Category Archives: Visiting a Museum in New York State

Day Three Hundred and Seventy-One How did Christmas arrive so fast? Part I November 29th-December 31st, 2025

I could not believe how fast the Christmas holiday season creeped up on us. One minute I am finishing classes for the summer and the next I am running around the State of New Jersey and Upstate New York attending the start of Christmas events. I have never seen a year pass by so quickly.

I started the Christmas touring early with a quick trip on the Thanksgiving break to Cooperstown. NY for some R & R at The Otesaga Hotel. The hotel was having some massive discounts on rooms and I had the time and money for a quick trip upstate. Plus I had wanted to update my birthday blog and needed new pictures, so I traveled Upstate, through the winding back roads and highways of the Catskills to Cooperstown, NY. It was a relaxing trip.

The Otesaga Hotel in Cooperstown, NY

https://www.otesaga.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Hotel_Review-g47529-d283789-Reviews-The_Otesaga_Resort_Hotel-Cooperstown_Otsego_Otsego_County_New_York.html?m=19905

The town was preparing for the Christmas festivities the Friday after Thanksgiving. When I arrived, they were finishing decorating the downtown for their holiday parade.

Downtown Cooperstown, NY decorated for the Christmas holidays

The finishing touches on Santa’s Village

The holiday treats in the Schneider’s Bakery window

The downtown is really picturesque as urban renewal never hit this small town and it still has its Victorian charm. All the local businesses have been replaced by tourist spots but the architecture of the homes and businesses still amaze me. The buildings were decorated with bows, garland and lights and the windows of the shops that were open were preparing for a long holiday season.

Downtown Cooperstown, NY decorated for the holidays

The hotel was starting to decorate for the holidays as well holding off the major decorating until after Thanksgiving. Traditionally the hotel closed for business after the Thanksgiving weekend but since COVID, has been open year round with winter activities. The hotel will be decked out fully for the holidays.

The outside of the front of the hotel with Christmas trees

The inside lobby of The Otesaga Hotel ready for the holidays to start

My stay up in Cooperstown was relaxing and enjoyable. I toured the museums, walked the grounds and explored the downtown, which most was closed this early holiday week. For me it was a two day escape to relax after a kind semester and getting ready for finals. Santa could not have provided me a better gift.

My blog on my trip to Cooperstown, NY:

After my trip up to Cooperstown, it was a whirlwind of running around over the Thanksgiving week. I got back on a Wednesday and then Thanksgiving was the next day. The weather cleared and I went into Manhattan for the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, which I had not seen live in a decade. Again, I was updating pictures on an older blog.

It was a beautiful sunny day in Manhattan and the parade route was packed with people. It was a lot of locals but there was loads of tourists as well as I heard all sorts of languages being spoken as well. In the post-COVID era, tourism is back in New York.

Getting ready for the parade on West 46th Street an excellent spot to view the parade

My blog on the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade:

It was really great to see the parade again and we had the perfect late Fall weather. It was clear, sunny and about 50 degrees outside by the start of the parade. Cool but perfect for this time of the year.

The Tom Turkey float opening the parade

The floats and balloons heading down Sixth Avenue to the Macy’s store on West 34th Street

The Gingerbread House float

Towards the end of the parade on the Christmas float, singer Darlene Love, who sang ‘Nobody aught to be alone on Christmas’, which was featured in the movie, ‘Home Alone II’, was in the parade and I thought that was really cool.

Singer Darlene Love on the Christmas float

My video on her performance in the parade as she passed by us. Everyone was excited that she was in the parade!

Then Santa arrived to much excitement of the crowd. I have to say from where I stood, this Santa really looked like Santa. He could not have been more engaging with the crowd as the float passed by.

The Santa float passing by us

Santa waving at us as we waved back

Santa passing by us on West 46th Street to head to Macy’s to open the holiday shopping season

The parade passed us by and was over before noon

After the parade was over, I was starved and made my way downtown. I could not believe how mobbed the City was all over the place Many stores and restaurants were open all over the place and the sidewalks packed with people.

Herald Square Park decked out for the holidays

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/herald-square

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d548744-Reviews-Herald_Square-New_York_City_New_York.html

Greeley Square was just as decked out

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/greeley-square-park

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d3529407-Reviews-Greeley_Square_Park-New_York_City_New_York.html

The Carousel at Greeley Square

The beautiful decorations by the carousel

The statue of Horace Greeley was decorated all around

By the time I passed Herald Square, the parade had ended and they were taking down the barriers. I could see tourists looking to see if the store was open! In 2015, they opened for a Midnight Sale (Union rules on opening on Thanksgiving), and after that I never saw it open that early again.

Macy’s during the day

Macy’s decked out for the holidays later that evening

https://www.macys.com/stores/ny/newyork/herald-square_3.html

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d208847-Reviews-Macy_s_Herald_Square-New_York_City_New_York.html

The store was decorated for the upcoming holiday season starting at 6:00am the next morning. I was back in the City the next morning working in Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen for a post Thanksgiving meal and passed the store afterwards and the whole area was mobbed.

The ‘Wonderful Stories’ theme of the storied windows

The windows were decorated for the holidays and the store was so creative with the Santa theme.

The ‘Wonderful Stories’ theme

The Macy’s Parade window

The inside workings of the store

The outside of the store

I made my was down Broadway, taking the same route I had done three weeks earlier on my Broadway walk down the length of Broadway. How the foliage changes so fast when I arrived in Madison Square Park.

Madison Square Park on Thanksgiving Day

https://madisonsquarepark.org/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d501513-Reviews-Madison_Square_Park-New_York_City_New_York.html

I made my way down busy lower Fifth Avenue to Washington Square Park, where the students from NYU hung out. The park was really busy that afternoon considering school was out for the Thanksgiving Weekend. It also was decked out for the holidays. I took my walk down Broadway the way I walked to school last year (God is NYU over already?!).

Washington Square Park during Thanksgiving

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/washington-square-park

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d32893149-Reviews-Washington_Square_Park_New_York-New_York_City_New_York.html

The entrance to the park from the NYU side of the park at the start of the Christmas holidays

The entrance to the park so beautifully decorated

I reached my Thanksgiving dinner destination and nothing says Thanksgiving than Chinatown. I thought maybe a few restaurants would be open and neighborhood quiet. Both Chinatown and Little Italy streets and restaurants were mobbed! Mott Street was packed with people. I was floored by that. I went to one of my favorite restaurants for Thanksgiving dinner, Wonton Noodle Garden, known now as Mei Lai Wah, at 23 Pell Street.

Wonton Noodle Garden (Mei Lai Wah) at 23 Pell Street

https://www.meilaiwah.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d26997229-Reviews-Mei_Lai_Wah-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=69573

My review on LittleShopOnMainStreet@Wordpress.com:

https://mywalkinmanhattan.com/tag/wonton-noodle-garden/

The food is always wonderful and the service is excellent. I always eat at the bar area in the back and you get the best service and see what is going on. Being at the bar you observe not only what is going on in the kitchen but in the dining room. I ordered the Cantonese Wonton Soup with roast pork, pork wontons and egg noodles and an order of Fried Wontons, which are so good.

My Thanksgiving dinner of Cantonese Wonton Soup and Fried Wontons

The Cantonese Wonton Soup with roast pork and wontons

Fried Pork Wontons

It was a really wonderful meal and the perfect Thanksgiving dinner with a nice twist. This is how to spend the holiday.

After dinner, I walked around Chinatown on a cool night and it was so picturesque. When the lights went down earlier in the day, you can see the true beauty of Manhattan.

Mott Street at night, the heart of Chinatown

The beauty of Chinatown and lower Manhattan

I decided to walk back to the Port Authority and admire the views on the way up Broadway. I never get tired of the lights on Broadway.

The Empire State Building on Thanksgiving at night

https://www.esbnyc.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d104365-Reviews-Empire_State_Building-New_York_City_New_York.html

It really was a wonderful holiday and it was fun to spend it in Manhattan.

After working in Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen the next morning and walking the streets of Alphabet City for my blog. It was fun to explore the streets of this diverse neighborhood. I also knew the weekend was going to be lot of running around and I wanted to get as much done in Manhattan as possible. I knew that I would not get back to finishing the streets until after the holidays and then it would be cold.

The next morning it was an early morning drive to Long Beach Island and the holiday activities of the shore towns the line it of Beach Haven, Ships Bottom and Barnegat Light. Even in the colder months, there is a lot going on in these once sleepy summer towns. They are open for the holiday season and the towns have lots of activities going on.

The Barnegat Light Lighthouse in December

https://dep.nj.gov/parksandforests/state-park/barnegat-lighthouse-state-park/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46285-d286497-Reviews-Barnegat_Lighthouse_State_Park-Barnegat_Light_Long_Beach_Island_New_Jersey.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

The beauty of the inlet that separates Long Beach Island from Seaside Park

The boats were out in full force that cool morning

You have to be there to experience how relaxing it is

It was a cool and crisp day and there were a lot of activities going on all over the island. There were places I wanted to revisit. This holiday would be one long picture taking mission.

