in the Fragrance Garden.

Then I walked through the Magnolia Garden which was just coming into bloom. The forty-degree weather recently really affected the trees. Some of them looked like they got hit with frostbite. Still, it was magnificent display of pinks, purples and dark rogues.

The Magnolia Garden.

The Magnolia Garden in bloom with Daffodil Hill behind it.

The Magnolia Garden by the sun dial.

The Magnolia Garden were vibrant in their colors and played beautifully off one another.

The Magnolia Garden by Daffodil Hill

Some of the season smaller flowers were in bloom too and these are usually only blooming for about a week, similar to the crocuses. I love the contrasts of the large old oaks and the small delicate flowers.

The deep purple Virginia Bluebells.

The Virginia Bluebells were in full bloom when I visited and with their deep purple hue make quite a statement against the large oaks that have not quite opened yet.

The Virginia Bluebells just around the corner from the Cherry Blossom lawn.

The Virginia Bluebells by the Cherry Blossom lawn.

The edge of the Rose Garden’s fountain was still not in service (the weather was still in the 40’s recently) but the tulips were in full bloom with their colorful statement.

The fountain on the edge of the Rose Garden.

The flowers were fully open on this warm Spring Day. The colors contrasted so nicely. The crowds started to grow around this part of the garden and the Cherry trees were just starting to open.

The crowds growing for the Eclipse by the Cherry Blossom lawn.

The Cherry Blossom lawn ready to burst open to show their magnificent colors.

The crowds started to grow all over the gardens and families talked while their children ran around the lawn.

The gardens started to show their brilliance.

The walk through the gardens is delightful.

People exploring the gardens by Daffodil Hill.

I came across these vibrant little yellow flowers that lined the lawns and hills right near the entrance to the Children’s Garden.

The tiny yellow flowers on the hill near the Children’s Garden.

This beautiful yellow blanket lined the sides of the hill and was such a nice contrast to Daffodils Hill.

The vibrant tiny yellow flowers.

These tiny yellow flowers lined the hills just past the Magnolia Garden.

The Natural waterway with more flowers.

The Children’s Gardens were in full swing with activity that afternoon. The gardens are always busy with families on the weekend, but it looked like the staff was preparing more beds as the weather was finally starting to warm.

The beds were being prepared for planting in the Children’s Garden.

Flowers right now dominate this garden which by the middle of the summer will be filled with fruits and vegetables.

The Children’s Garden building has been around since the turn of the last century.

Families were here to see the eclipse and it was mostly staff working here that afternoon.

I loved these signs. How creative!

I finally settled in and sat in a small incline across from Daffodil Hill so I could admire the flowers in between the glimpses of the solar eclipse. We lucked out and it started off as a sunny day. We had some cloud coverage during the show but with the glasses on, it was an interesting show.

The sun as the celestial show begun.

The problem with the eclipse was that we were too far away from the path to really see the show so you could only see it through the glasses. The sun still looked like it was shining.

Just as the moon started to cross the sun.

The clouds kept rolling in and out, but it was not as gloomy as they thought the weather would be that afternoon.

The start of the show as the moon started to cross the sun.

Only through the glasses could see the passing which took a little over two hours to finish and it was not a complete eclipse from our viewpoint. It was still interesting to see.

The crowd was really getting into it and everyone was becoming the experts by the end of the afternoon.

In between the moon crossing the path of the sun (you could not look at this all the time), I admired the flowers blooming around us.

The Magnolia Gardens right across from the incline where we were all sitting.

It was a nice break from looking at the sun. I picked the best location in the garden to both view the eclipse and the flowers.

The moon crossing the sun at the midpoint. You could see nothing without the glasses.

The sun was totally covered by about 3:20pm and then started its movement away from the sun.

The moon moving away from the sun.

By 4:20pm, the eclipse was over, and most people left the gardens by that point. Others just relaxed and enjoyed the beautiful sunny afternoon that we were finally having. It had been such a cold early Spring (so much for Phil’s prediction). with temperatures in the low 40’s until just recently.

Some of the crowd lingering at the end of the show.

I left the gardens around 5:00pm after most of the crowds left and enjoyed one more walk around the gardens. Some of the flowers were at their peak and would not be in bloom when I returned the next time. I wanted to enjoy them now.