Watching people walk along the bunker by the lighthouse

Walking along the pathway back to the car

Learning about the areas role in the Revolutionary War

After the tour of the lighthouse and its grounds, I headed over to Viking Village for the Crafts Fair and Santa’s visit. That is always a lot of fun.

The Viking Village at the holiday

https://vikingvillageshows.com/

The Viking Village Craft Fair and some of the interesting work at the fair

The statue outside is always clever in its decorations

The entertainment was really good. Musician Jimmy Aziz played for everyone in the afternoon

His performance singing “Easy as Sunday Morning”

I really enjoyed the performance as did other people who stood by to listen to the mini concert. I got to walk around the craft fair, admiring all the artists works and many of the display pieces. There were a lot of talented artists showing there work that afternoon.

One of the craft displays outside a store

While I was walking around waiting for Santa to arrive on the fire truck, I was admiring the display the people at Viking Village had set up in his honor for the holidays.

The Santa display set up in Santa’s honor

Then 1:00pm arrived and we could hear the bells and whistles of the fire truck as Santa and Mrs. Claus arrive at Viking Village. There is always a lot of anticipation for their arrival and the crowds lined up so deep, that the truck dropped them off at the entrance and they walked in this time.

Santa and Mrs. Claus arrive by fire truck with help of the Barnegat Light Fire Department

Santa and Mrs. Claus arrive to a enthusiastic crowd

Then they sat down to join the crowd and hear requests from children and adults alike. They were busy for the rest of the afternoon.

Santa and Mrs. Claus await the first family to visit them

The proud couple with their first little visitor

As the long lines started for their visit, I decided to get some lunch while the crowds waited in line. In the same complex was the restaurant, ‘Off the Hook’, a wonderful seafood restaurant I had eaten at before. It was the perfect place for an outside lunch on the picnic tables.

Viking Fresh Off the Hook at 1905 Bayview Avenue in Barnegat Light, NJ

https://www.vikingfreshoffthehook.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g46285-d3357767-Reviews-Viking_Fresh_Off_The_Hook-Barnegat_Light_Long_Beach_Island_New_Jersey.html?m=69573

The food here is excellent and again I really enjoyed my meal. They had a limited menu and I started with the New England Clam Chowder, which I enjoyed so much the year before.

The start of my meal, the New England Clam Chowder

It was thick and rich and loaded with clams

For my lunch, I ordered the Fried Shrimp Tacos. They were served in a soft taco shell with fresh shredded lettuce and tomatoes. With a little hot sauce and sour cream, they made the best lunch.

The Fried Shrimp Tacos with fresh shredded lettuce and tomatoes and fried potato chips

Now this is dining at the shore!

Yum!

Maybe it was the salt air or the excitement of the holidays and Santa’s visit or just the beautiful day of just the delicious food and eating outside on the picnic bench but it was such a nice lunch and I really enjoyed myself. The meal was excellent. It was also nice to eat outside on a sunny day when the weather is cool but not cold.

On the way back to Beach Haven to visit the Beach Haven Library Open House, I stopped at Baked on the Beach at 2102 Long Beach Boulevard for dessert. I love their cookies and needed something sweet to finish the meal.

Baked on the Beach at 2102 Long Beach Boulevard in Surf City

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g46856-d10275318-Reviews-Baked_on_the_Beach-Surf_City_Long_Beach_Island_New_Jersey.html?m=69573

The delicious selection of baked goods

I had to get one of their cookies and got the ‘Beach Bum’ with all sorts of chips inside an oatmeal cookie.

The Beach Bum cookie

The delicious desserts at Baked at the Beach

After I finished at the Craft Fair and lunch, I headed down to Beach Haven to go to the Beach Haven Library & Museum Open House. I never knew that there was a museum at their library so I looked forward to seeing it. What a beautiful library.

The Beach Haven Library & Museum at 219 North Beach Avenue

https://www.beachhavenlibrary.org/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Profile/R4960NKjustinw/mediabatch/14036054?m=19905

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://visitingamuseum.com/

It is such a beautiful and historical library dating back from 1924. The downstairs was very interesting with wooden bookshelves and display cases and shelves showcasing the libraries collection. On the top floor was the museum with many artifacts from the island’s nautical and resort past.

The first floor of the museum with the library book collection

The second floor book collection

The second floor museum gallery

While the museum was small, it was packed with all sorts of interesting artifacts. There were hotel ledgers from long closed hotels, relics from ship wrecks and items from local families.

Hotel ledgers where guests once signed in

The artifacts save from ship wrecks and pictures of local spots

The upstairs conference room decorated for the holidays with book shelves lined with the collection

Downstairs there was a very nice Open House with snacks and a working fire with music and nice conversation with the staff.

The Open House Refreshment table

The Christmas decorations in the library with the working fire place

The Christmas tree in the Children’s Room

After I left the library, I explored the Downtown area and the Pharmacy had their Open House too with ice carvings and several contests. This was a how many reindeer can you count in the window contest.

The Counting Reindeer contest in the window

So many reindeer

The ice carving demonstration

Before I left for my last event on the island, the Ships Bottom Tree Lighting Ceremony, I stopped for some ice cream at The Woo Hoo. This is always a treat and I do not care how cold it gets there is nothing like homemade ice cream.

The decorations for Christmas at the Woo Hoo

https://thewoohoo.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g46292-d7646259-Reviews-The_Woohoo-Beach_Haven_Long_Beach_Island_New_Jersey.html?m=69573

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

I decided on the Christmas specialty flavor, ‘Santa’s Favorite Cookie’, which was a Cinnamon ice cream filled with crushed biscotti cookie, cookie dough, chocolate chips and M& M’s. It was heavenly.

‘Santa’s Favorite Cookie’ ice cream

Yum!

I love the holiday decorations at the Woo Hoo

With the wonderful lunch and some time before the tree lighting, I walked over to the pier to see the sun set over the island. This is always a treat.

The sunset over the pier

The sunset was so beautiful that night

The decorations in the park in Beach Haven

It got darker for the tree lighting ceremony and I got so lost. Then I did not know where the tree lighting was taking place. I had to Google the location about three times and I finally found it down by the harbor by the bay. By that point, they had lit the tree and people were visiting Santa. It was a nice way to end the evening at the shore.

The Christmas Tree lighting ceremony in Ships Bottom, NJ

https://welcometolbi.com/event/ship-bottom-christmas-tree-lighting

People were taking pictures by the tree and visiting Santa. They also had refreshments for everyone as well.

The beautiful Christmas tree in Ships Bottom by the bay

The decorations with Santa leading the way

The festive pirate ship

People were visiting Santa in the gazebo that night

This was a nice way to end my evening at the shore. The lights and the sounds were really nice and there was still a nice crowd when I left the tree lighting. It was really a wonderful afternoon at the shore. Long Beach Island knows how to celebrate Christmas.

After another long week at work, it was going to be another long weekend of activities as I had the Snowflake Festival in Kingston, the Cape May Historical Walking Tour and their Christmas Parade and then the Bergen County Firemen’s Home Association Christmas Party for the residents followed by a Sinterklaas event at the historical Van Allen House, home to the Oakland Historical Society. I would be in the car all weekend.

I had gotten an email from the Dorsky Museum on the SUNY New Paltz campus that the BFA/MFA Student Opening Show was going to be that night. I decided to attend before I went to the Snowflake Festival in Downtown Kingston. Don’t ask me how but I attended both events with plenty of time to spare.

I got up to New Paltz in record time and had time before the art opening to visit Historic Huguenot Street, the complex of historic homes in the historic district in the downtown area.

Historic Huguenot Street at Christmas

https://www.huguenotstreet.org/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g48245-d288641-Reviews-Historic_Huguenot_Street-New_Paltz_Catskill_Region_New_York.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

Some of the homes were decorated with simple wreaths and not much else but the snow from the recent storm offered a picturesque view with a Christmas feel.

The decorations outside the Dubois House

The historic Dubois House

The Janet Hasbrouck House

The historic Presbyterian Church decorated for the holiday

As it got darker, I made my way to the SUNY campus and to the art museum. It really was a good show with a nice reception and interesting art. While the students were devouring the food at reception, I had the whole gallery to myself to look at the art.

The Dorsky Museum on the SUNY New Paltz campus:

https://www.newpaltz.edu/museum/

https://www.newpaltz.edu/museum/exhibitions/bfamfa-thesis-fall-25/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g48245-d10130343-Reviews-Samuel_Dorsky_Museum_of_Art-New_Paltz_Catskill_Region_New_York.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

I have to admit that some of the art was quite unusual. The students did have a streak of creativity to them.

The Dorsky Museum Gallery

Some of the unique pieces

Once the students devoured the Reception buffet, everyone came in to see the exhibition

This is the one piece that really stuck with me at the show

The gallery at the museum is rather small do I got through the whole show in less than an hour. I had a quick snack with what was left on the buffet table, which was not much. The food was really good and a snared the final meatball.

Just enough of a snack to get through the next two hours

I only stayed at the Gallery opening for about an hour and then it was back on the road again and up I 87 I went to downtown Kingston to the Annual Snowflake Festival. The weather was cold but at least it was not raining like the previous year. The crowds were beginning to grow that night.

The crowds that evening on East Front Street

The decorations in downtown Kingston, NY for the Annual Snowflake Festival

https://kuba.network/snowflake/

The festive display windows for Christmas

This merchant does a wonderful job every year

They are very creative

The first entertainer at the beginning of the event I saw was the Fire Thrower and she did an amazing job interesting us. She really got the crowd engaged.

The Fire Thrower engaged the crowds downtown

The next group of entertainers I saw was the band on stilts, whom I have seen at Sinterklaas for years. They got the crowd motivated.

The guys do a marvelous job every year

Even their Christmas songs are fun. Here are them performing ‘Rudolf the Red Nosed Reindeer’

I made my way around the downtown this year to try to enjoy everything in the festival, which meant running from one thing to another.

Main Street where the stage was and the core of the entertainment

My first stop was the bank with all its entertainment and things to do. They really kept the crowds entertained.

There was a group of singers performing Christmas carols. I thought they were the bank staff.

They had all sorts of desserts and hot beverages like Hot Cider and Chocolate for the crowds

Mrs. Claus was entertaining all of us with puppets and stories. There was also crafts for the kids

Mrs. Claus posing for me. It took me a half hour to finally email this picture to here.

Then I headed over to the Dutch Reformed Church to hear the fiddlers. The church is always so beautifully decorated for the holidays. It never disappoints anyone to just visit inside and keep warm and listen to wonderful music.

The Dutch Reformed Church of Rhinebeck

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g48003-d7232701-Reviews-Old_Dutch_Church-Kingston_Catskill_Region_New_York.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

The luminaries lighting the way inside

The inside of the Dutch Reformed Church that evening

The start of the concert with the Strawberry Fiddlers performing

Here you get to see the true beauty of the church

I then got a close up shot of the fiddlers

The Strawberry Fiddlers performing that night. They really got the crowds going. I heard two songs performed before I moved on to the next thing to do.

Walking through the well lit downtown where freshly fallen snow the night before made it look more picturesque.

The downtown was amazing at night

My next stop was the Kingston Volunteer Museum’s display of antique fire trucks.

The Kingston Volunteer Fire Museum

https://www.facebook.com/volunteerfiremansmuseum.ofkingston/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g48003-d3367598-Reviews-Volunteer_Fireman_s_Hall_Museum_of_Kingston-Kingston_Catskill_Region_New_York.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

I didn’t go inside because the crowds packed the place and I remembered from both years how God awful their hot chocolate was and bypassed it this year. Still the fire trucks were the big lure and festively decorated with Christmas lights.

The decorated trucks outside the museum

As the evening wore on, I had never seen an evening fly by. My last stop of the evening was the Senate House, which was closed that evening, but in the barn Santa and Mrs. Claus were receiving visitors and a guitarist was performing.

The Senate House Barn decorated for the holidays

https://parks.ny.gov/visit/historic-sites/senate-house-state-historic-site

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g48003-d3225491-Reviews-Senate_House_State_Historic_Site-Kingston_Catskill_Region_New_York.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

The line to see Santa was about sixty deep and I really did not have time to see them. I had seen Mrs. Claus already.

Santa and Mrs. Claus greeting guests that night

So I listened to the guitarist, who I seen perform before. He performed all sorts of classic Christmas songs with a good personality. He talked about this traditional Italian Christmas song that his Sicilian wife loved so much.

The singer performing on that cold night. I do not know how he did it.

Here he is performing ‘Dominick, the Italian Christmas Donkey’

The musical performance of ‘Dominic, the Italian Christmas Donkey’

The last thing I did that night after the performance was get in line for the horse drawn carriage around the downtown. The line had been fifty deep most of the night. It ended up I was the last person allowed in line as it was the last ride of the night.

The horse drawn carriage rides that night

Everyone was trying to get on the last ride of the night and begged because they had kids. I love it when parents use their kids as pawns. Even so just as we were to get on the carriage a group of people snuck out of a restaurant and took the spots of the family in front of me and myself and we could not get on.

They were so pissed. The police were just starting to reopen the downtown roads and the carriage guys said he had no control over it. So the carriage guy said he would take us on a ride back to the other side of downtown to load up these very cold horses.

The temperature had really dropped at this point. We got the best ride because we got to see more of downtown and see it lit up for the evening.

The very last ride on the horse drawn carriage through the downtown. It was the best trip of the night!

By this point the event was over. It was past 8:00pm and when this event ends, it ends! The roads opened up and the crowds disappeared. I turned around and everyone was gone.

Like last year, most of the restaurants close at 8:00pm on the dot. I am not sure why. One of the few restaurants open that night downtown was Vincenzo’s Pizza at 305 Wall Street. It was packed when I arrived being one of the few restaurants open at that time.

Vincenzo’s Pizza at 305 Wall Street

https://www.vincenzoskingston.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g48003-d4647055-Reviews-Vincenzo_s_Pizzeria_Ristorante-Kingston_Catskill_Region_New_York.html?m=69573

The inside was crowded as there was barely anything open after 8:00pm

I needed something to warm me up and carry me over before the two hour ride home and pizza would not do. So I ordered a Meatball sub. Was that ever good on a cold night.

The best comfort food that night. Yum!

After dinner was over, the crowds were gone and I had to head home. I stayed for just a little bit longer to admire the decorations one more time and visit their Christmas tree.

This downtown display replaced the Pumpkin man from a month ago

The Kingston Christmas tree downtown

I headed back to the car and managed to get home in an hour and forty-five minutes. There was no traffic on the road that night. I was happy as I had to turn around early that next morning for my trip to Cape May for the Christmas Walking tour.

I only got about six hours sleep before I had an early ride to Cape May for the Christmas walking tour of the decorated homes, churches and B & B’s. I had been wanting to do this for years and with Sinterklaas cancelled again in Rhinebeck, NY this was my opportunity to go on the tour.I got on the road early for the three hour ride down the Garden State Parkway.

Needless to say, the walking tour in Cape May was an excellent experience and one I have wanted to do for years but the B & B I stayed at in Wildwood was a complete horror show. They never turned the heat on in the house and I slept in a room that was 32 degrees. An igloo was warmer than this place. That was a whole other story.

The Christmas tree at this B & B was the only good thing I experienced that night

I got to Wildwood and dropped my things off. I felt something coming on and I seriously needed Chinese food especially Hot & Sour soup. There are no Chinese restaurants in Cape May proper so I had to eat in Wildwood. Most restaurants this time of year are closed because the town is so quiet. The only choice that took a credit card is the Dragon House at 3616 Pacific Avenue in Downtown Wildwood.

The Dragon House at 3616 Pacific Avenue

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g46931-d393849-Reviews-Dragon_House-Wildwood_Cape_May_County_New_Jersey.html?m=69573

I had eaten here many, many years ago the first year of when I started attending the NJ State Firemen’s Convention. It was the only option in town and I swear it was like a step back into the early 1970’s both in decor and food. It still is a Cantonese holdout.

The restaurant still has paneling and red backed booths

The food is just good here and I will leave it at that. It is not bad but not great and it would not warrant another trip. It served its purpose as I ordered the lunch combination meal of Hot & Sour Soup and Beef and Broccoli. Everything was just average but the soup was spicy enough to open me up and I did feel better for the long night of activities.

My 1970’s lunch started with Hot & Sour soup

The Hot & Sour Soup did open me up

The Beef and Broccoli was just good

After lunch was over, I headed down to pick up my tickets for the walking tour and walk around Cape May. It was promising to be a very cold night but it was in the mid 40’s when I got there. I dressed as warm as I could.

Enjoying the decorated homes of Cape May

Cape May at Christmas is a fantasy land of Christmas decorations

I started the day with a walk around the Physick Estate in Cape May, where I picked up my tickets. I had toured the house at various times of the year so I knew the home quite well.

The Physick Estate was the start of the holiday walking tour

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46341-d614851-Reviews-Emlen_Physick_Estate-Cape_May_Cape_May_County_New_Jersey.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

The home was once the home of Dr. Physick and his extended family. I picked up my tickets and started to walk around Downtown Cape May. The crowds were overflowing into the town because of the Cape May Holiday Parade. It would be starting about an half hour after I arrived.

The start of the Cape May Holiday Parade at dusk

The start of the parade with local organizations and the Coast Guard Band to start the parade

Then the floats and bands joined the line up

In the beginning of the parade, the Coast Guard, with its band and equipment entertained all of us. The boats were lit up with brightly colored lights and the band played on.

The Coast Guard boats were lit up at the beginning of the parade

The Cape May Fire Department then joined the parade

More decorated Coast Guard boats passed by

I only stayed for the first half hour as the parade winded through Downtown Cape May to the large crowds of on lookers.

The Cape May Stage at 405 Lafayette Street

I started the Cape May Holiday Walking tour with my green band on and map in hand. I walked two blocks to my first stop at the Cape May Stage, where I had seen many shows during the holidays.

The Cape May Stage decorated for the current production

The woman who helps run the theater told us the story of the building and of its time as a church. Then about its history as a theater and the famous actors who have graced the stage.

The Christmas tree in the lobby

My next stop up the street was the Macedonia Baptist Church at 630 Lafayette Street, which was decorated for the upcoming holiday Mass.