Leaving the Magnolia Garden.

Passing the Japanese Gardens when the crowds were gone, I finally got to enjoy the paths.

The path by the Japanese Garden

The Magnolia trees around the corner from the Frangrance Gardens.

The Cherry trees in the Japanese Gardens were in full bloom and were quite a show themselves. It was so colorful reflecting off the pool.

The beauty of the Cherry trees in full bloom.

The paths around the Japanese Gardens pool were crowed.

The vibrant light and dark pinks and mauve of the trees.

The Japanese Gardens at their peak bloom.

I took the subway back to Greenwich Village that night for our talk on campus. Even in Greenwich Village, the flowers put on quite a show. I love the contrasts of urban gardens against the old brownstone apartments. These flowers were a block from the NYU campus.

West 12th Street in bloom in the Spring.

Walking around the Village on that late afternoon was a nice way to cap off this unique afternoon. There will not be another eclipse in about a decade, but we can wait for it.

West 12th Street in the Spring.

West 12th Street by our campus building is always a treat to walk down in the Spring, Summer and the holidays.

West 12th Street in the Spring.

Greenwich Village is very unique in its own way with nicely landscaped properties and lots of potted plants. Until the next eclipse there is still a lot of Manhattan to explore!

Places to Visit:

Brooklyn Botanic Garden

990 Washington Avenue

Brooklyn, NY  11225

(718) 623-7210

http://www.bbg.org

Open:  Sunday and Saturday 10:00am-6:00pm/Monday Closed/Tuesday-Friday 8:00am-6:00pm

Admission: Depending on the time of year/please check the website

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60827-d103900-Reviews-Brooklyn_Botanic_Garden-Brooklyn_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/2785

Places to eat:

840 United Deli Corp.

840 Washington Avenue

Brooklyn, NY 11238

(718) 789-9250

Open: 24 Hours

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g60827-d27668782-r946476962-840_United_Deli_Corp-Brooklyn_New_York.html?m=19905


My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com

Gino’s Pizza 831 Flatbush Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11226

Gino’s at 831 Flatbush Avenue in Brooklyn, NY.

The Cheese Pizza here is excellent!

The Hungarian Pastry Shop 1030 Amsterdam Avenue New York, NY 10025

The Hungarian Pastry Shop at 1030 Amsterdam Avenue in Morningside Heights.

The pastry case is filled with the most amazing baked goods.

Day Three Hundred Attending the Ivy League Championship at Columbia University Levine Gym March 18th, 2024

I got an email during Spring Break that Cornell Basketball was going to be playing Yale for the Ivy League Championships. We had an Alumni get together at the Lion Head Tavern at 995 Amsterdam Avenue before the game and we would be heading up for the game. You know that nothing works out the way you think it will.

Lion’s Head Tavern at 995 Amsterdam Avenue

https://www.lionsheadnyc.com

Review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d5842687-Reviews-Lion_s_Head_Tavern-New_York_City_New_York.html

By the time I got to the Alumni get together at the Lion Head Tavern which is several blocks from the gym it was almost over. It had been a long morning for me and try getting a bus to cooperate getting into Manhattan on a Saturday and then catching the subway uptown was interesting. I have to say that the tiny bar was PACKED with Alumni and current students having a good time before the game. The whole place both inside and outside the bar was spilling with Red and White. Everyone really thought we would win the Ivy League Championship. I thought so too with the current record we had for the season.

When I got inside, all that was left was a salad that had seen better days and there was no dressing to it and some portobella mushroom burgers (Yuck!). I did not want to eat any mushy mushrooms. By that point at 1:30pm, everyone was heading up to the Levien Gymnasium where the game was taking place and I was starved, so I walked to Koronet Pizza on Broadway to have one their giant slices. I forgot how giant the slices are there.

Koronet Pizza at 2848 Broadway

https://www.koronetpizzany.com

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d426021-Reviews-Koronet_Pizza-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

I forgot how good the pizza was and how big these slices actually are. The cheese slice if cut into half could easily serve two hungry people. I downed the slice with a Coke before the game and it filled me up for the rest of the afternoon. It was so beautiful outside that the doors and windows were all open and the place was spilling with Cornell, Columbia and Princeton Alumni (Princeton had just lost to Brown in the Semi-Finals and they were all bummed).