Macedonia Baptist Church at 630 Lafayette Street

https://www.facebook.com/p/Macedonia-Baptist-Church-Cape-May-100064897925489/

The tour guide who was a parishioner of the tour told us the history of the church and its place in the community.

The Macedonia Baptist Church decorated for the holidays

All the Inns and B & B’s that were around the square near Columbia Street were packed to the gills with people waiting in lines that were about 40 deep so doubled back to Hughes Street and visited the J. Stratton Ware House, one of the few private homes on the tour. The house was nicely decorated with festive green.

The J. Stratton Ware House at 655 Hughes Street

The J. Stratton Ware House during the day

The inside of the living room of the house

The main room

The festive Dining Room table

On the way to the next destination. I passed the Chalfonte Hotel, where I should have stayed that night rather that night instead of the place I decided on in Wildwood. We all learn from our mistakes.

The Chalfonte Hotel at 301 Howard Street decorated for the holidays

The Chalfonte Hotel during the day in the Summer of 2025

https://www.chalfonte.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Hotel_Review-g46341-d79381-Reviews-The_Chalfonte_Hotel-Cape_May_Cape_May_County_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

The hotel’s first floor had been winterized and had been open that weekend but the rooms were sold out and the only one that was open was $250.00, which I could not afford that weekend. So I stayed in my Airbnb ‘igloo’ that night. More on that later.

The next B & B I visited was the Beauclaire’s B & B at 23 Ocean Street (the inn during the day)

https://www.beauclaires.com/

The Beauclaire’s sign decorated for the holidays that night

The sign during the day

The view of the homes in the neighborhood

The inside of Beauclaire’s on the first floor parlor area was beautifully decorated for the holidays.

The fireplace on the first floor parlor

The Christmas tree in the house

The banister in the first floor

My last part of the house we walked through was the formal dining room set for Christmas dinner

I doubled back on my way to the Physick Estate and was able to visit the Bedford Inn at 805 Stockton Avenue.

The Bedford Inn sign at night during Christmas

The sign during the day

The front of the Bedford Inn at 805 Stockton Avenue decorated for Christmas

https://www.bedfordinn.com/

The Bedford Inn at 805 Stockton Avenue during the day

The inside fireplace decorated for the holidays

The banister fully decorated

The Christmas tree in their parlor

The White Christmas tree in the foyer

The Parlor at the Inn

The last house of the evening I toured was the Physick Family, where I started the tour during the day. I have visited the home many times at Christmas and I never get bored of looking at all the Christmas decorations. Dr. Physick was once prominent resident in town whose home is still a showcase of the community.

The Physick House when I arrived that afternoon of the tour

The estate was decorated both inside and out and there were lights and decorations all over the grounds. It really puts you in a festive mood and it is a house you should not miss at the holidays.

The 1879 Emlen Physick Estate at 1048 Washington Street

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46341-d614851-Reviews-Emlen_Physick_Estate-Cape_May_Cape_May_County_New_Jersey.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

The home is always so beautifully decorated for the holidays and I try to take this tour every year. While the decorations do not change that much it is still spectacular to tour.

Being greeted by the docent in the Living Room

The Parlor was decorated for the holidays

The beautiful woodwork in the home

The Christmas tree was decked for the holidays

The sideboard during the holidays

The Dining Room table set for Christmas lunch

The elaborate table setting for the holiday dinner

The Table Tree in the Parlor

The beautiful decorations set around the room for the holidays

It is always nice to take your time to tour the house and admire all the beautiful objects to enjoy looking at. The house is a real treat to visit at the holidays. After my visit to the house, I took a tour of the gift shop and admired all the beautiful decorations there as well.

The Physick House Gift Shop at the holidays

After the tour was over, I was starved and you will be amazed how quickly places close around Cape May even after a major event. After walking around for awhile and passing packed bars that there would be no way to get a seat, I came across Mario’s Pizza and Italian Eatery at 315 Ocean Street Unit 7, that was still open for the evening.

Mario’s Pizza and Italian Eatery at 315 Ocean Street Unit 7

https://mariosofcapemay.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g46341-d393892-Reviews-Mario_s_Pizza_Italian_Eatery-Cape_May_Cape_May_County_New_Jersey.html?m=69573

On a progressively cold night, the warm pizzeria was a God send. It was one of the few restaurants open after the tour and the pizza was really good. Their red sauce base for the pizza is so well spiced and dinner was just delicious.

The pizza was really good that night and warmed me up

After such a wonderful evening in Cape May, the real fun began when I got back to Wildwood. The weather had been dropping all night and it had to be about 38 degrees by 10:00pm when I returned to the B & B.

It had been warm inside the building when I left that afternoon but when I returned, the house seemed cool. I called the number and tried to talk to innkeeper but no one picked up. I went down to the Christmas tree in the Living Room to get some work down but it just kept getting cooler in the room. So I called again.

This merry go round went on all night with me calling and texting through Airbnb and their phone number all night. By 3:00am, I gave up and slept in my clothes with every blanket in the room on top of me. I barely got two and a half hours sleep with an almost three hour car trip ahead of me. I was pissed off.

The only saving grace the next morning was the shower was hot and I was able to warm up. I slammed the keys down at the innkeeper and marched out of this place. I eventually got reimbursed for the stay (I know the owner screwed up) but this was after long talks Airbnb. My advice to my readers is stay away from the Sea Gypsy B & B in Wildwood, NJ.

On the way to Boonton, I had to stop at a rest stop to regroup and eat some breakfast before our meeting that morning. I stopped at the Burger King at the Wildwood Rest Stop on the Garden State Parkway and was pleasantly surprised by the wonderful breakfast and friendly service there. The woman working the counter was so nice to me, it put me back into a much better mood.

The Wildwood rest stop was very nice that morning (and warm!)

The Burger King at Christmas

https://www.iexitapp.com/New%20Jersey/Garden%20State%20Parkway/Exit%204/42840#google_vignette

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Profile/R4960NKjustinw/mediabatch/14038991?m=19905

I had a simple Croissanwich meal with sausage and you do not know how this cheered me up after a bad night. It just warmed me up.

My breakfast that morning

Even the rest stop Christmas tree cheered me up that morning

Work was in full force with all the Presentations of the students final projects. I was totally drained by the end of the week. Plus the memory of that freezing cold room in Wildwood, I did not want to travel the next weekend. The weather was not going to be nice either and I did not want to drive as snow.

After a very long weekend last week and a storm coming through the next weekend, I cancelled all the plans I had and just stayed home. I had wanted to see the Christmas House Tour in Mauricetown, NJ but with a snow storm coming decided against it. Smart move as I had to dig out on Sunday morning. It was a spectacular view thought.

The house in the first snow fall of the year

Our street after the storm

After I dug myself out, I walked around the property and admired the view. I could not believe how quiet and beautiful the backyard was the morning.

The backyard was a winter wonderland

The backyard after I shoveled the walks. It would melt that afternoon but was so beautiful when the snow stopped.

That Wednesday I had a series of presentations with my three classes at the college. For the last six weeks, the students had labored on these projects and I looked forward to seeing them.

The Tuesday before this, I needed a haircut, so I headed into New York and off to York Barber shop where I have been getting I have been getting my haircut since my barber, Jerry, retired after almost forty years of being my barber.

York Barber Shop at 981 Lexington Avenue

https://www.yorkbarbershop.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g60763-d27798906-r1042395804-York_Barber_Shop-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on LittleShoponMainStreet@Wordpress.com:

I have been coming here for a year and they do a wonderful job with my hair and I loved the scented hot towel after I am finished with my cut. I looked for my presentation.

The inside of York Barber Shop

I love the old-fashioned feel of this shop that has been around since the 1920’s and some of the barbers have been around for over thirty years.

After I got my haircut, I had time to walk around Manhattan and see all the decorations. So many homeowners and businesses decorated for the holidays and you can see the creativity and originality in getting ready for the holidays.

As I walked up to the barber’s and back, these were some of the best pictures I took around Manhattan as the sun set and the lights came on.

The churches are especially decked out for the holidays

Walking around Greeley Square decked out for the holidays

Brownstones on the Upper East Side decorated awaiting Santa

The lone Christmas tree in the window

6 1/2 Street by the MoMA

6 1/2 Avenue by Sixth Avenue

The lights in the pathway next to the CBS building

The beauty of the Upper East Side

Around the corner from the barber, I saw this lone wreath on this building

I thought this was the spirit of Christmas

I then walked back down through the Upper East Side, I saw all sorts of beautiful displays for the holidays.

The Pierre Hotel at 2 East 61st Street decorated for the holidays

https://www.thepierreny.com/

St. Patrick’s Cathedral at the Fifth Avenue entrance

https://saintpatrickscathedral.org/

Then I took a tour of both Saks Fifth Avenue and Bergdorf Goodman. For two stores that are teetering on the edge of bankruptcy, they looked pretty good. We are seeing their ‘gilded’ sheen and we will see what happens to them after Christmas.

Saks Fifth Avenue at night at 611 Fifth Avenue

https://www.saksfifthavenue.com/locations/newyork/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d208852-Reviews-Saks_Fifth_Avenue-New_York_City_New_York.html

The main floor of Saks Fifth Avenue

The floors were so elegantly decorated for the holidays. The company though is ‘dancing on the rim of a volcano’ right now. The store looked so beautiful on each of the floor and I figured this is where all the money was going. The in store designers did a magnificent job with the store for this holiday season.

The back floor of the first floor of Saks

The escalators between the first and second floors

A first floor clothing display

This was a display was on the first floor perfume department

Then I walked outside to admire their Christmas windows. They were not their best but I thought some of them were fun. These were my favorites.

The snowman through Central Park

A cab ride down Fifth Avenue

The baking of Gingerbread treats

Then across the street from Saks Fifth Avenue was Rockefeller Center as it turned to twilight.

The Christmas tree at Rockefeller Center

https://www.rockefellercenter.com/holidays/rockefeller-center-christmas-tree/

The decorated lions outside the New York Public Library

Then I headed back to Port Authority to head home. I stopped by the New York Public Library to see the decorations and take a walk through the Christmas Village in Bryant Park. I love looking at the lions when they are decorated.

The Christmas tree at the Bryant Park ice skating rink

https://bryantpark.org/activities/category/winter-village

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d136347-Reviews-Bryant_Park-New_York_City_New_York.html

Their tree was really beautiful too!

The plantings on the way out of the park

It was a nice but quick afternoon in the City before the Presentations the next day . The students had to Present their final projects which was a major part of the grade. They had been working on this for the previous six weeks and it was time to see the results. All of these projects are under my Bergecco-Parc Consulting Inc. banner for my business classes.

My 8:00am class presenting the ‘ Sounds and Subs’ Team Project

Some of my 8:00am students presenting their diagrams of their restaurant for their presentations

My blog on the project:

The Project “Subs and Sounds”:

One Wednesday morning, December 10th, the class presented their ideas to me and these are the results of the individual Teams.

The Proposal from the Professor:

The PowerPoint of the Presentation:

The Website of the Presentation:

https://icuffaro.wixsite.com/my-site-6

The YouTube Video of the Presentation:

The Holiday Project PowerPoint:

https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1KIhtOxsZc_ZBI2tliNecVSuMCaPpvCH418k3tjOP0b8/edit?slide=id.p1#slide=id.p1

The Holiday Project Video:

The Holiday Project

The day of the project, I have the students dress in professional dress to present their ideas to the clients. The student executives presented their ideas on location, design, menus and ideas for local musicians who could entertain on a nightly basis. The client was looking for a concept that would attract music lovers not just from the suburbs but from Manhattan, Brooklyn and Newark.

Then at 11:00am, I had my next class present their project “Farmer’s Market-A Farm to Table” dining concept with the same set up as the other classes. They had to pick a location, figure the rent, logistics and zoning, the menu, create items for the gift shop, create an opening party and do the social media on Tik Tok and YouTube.

My 11:00am class Team Pictured for the ‘Farmer’s Market-Farm to Table ‘ concept

My blog on the project:

The Project “The Farmer’s Market”:

This class created menus with Farm to Table concept with sandwiches, entrees, side salads and unique signature desserts. Some students kept the menus safe while others really put their heart and sole into it and showed how creative they were with their menus.

The Project Proposal:

The Proposal for Farmer’s Market:

The Holiday Project Proposal:

The Holiday Project Presentation:

The Holiday project normally serves as Quiz Four for my class but I wanted the students to concentrate on their Academics this semester so I used this as an extra credit project.

Each Team has been requested by corporate to create a proposal for the Corporate Holiday Party that includes a invitation with a Christmas themed logo, a menu proposal with an appetizer, entree, and a dessert along with a signature holiday drink. Then the Team had to film a video greeting in English and Spanish wishing everyone a Happy Holiday season. They had forty-five minutes to pull it off and these were the result of that project.

The PowerPoint of the Presentation:

https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1raYNRfdEKhcioW0Mu71mvbQcTBcfx-uFSFPicdq9HYE/edit?slide=id.g39f9fe40fbd_0_1#slide=id.g39f9fe40fbd_0_1

The Website of the Presentation:

https://ckramer169801.wixsite.com/bergecco-parc-farm-t/group-one

The YouTube Video of the Presentation:

One Wednesday morning, December 10th, the class presented their ideas to me and these are the results of the individual Teams.

Team Two’s diorama of their restaurant concept

Some of my students presenting their projects that morning to me

The Team

One of the Team’s presenting their logo

My last class at 6:25pm that made their presentation that evening was my Business 101 class with their restaurant concept ‘Pasta and Pies’, which was a restaurant that offered sweet and savory pies and pasta dishes.

My Team picture with my night class at 6:45pm

My blog on the project:

The Team Project Proposal:

This class created menus with creative pies and what can be tucked into them, selective pasta dishes with side salads and unique signature desserts. Some students kept the menus safe while others really put their heart and sole into it and showed how creative they were with their menus.

One Wednesday night, December 17th, the class presented their ideas to me and these are the results of the individual Teams.

The Project Concept:

The Proposal for Pasta and Pies:

The PowerPoint Presentation of the Project:

https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1G9MngEpc0Jzxa-jsUcfCI-R9eSd-pBG1PAhMsOYflCY/edit?slide=id.g3aaba619d79_4_162#slide=id.g3aaba619d79_4_162

The YouTube Presentation:

Part One: Opening Team Four and Team One

https://www.youtubeeducation.com/watch?v=FeXYdhTMG8c

Part Two: Team Two and Team Three

Part Three: Team Five and the Conclusion

https://www.youtubeeducation.com/watch?v=vV-C8kg5jbI

The Company Website:

The Team Presentation pictures from that evening:

Each Team made their presentation to me and the Team below really did a wonderful job with their presentation and won the competition.

Team Three so professionally dressed for the Presentation and the Team that won the competition

Team Four gave them a run for their money

All of the major Presentations were done on December 10th and then the next week on the 17th was the final exam. Each division had to create their PowerPoint, their video Presentation and a website for their division of the company. This way the entire Team have a reference point to put on their resume.

I joined other faculty members for the college’s Holiday Party that week and then went to the Bergen Room, our on campus student run restaurant for Christmas lunch, which is the final student project before the winter break. There was a lot of eating going on this week.

The Bergen Room Bistro had a very special Christmas Dinner in December of 2025 which was the last meal of the year by the students. The room was beautifully decorated and the food and service were wonderful.

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g46712-d12308869-Reviews-The_Bergen_Room_Bistro-Paramus_New_Jersey.html?m=69573

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

The Bergen Room Bistro had a very special Christmas Dinner in December of 2025 which was the last meal of the year by the students. The room was beautifully decorated and the food and service were wonderful.

The menu for Christmas dinner in the Bergen Room in 2025

Christmas dinner in 2025 was a wonderful afternoon of good food and conversation. I loved the was the tables were set with a Christmas tree napkin. This was the last meal of the semester and the students and faculty advisors made the whole room as spirited to the holidays as possible.

The Christmas table set for a wonderful lunch

The table setting

The Christmas tree napkin fold

The candy decoration on the table

There was a fun centerpiece decorating the table

The students did a nice job decorating the tables for the Christmas holidays. The menu was so enjoyable. We started off either homemade soup.

The Minestrone Soup

The Garlic Bread

We then were treated to an Antipasti and a Caesar Salad. Both served family style and everyone at the table helped themselves while we were talking at the table.

The Antipasti

The Caesar Salad

The entree kept with the Italian theme and for the main entree, we had a platter of Chicken Parmesan with a side of Pasta Primavera and Penne à la Vodka.

The Chicken Parmesan

The Penne à la Vodka

The Pasta Primavera

My Christmas lunch that afternoon with delicious pastas and salad and the Chicken Parmesan

My holiday drink, the Berry Sparkler

For dessert, we had homemade Tiramisu

At the and of the meal, we applauded all the students for all their hard work on the meal and their dedication to the class and the Bergen Room.

The Culinary arts students who cooked this wonderful meal for us.

I loved how the centerpieces said “Merry Christmas everyone!”

It was a nice afternoon of talking to my counterparts on the faculty before the break and gave me a chance to finish my grading on campus and get ready to post grades to the students before the Winter break.

Because of the snowy weather and the bad experience in Wildwood, I decided to give the Christmas activities a rest the weekend between the Presentations and the final exam. I resumed my touring and picture taking the weekend after the finals. We finished finals on December 17th and I had graded all my students in my morning classes before I gave my evening final. Once finals were done, I spent the evening finishing grading my evening classes exam and went straight to bed. I had to be up early to meet students.

That Friday I met with any student who wanted their exams back and wanted to know their grades. This way there were no surprises and several students took me up on this. I had finished all the evening grades that morning and left for campus. Then in the afternoon I posted grades and changed clothes and headed to dinner and the theater in the City.

Singer Megan Hilty was returning to Carnegie Hall for a Christmas show performance and I decide to take this opportunity to revamp the blog I did on this eight years earlier. That meant dinner at Patsy’s Italian Restaurant and an evening in Carnegie Hall, both of which I was looking forward to the evening. It was the perfect way to end an extremely long semester.