The pizza slice is huge and takes up two plates.

After this large lunch, I walked up to the gym to get tickets. At first they were trying to sell me the seatback tickets for $60.00 but I could not afford that nor did I want to pay that for a Ivy League game. Since I was traveling alone, I did get a ticket in the bleachers for $30.00 which I still thought was too high but I came all the way to see the game so I paid for my ticket and then had to run around the perimeter of the gym to get to my seats. The commentators were blocking the easy route to the bleachers.

The place was mostly a sea of red and white with the Yale Alumni tucked into two sets of the gym. Our band and cheerleaders were on top of the bleachers yelling and screaming. At that point were behind by ten points when I arrived in the first half of the game.

The Cornell Team in the huddle during the first half of the beginning of the game.

The start of the game when I got there.

The first half was not so great. We had lots of mistakes. We kept up with Yale, a team that we had beaten the last time and lost by two points the time before. I have to say that our side of the court was rather loud. I have found at Ivy League games no matter football or basketball, Cornell Alumni and students are far more the dominate members of the stands even at away games. I have been to Penn, Columbia and Yale games were we take up all the seats and do most of the cheering.

It was not much of a game for either side in the first half as we left at half time 37-25 with Yale ahead by twelve. I knew a score like this you could catch up in the second half as I have seen Michigan State (my undergraduate Alma Mater), come back from games with higher deficits. The problem with Cornell is that we kept missing all our shots and Yale kept making the three pointers. That was the difference in the game.

The end of the first half.

The second half was a bit better in the beginning. We started to catch up from the blood bath of the first half. We started to chip away at their lead. During the break, our cheerleaders came out and got the crowd going along with the band.

Our cheerleaders led the way.

The Cornell Cheerleaders leading the way to a hopeful comeback and victory in the second half of the game.

We starting catching up in the second half and came out fighting. We were able to get the score within seven points with three and a half minutes left to the game. The crowds were exploding on the Cornell side and Yale got very quiet for about a minute and a half. It looked like the game was going to turn around.

We kept chipping away at that lead.

You got to keep fighting!

We moved within seven points of the lead but we could not sustain the game. We kept missing the three point shots and easy layouts.

The teams battling it out but we could not put the game away.

Oh well!

In the end we chipped away to nine points but we could not come back from the deficient. We ended up losing by twelve points 69-57.

I like all the other Alumni was bummed at the loss. Several I heard went back to the Tavern as the Columbia versus Princeton Girls Basketball Teams started their game. I decided to walk around the neighborhood as I had not been up here in several years to walk around. I had not released I had written my blogs here in 2017.

I needed something sweet and remembered the bakery on Amsterdam Avenue that had been there for years that everyone kept raving about, Hungarian Pastry Shop. I stopped for some dessert. I had read and seen so many videos on the shop I wanted to try it. The lines were long all day and I had to get into the line for a half hour before I could get in.

The Hungarian Pastry Shop at 1030 Amsterdam Avenue

https://www.facebook.com/hungarianpastryshopnyc

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d457265-Reviews-Hungarian_Pastry_Shop-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

The pastry cases.

I tried their version of the Napoleon, which was layers of Vanilla Cream, whipped cream and a caramel topping between the flaky layers and a Apple Strudel, that was loaded with fresh apples and cinnamon. I took the desserts across the street to the park and I have to tell you that they were terrific.

The pastries are amazing!

I ate them at the park across the street and just relaxed and watch the world go by. I admired the statuary in the park which I had seen when I visited the park years ago on my walk through here.

Down the long paths of plantings and around the bends of the property, I sat by the interesting statue at the center of the park. The breathtaking statue is called the “Peace Fountain”, created in 1985 which shows a unusual look at the battle between good and evil by artist Greg Wyatt, who was an artist in residence at the church.

Greg Wyatt artist

Artist Greg Wyatt

https://gregwyattsculpture.com

Mr. Wyatt has graduated from Columbia College with BA in Art History and studied at National Academy of Design. He bases his work on the philosophy of the “spiritual realism’ merging realistic images and abstract forms of space, form and energy (Wiki).