Carnegie Hall was sold out both nights

The concert that evening ‘A Place Called Home’ was the return of Singer Megan Hilty since her concert I saw this time back in 2017. I could not believe that eight years had gone by so fast. Both performances were sold out and seeing her perform again was worth the wait. As I said before, this holiday was a picture taking mission so I recreated the whole evening I had at her show and started with dinner at Patsy’s Italian Restaurant.

Dinner at Patsy’s was wonderful but I could not understand why they put everyone on the second floor and kept the first floor empty. Patsy’s was founded in 1944 by Pasquale “Patsy” Scognamillo and has been in its current location since 1954 serving locals, celebrities and tourists alike. There has only been three chefs at Patsy’s, Patsy himself, his son, Joe and Joe’s son Sal (Patsy’s history).

Patsy’s Restaurant at 236 West 56th Street

https://www.patsys.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g60763-d478026-r1043293382-Patsy_s_Italian_Restaurant-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

The second floor dining room at Patsy’s right before the theater

When I had dinner there before my trip to Carnegie Hall, the food was amazing (see my review on TripAdvisor). I came with a big appetite and had a wonderful three course meal. I read about the menu online and then I saw Sal, the owner cooked the Lobster Linguini on Martha Stewart’s TV show.

I started with the Mozzarella in Carrozza for two which I finished on my own. It is basically a breaded mozzarella sandwich with their fresh Mariana sauce which were pan-fried perfectly and melted in the middle. It is served with their delicious homemade red sauce.

The Mozzarella in Carrozza at Patsy’s is excellent

The Mozzarella Carrozza

For the entree I had the Lobster with Linguine Oreganata, which I had seen prepared on the Travel Network and on Martha Stewart’s TV show and feeling generous to myself at the holidays, I treated myself. It was excellent. Perfectly cooked pasta with almost a half of sweet lobster topped on the dish. While the entree is not cheap, it is well worth the price so treat yourself!

The Lobster Linguini comes in two parts when served, with pasta and a split and broiled with bread crumbs. It is a delicious dish.

Don’t ask me how ate dessert but as the Dessert Cart kept passing me, I kept eyeing this cake and it ended up being a Napoleon Cake filled with white cream and layers of pastry dough. It was such a great end to a fantastic meal.

For dessert I had on my second trip to Patsy’s, the Vanilla Cream Napoleon Cake

Walking down the stairs at the holidays

Somehow I stuck upstairs with all the tourists but I it was fun as it was where all the action was that evening. The downstairs was extremely quiet that night. I do not know why they kept it so empty. The restaurant during the holidays is so nicely decorated and this is the view going down the steps.

patsys-restaurant-iii.jpg

Chef Sal Scognamillo of Patsy’s Restaurant

After dinner was over, I had to take a long walk around the block to digest. It was a wonderful three course meal but still I wanted to digest and relax before the show and what a show it was that evening. I love going to Carnegie Hall.

Carnegie Hall at 57th Avenue and 7th Avenue at Christmas time

https://www.carnegiehall.org/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.carnegiehall.org/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d116237-Reviews-Carnegie_Hall-New_York_City_New_York.html

Entering the theater for the concert

The inside of Carnegie Hall during Christmas

The entrance decorated for the holidays

The view from my seat in the ‘nose bleed’ section of the sold out concert. This was one of the last seats left when I bought the tickets at the last minute. I still could hear the concert fine and it was nice being back in Carnegie Hall again.

The singing group before the second act

Some of the songs she sang that night:

“The Christmas Song”

“Have yourself a Merry Christmas”

“The Most Wonderful time of the Year”

“A Place called Home”

The second part of the concert was all Christmas carols and some of the more religious songs. They ended the concert with a sing a long and everyone in my section of the theater really got into it. We ended the concert with the singer and Santa taking a bow. It was another great concert and if you have to the chance to catch her concert at Carnegie Hall at Christmas, get a ticket and go! It is well worth it. It really puts you in the holiday spirit.

The end of the sing a long

“Jingle Bells” was part of the sing a long

Megan Hilty and Santa taking a bow

After the concert was over, I took a long walk around Midtown, up and down both Fifth and Sixth Avenues to look at the Christmas decorations. I love Manhattan at Christmas.

West 57th Street decorated for Christmas

The decorations are incredible at night

The candy cane decorations are fantastic

Then I walked down Fifth Avenue and passed the Star on Fifth Avenue, which changed colors either each rotation.

The Star on the corner of Fifth Avenue and 57th Street in aqua

The star in blue

The Star in red

Star in a green and red

The video on the Star changing colors

I then turned the corner down Fifth Avenue and admired all the lights and decorations. Businesses really decorated this year.

These beautiful Christmas present boxes lined upper Fifth Avenue

The Peninsula Hotel in all its glory

The beauty of the decorations that top the entrance of the hotel

Cartier on Fifth Avenue decked out for the holidays

Saks Fifth Avenue at 611 Fifth Avenue across from Rockefeller Center

All the buildings at Rockefeller Center were decorated to the hilt and surprisingly the crowds by the tree were not that heavy that night so I got some great pictures in around the complex.

The front of 630 Fifth Avenue across from Saks

The Ralph Lauren bus outside of 630 Fifth Avenue

Walking through Rockefeller Center was easy that night

The Tree at Rockefeller Center was beautifully lit that evening

After my walk around Fifth Avenue and then through Rockefeller Center, I walked down Sixth Avenue to see all the decorations there was well. Corporate America at its best.

The tree at 1221 Sixth Avenue

The tree at 1221 Sixth Avenue

The tree outside of Sixth Avenue

I then made my way down to Bryant Park to see what was happening there and even after 11:00pm the park was going strong.

The Skating Rink at Bryant Park Christmas Village

https://bryantpark.org/activities/holiday-shops

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d136347-Reviews-Bryant_Park-New_York_City_New_York.html

What really dazzled me was the Bryant Park Christmas tree. It was lit for the evening and the array of lights and colors was so brilliant. It really put me in the Christmas spirit.

The Bryant Park Christmas tree ablaze with lights

Not only was the tree amazing but in the background of the park the Empire State Building was having a light show that made the building look like a giant ice cycle.

The Empire State Building during the light show

https://www.esbnyc.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d104365-Reviews-Empire_State_Building-New_York_City_New_York.html

The light show on the Empire State Building

Now that grading was done and posted for my classes I finally started my holiday break and that meant a series of tours of historical building and sites in Upstate New York in the Tarrytown region. I had tickets for a special Victorian Christmas event at Sunnyside, Washington Irving’s home first and then of Philipsburg Manor and their holiday tour. It was a long day of touring.

The Washington Irving estate decked out for the holiday event

The sign for the holiday event

I started the tour with some of the holiday refreshments they had in the meeting room off the gift shop. They had a variety of cookies and snacks along with coffee, tea and hot chocolate . The perfect snack to start the tour of the house.

The refreshment table at the event

After a snack and a talk with the docents, it was off to tour the house which was all decorated for the holidays pre-Civil War around 1835.

Washington Irving’s home , Sunnyside in Irvington, NY

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g48720-d3680157-Reviews-Washington_Irving_s_Sunnyside-Tarrytown_New_York.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

The house was beautifully decorated for the holidays and what was nice was that the rooms were not overdone. Each room was tastefully decorated for the holidays. These were some of my favorite rooms in the house.

Washington Irving’s office and study

The Dining Room set for Christmas lunch

The Dining Room table was so beautifully set for a Christmas luncheon. These side boards held all the desserts, sweets and beverages.

The Living Room held the Table tree which was popular before the Victorian era and the full tree came into vague.

The Children’s guest room for a visiting niece held all sorts of holiday toys and gifts

The French Bedroom has some of the best views in the house and wonderful exposure to sunlight and the river.

The kitchen was all set for the holidays as the servants prepared meals for the holidays. The table even had original recipes for dishes cooked in the house.

The last part of the tour once I left the kitchen was the grounds and this wonderful patio is just off the kitchen.

The last part of the events was a crafts room in the barn where we could make either pumice, which are oranges studded with cloves, Christmas crackers or ornaments . I chose the pumice as the smell is incredible over time as it ages. It was a really nice scent.

In between my tour of Sunnyside and the Philipsburg Manor, I stopped in Downtown Irvington to see if the Irvington Historical Society was open and it was on their last day of the exhibition on the ‘The history of the Irvington Gazette’. I got to tour the museum and then walk around their wonderful downtown, which was beautifully decorated for the holidays. Their latest exhibition that I visited was on The Irvington Gazette, their local paper.

The Irvington Historical Society at 131 Main Street is always so beautiful during the Christmas holidays

https://www.instagram.com/irvingtonhistoricalsociety/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g47953-d32814098-Reviews-Irvington_Historical_Society-Irvington_New_York.html

My review on VistingaMuseum.com:

When I returned to the museum in December of 2025, the new exhibition that was on display was the history of The Irvington Gazette Gazette, the local paper. It is a testimony to the power of local news. This is the importance of local newspapers.

The Irving Gazette exhibition

The exhibition up close

The first issue of The Irvington Gazette in color

The museum is small so I was able to tour the whole exhibition in about an hour and still have time to walk Downtown Irvington, NY. It is such a beautiful and quaint downtown and one of those Upstate downtowns that are so beautiful at Christmas time.

Downtown Irvington, NY decorated for the holidays

The downtown was decked for the holidays

Toy soldiers smile and wink at passers by on the fences of downtown

The fences in the downtown

The downtown merchants really decorated too

Irvington City Hall decked for the holidays

Even the Downtown Merchants got it

Both inside and out

After touring Downtown Irvington and admiring all the decorations, I moved on to my next site, Philipsburg Manor, the site of the Philipse family gristmill and home when they were in Upstate New York.

Philipsburg Manor and Gristmill in Sleepy Hallow, NY at 381 North Broadway

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g48622-d299069-Reviews-Philipsburg_Manor-Sleepy_Hollow_New_York.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

The first part of the tour was the gristmill where the wheat from the estate was produced, bagged and shipped down to the storerooms in New York City.

The inside of the gristmill

The finished flour products that would have been used for shipping

The gristmill that was used to manufacture and process the wheat into flour

We then toured the grounds and got to see where life would take place during the working months on the property. We passed the vegetable gardens where the slaves would grow their crops and where animals would graze.

The grounds of the Philipsburg property during the winter time when things would have slowed down on the estate.

We next toured the Manor house which would have been used by the Philipse family when they were visiting the facility which was at least once a year. The house would have been prepared for them as if they could come out at any time.

The Philipse family Manor house on the property

We toured the preparatory kitchen used by the slaves to prepare and cook meals both for the owners and his guests and themselves.

The seasonal table in the main kitchen with its fresh fruits and vegetables all sourced locally

The formal kitchen where all the meals were finished and where the china and pewterware would be kept for serving

The formal bedroom where members of the Philipse family would stay when they were visiting the site

The Philipse family kept everything in house for the tenant farmers and even had a store within the house selling goods from the City saving them a boat trip that could take hours or days.

The store room

This way the money was kept on the estate when money was paid for crops and supplies.

Items that would have been found in the store room of the Philipse shop

The store room items

We then moved to the dining area where business would be conducted and inventory and accounts would be settled.

The Dining area

The Philipse bedroom

The Philipse bedroom and dining area

Our last part of the tour was the historic barn

The docents did a great job demonstrating the process to separate wheat

The sunset over the estate at the end of the tour was amazing

This was the last weekend that the estate would be open and I had wanted to see as much of the town as I could. This tree was fully decorated with lights and was illuminated at twilight.

The illuminated Christmas tree in Downtown Tarrytown

After classes were over after finals week, I was completely burnt out from work. It had been a rough semester of trying to motivate everyone. My best friend and I decided to take a night off and spend the night in Manhattan. She arranged a room at the Fairfield Inn at Penn Station and we met in the City.

The lobby of the Fairfield Inn & Suites at Penn Station at Christmas time

https://www.marriott.com/en-us/hotels/nycps-fairfield-inn-and-suites-new-york-midtown-manhattan-penn-station/overview/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Hotel_Review-g60763-d3613090-Reviews-Fairfield_by_Marriott_Inn_Suites_New_York_Midtown_Manhattan_Penn_Station-New_York_City_.html?m=19905

The lobby decorated for Christmas

The bedroom

I was really surprised by the hotel. When I had walked in here about a decade ago it was not the nicest hotel with some shady characters in the lobby. When I walked in this time, it had all been renovated and decorated for the Christmas holidays. The room was comfortably corporate and we just relaxed before we left for lunch.

We stayed in the neighborhood and went to Pho 2 at 273 Eighth Avenue. We were both in the mood for Bahn Mi sandwich and this small City chain has wonderful food in every branch I have eaten at in Manhattan.

What surprised us was a new item on the menu that we enjoyed, the Pork and Chicken Tacos. These were even better than the sandwiches filled with fresh veggies and spicy meat tucked into a soft shell. A nice twist on fusion food.

https://www.thepho2ny.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d13166614-Reviews-The_Pho_2-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=69573

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

The Chicken Tacos

The Pork Tacos

Yum!

For dessert, we stopped at the Krispie Kreme at Penn Station. We got a kick out of the ‘Peanuts’ themed doughnuts and we had to get a few of them to bring back to the room. I thought the design was very clever.

Snoopy was too nice to eat

https://site.krispykreme.com/ny/new-york/2-penn-plz

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d1025666-Reviews-Krispy_Kreme-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=69573

The Santa doughnut was really good

It was a very interesting and very delicious pre-Christmas lunch. We had a ball just eating and talking in the afternoon. I think the two of us just needed an afternoon to relax. We then spent the evening watching the new documentary “Drop Dead City”, on the 1975 financial crisis in New York City. Seeing the changes in the City especially in Brooklyn and Manhattan over the last thirty years, you would think this movie was made up. I remembered seeing it all as a kid as I lived it every time we went into the City to go to the museums and to Chinatown.

The Directors talking about the movie in 2025

The movie’s trailer

I am not sure how tired we both were but right after the movie, I was fell asleep and slept for eight hours. I was not sure if I was just tired from work, the weather, all the running around I was doing for the holidays and for the blogs or a combination of all of these. December had been a long month. I felt much better the next morning.

Before I left for home the next morning, I had a good breakfast at the hotel’s buffet. That I really enjoyed. This also put me into the holiday spirit.

The morning buffet at the Fairfield Inn & Suites just before Christmas

The buffet was really nice and had a very nice selection of items to choose from

They even had a pancake making machine to make fresh pancakes for guests

I thought the machine was really clever and made good pancakes

It was a wonderful breakfast and a very interesting and very international crowd as I heard languages from all over the world being spoken. It looked like everyone was loading up for a long day of touring.

The room was really decorated for the holidays

After breakfast, we both crashed back in the room and just talked for an hour while we were digesting. We talked about work and the upcoming holidays. We had the option to stay until 4:00pm if we wanted but I had packing to do. I was leaving for the Christmas holidays, first to Woodstock, then to Rehoboth Beach and finishing in Cape May. It would be a long holiday for me and a lot of running around and picture taking for my blog.

We took one last look at the view out our window of the Moynihan Train station and then went downstairs to check out. I had to go home and pack. It was going to be a very busy Christmas.

The view from our room of the Moynihan Train Station

The first part of the holiday was busy and a lot of running around. The second part of the holidays was just as busy. I did not sit still until after New Years. This is why there are two parts to this holiday blog. There so much more to see and do.

So look out for Part II of the blog: A trip back to Woodstock, NY

Another Woodstock Christmas!

Day Three Hundred and Sixty Four Halloween zipped by and I did not see a Ghost! October 1st-31st, 2025

I started October with one game plan, not to over do it this year with loads of activities. At this point, I had been to almost every activity in the area over the last five years and I needed to concentrate on work and my writing this time around. I was still catching up with blogs from the summer and work with my 102 students at the college was getting over whelming. I took it easy this Halloween and did not cram as much in as previous years.

That and the fact that over the last five years I have been to every haunted house tour, cemetery graveyard walk, themed meal event and musical performance that I can find in the tri-state area. I had been to them multiple times and I wanted to find new things to do. Plus work was taking up a lot of my time, so I learned to better pace things this year.

The month started off with a tour to see the foliage both in New Jersey and in Upstate New York. The first trip I made was for the Apple Festival at the Gandy Farmstead which I had toured during the Firemen’s Convention two weeks earlier and two weeks after that it was back to the Hudson River Valley for the Annual Sheep and Wool Festival.

My blog on the Apple Festival at the Gandy Farmstead:

I had a very busy weekend of running around South Jersey. I have been updating my blog on the Historical Sites of South Jersey and trying to visit as many of this small museums and special events venues before they close for the season. Like any of my blogging trips, I planned the weekend like “D Day”. I lucked out as the weather was wonderful both days, clear, sunny and in the mid 80’s. I could not think of a better time to go to the shore than post-Labor Day weekend. My goal was to attend the Apple Festival that I had heard about at the Gandy Farmstead Museum when I toured the home for my blog, VisitingaMuseum.com (see blog and reviews).

The JW Gandy Farmstead Museum at 26 Tyler Road in Greenfield, NJ

Click to access gandy-house-history_copy_%2015June2008.pdf

https://capemaycountynj.gov/DocumentCenter/View/9331/CMC-Heritage-brochure-2022

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g46699-d33734753-r1031187378-John_Westley_Gandy_Farmstead-Ocean_View_Cape_May_County_New_Jersey.html?m=19905

My blog on the Gandy Farmstead Museum:

Two weeks after my initial visit to the Gandy House during the Firemen’s Convention, I returned for the Historical Society’s Annual Apple Festival on Saturday, October 4th. The event reminded me of the Brinckerhoff House Strawberry Festival I had attended in May , a very nice family and community event that attracted everyone.

The East Fishkill Historical Society-Brinckerhoff House Strawberry Festival 2025/Exploring Fishkill, NY blog:

https://mywalkinmanhattan.com/tag/exploring-fishkill-ny/

Since there were a lot of shore towns I wanted to revisit while the weather was nice, I arranged to stay at an Airbnb in Ocean City so I had plenty of time to do what I needed to do and relax afterwards. Plus when the event was over, I could visit Ocean City and explore both the downtown and the boardwalk.