The ‘Peace Fountain’ by artist Greg Wyatt

The sign from the sculpture.

I decided rather than head off to a museum downtown, I would update my blogs in this part of the City and walk around Morningside Heights, Bloomingdale and parts of the Upper West Side. It was a nice afternoon and it was a chance to catch up and see what was going on in the neighborhoods and what had changed. I have to say that the SoHA section of Harlem (from 125th to 110th from Morningside Park to Fifth Avenue) has really changed and gentrified even more than I remembered. This was the same with the Bloomingdale section of the Upper West Side (from 110th to 94th Streets from Riverside Park to Central Park).

My blog on Morningside Park Day Sixty-Nine:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/3909

My blog on SoHA Day Sixty-Eight:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/3900

My blog on Bloomingdale Day Eighty-One:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/5822

I walked all around Morningside Park amazingly enough not looking as dangerous as everyone said it was now. There were plenty of people walking their dogs, conversing in the park and playing basketball. The flowers were just starting to bloom and the park by the pond looked really pretty.

Morningside Park in bloom

The pond area of Morningside Park

The pond with Columbia University in the background.

I walked all around the streets and avenues looking at old restaurants that had closed or moved, businesses that changed hands and how much the neighborhoods have changed in seven years.

West Place Chinese Restaurant at 1288 Amsterdam Avenue

https://www.seamless.com/menu/west-place-express-inc-1288-amsterdam-ave-new-york/4672840

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d5065901-Reviews-West_Place-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

Not wanting to head home without eating dinner, I went to West Place Chinese Restaurant at 1288 Amsterdam Avenue for dinner and this time I tried the Boneless Spareribs with Fried Rice and an Egg Roll combination platter and the meal was excellent as usual. I had not eaten here in months and the food is consistently excellent. The portion size was larger than I remember from the last time. They really piled the food into the container.

The Boneless Spareribs with Fried Rice and an Egg Roll.

The Boneless Ribs were overflowing on the platter.

These sweet and juicy bites are full of flavor and piled into this small dish. There was enough food for two people.

The Egg Rolls are amazing.

By this time it was getting dark and I wanted to head home. I took the subway at 125th Street, got the joy of watching some kid jump the turn style and then headed up to take the subway back downtown.

It may not have been a good game but it gave me a chance to revisit several neighborhoods, update blogs, eat some terrific food and enjoy a day supporting Cornell University on what should have been our championship year (Yale eventually won the Ivy League Championship by one point over Brown and will go off to the NCAA Championship).

Still it was a nice day out. Go Big Red!

Places to Eat:

Lion’s Head Tavern

995 Amsterdam Avenue

New York, NY

https://www.lionsheadnyc.com

Open: Sunday 11:00am-2:00am/Monday 12:00pm-2:00am/Tuesday-Friday 12:00pm-3:00am/Saturday 11:00am-4:00am

Review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d5842687-Reviews-Lion_s_Head_Tavern-New_York_City_New_York.html

Koronet Pizza

2848 Broadway

New York, NY 10025

Phone: (212) 222-1566

Fax: (212) 212-0664

https://www.koronetpizzany.com/

Open: Sunday-Saturday-10:30am-11:15pm

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d426021-Reviews-Koronet_Pizzeria-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/diningonashoestringinnyc.wordpress.com/273

Hungarian Pastry Shop

1030 Amsterdam Avenue

New York, NY 10025

https://www.facebook.com/hungarianpastryshopnyc

Open: Sunday 8:30am-8:30pm/Monday-Friday 7:30am-8:30pm/Saturday 8:30am-8:30pm

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d457265-Reviews-Hungarian_Pastry_Shop-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on LittleShoponMainStreet@Wordpress.com:

West Place Chinese Restaurant 

1288 Amsterdam Avenue

New York, NY  10027

http://www.west-place-indy.com/

Telephone: (212) 932-9390 and 9376

Open: Sunday-Saturday 11:00am-11:00pm

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d5065901-Reviews-West_Place-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/diningonashoestringinnyc.wordpress.com/591

Places to Visit:

Morningside Park

Morningside Drive

(212) 639-9675

Open: Sunday-Saturday 6:00am-1:00am

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d548724-Reviews-Morningside_Park-New_York_City_New_York.html