I could not believe how crowded the roads were as so many places were having either Fall festivals or October Fest. Route 9 was like a parking lot near Smithville, NJ as the town was having their ‘October Fest’ over both days of the weekend. Traffic was backed up for about two miles trying to get in so I got off Route 9 and traveled down the Garden State Parkway.

I got to the Apple Festival around noon and the parking lot was packed with people. One of the members said later that afternoon that he could not believe the consistent crowds as it was still busy at 2:15pm (the festival was over by 3:00pm). The crowds were filled with several generations of family members who I am sure were traveling from one event to another on this spectacular sunny morning. People were still arriving even as the event was winding down that afternoon.

The sign welcoming you to the event

When I arrived at the festival, the parking lot was still filling up so I had to park way in the back so I could get in and out easily.

On the Gandy family property on the other side of the home, they had an antique car show, a mini train ride around the tracks of this part of the property and a Caboose train car that you could explore.

The train tracks around the farm property

The train set up and tracks to tour around the farm

The train rides were really popular with both the small and ‘big’ kids

This small train trip had a nice sized line to it as families were really enjoying themselves

The back of the Gandy Farmstead with crafts and entertainment

Entering the Apple Festival with a Farmers Market and Apple sale

The Farmers Market of locally grown produce

There was a stand that was a mini Farmers Market with locally grown apples, pumpkins, squash and tomatoes on top of other produce. It was so nicely displayed and the prices were really reasonable.

They had a wonderful duo interesting the crowds that afternoon

There were all sorts of crafts stands around where the entertainment was performing

The local crafts people were really talented and included crocheted, painters, floral arrangers and jewelry markers. There were all sorts of handmade items and there were stands to buy homemade jellies and pickles and the prices were not like North Jersey, where a jar of jam at a Farmers Market will run you $15.00. The prices here were closer to $5.00 for certain items, which I thought was very fair.

One woman sold flowers from her gardens and arranged bouquets

This woman painted her own crafts and did beautiful work for both Halloween and Christmas

Here beautiful holiday crafts

I loved this Santa tree and was going to get it for my mom

This woman had the most beautiful handmade doll clothing and knit items for the holidays

What is an Apple Festival without food? I went to the concession stand for lunch and ordered a hot dog with a glass of locally made Apple cider and had an homemade Apple Shortcake, which I found out later the members had made the night before.

The concession stand where all the food was made

Enjoying my lunch. Both the hotdogs and apple cider were locally made and that’s why it tasted so good! The apple cider was from a local farm and I wished they had sold this at the festival. I think the farmer would have sold out!

Hot dogs taste so good off the grill!

The delicious homemade Apple Shortcake with homemade apple topping were made by the members

I also stopped off at the apple stand where cases of apples were being sold. It looked like many people were going to make pies and sauce with these and the stand looked like they were selling out.

I managed to buy one of the Mango sweet apples they were selling individually

The apples were so hard, fresh and sweet that it made the perfect addition to dessert. Nothing is better than a Jersey Apple right off the vine. I could not believe how fast they sold out of the boxes of apples and the individual apples were selling just as fast.

The Mango Sweet apples

Talk about delicious

After lunch, I ran into the Board members who had helped me with the tour two weeks early and I took a quick tour of the first floor of the home. The laundry room was not open the day of my private tour, so I toured this part of the house on top of taking a better look at the first floor.

Touring the outside grape arbor

The grape arbor on an early Fall day

Touring the first floor laundry room

An early washing machine

How to do laundry at the turn of the last century

After having lunch, touring the house and visiting all the vendors I relaxed for the rest of the afternoon and listened to the entertainment perform. The duo performed a combination of 70’s hit songs, country music and some James Taylor.

The duo performing classic hits

The first part of the song “Brandy (You’re a Fine Girl)” from the 1970’s before people walked in the way

The rest of the song performed. They did an excellent job with it

Before I left just after 2:00pm, I stayed to see who won the Apple pie contest. There were only three contributors but I wanted to get a slice before I left. They did not slice them up while I was there. Bummer! I really wanted a piece of fresh Apple pie.

The winners of the Apple pie contest

The Apple Festival sponsored by the Upper Township Historical Society happens every October. It is a wonderful family event and fundraiser for the Historical Society. I know I had a lot of fun and it reminded me of the events that I went to as a kid in the 1970’s, which was long before cell phones.

It was funny that the only person who had a cell phone glued to his hand was me but then I was there to cover this event. It really was a relaxing and wonderful afternoon with good food and entertainment. It was just like the 1970’s all over again with families enjoying each other’s company. Sometimes I think that people underate these local events which are so much fun. I don’t know about everyone else, but I had a ball!

Two weekends later, I headed up to the Sheep and Wool Festival at the Duchess County Fairgrounds and the followed by the Graveyard Walk at St. James Church in Hyde Park. There is such much to see and do this time of year.

Here is my full blog on the events:

Bryant Park on October 1st, 2025

The Sheep and Wool Festival is not as big as the Dutchess County Fair but had a lot of the same food and merchant vendors. On a smaller scale, it is much more manageable but with the number of people who attend this every year, they could use more food vendors for the event.

The sign and directions in the fairgrounds

The foliage was so beautiful that afternoon

The Festival takes place the second week of October just when the Duchess County foliage is coming to its peak. The fairgrounds were covered in golds and reds.

Entering the Midway at the Sheep and Wool Festival where the food vendors were located. The foliage was at peak color.

The Midway was not as packed with vendors as the fair but is had a nice selection of food vendors

Entering the middle of the festival was getting busy

The foliage was amazing both inside and outside the fairgrounds

I got up to the fair late this time, not arriving until 2:00pm ( I thought the festival ended at 6:00pm but it ended at 5:00pm) and needed to get done lunch. Amongst all of my choices, I still always head to Janek’s, the barbecue/hamburger truck that has been my favorite for years.

Janek’s food truck is always at the same location

For years I have been getting the Piggy Back burger with Cheddar cheese and pulled pork on top(which I highly recommend) but I decided to do something different and have the Burger with freshly made Pastrami and Swiss Cheese. A very nice substitute.

The Pastrami and Swiss burger

The burger was perfectly cooked with slices of smoked pastrami on top

Yum!

After a good lunch and getting my energy back, I headed over to the animal pens and the craft stalls to see all the handmade products. My first stop was the Sheep pens, where sheering was going on and they were many contests to showcase the livestock. The Sheep were being shown, sheered and were talking amongst themselves as we walked around the pens admiring them.

I found that the sheep looked really relaxed and seemed to have more fun staring at us

This little guy kept smiling at me watching him

While the livestock contest was going on to a huge crowd, I toured the Crafts stalls. In the Summer for the fair, this was full of cows and goats, it now had all sorts of wool vendors, knit items, handcrafts and cosmetic items.

The colorful wool items on display

These wool dragon sculptures I thought were really interesting

After the show was over, I decided to tour around Rhinebeck. I just wanted to take a quick walk around the downtown before I took a tour I had done a few years earlier at the St. James Church graveyard. Since I was Upstate, I figured I would do both the same day since the weather was nice.

I got to St. James Church in Hyde Park at 7:30pm so I had plenty of time. I had taken this tour back in 2021 just as everything had opened up and it was a lot of fun, plus I wanted to update my pictures of the church and the graveyard. It also gave me time to talk to the docents and get some background on the church.

St. James Church before twilight at 6:15pm

The staff was just setting up the lights at the cemetery (technically a graveyard)

The inside of St. James Church in Hyde Park, NY, parish of the Roosevelt family

https://www.facebook.com/stjameshydepark/

https://www.dutchess.org/events/st_james_historic_graveyard_tours

My review on TripAdvisor:

I got to the church an hour before my tour and just relaxed and admired the beauty of the church. I never saw an hour fly by before my tour started. Then darkness came and my tour started.

Darkness came by 7:30pm and the cemetery looked much different

We started the lantern tour with a talk of the spirits who were buried in the grave yard. Each of the actors was waiting for us at each stop. I still could not believe these actors were waiting alone in the dark in a graveyard for people to walk by the them.

Each of the actors told their tales of when they were living and stood beside the place that they were buried. It was very intriguing.

The first person we met was Mrs. Emma Victoria Pitkin Marshal

Mrs. Marshall was once known as the ‘Poet Laureate’ of Dutchess County. She was well known in the world of publishing.

The second spirit I met was Mrs. Harper, Mrs. Mill’s housekeeper up at the Staatsburgh mansion. She told us the story of her life working for the Mills and Livingston families.

Mrs. Catherine Kennedy Harper

Mrs. Harper told us about her life working for the Livingston family and her relationship with Ruth, who she was her nanny and then housekeeper.

Our conversation with Mrs. Harper

Our next spirit we visiting was the ghost of Gertrude ‘Gerdie’ Livingston who talked about her time in the Hudson River Valley and in New York City.

Gertrude ‘Gertie’ Livingston

Mrs. Livingston telling her tales of the Hudson River Valley

In between our conversations with the spirits of the past, we walked through the graveyard as twilight gave way to darkness. The graveyard was illuminated with lanterns and lights to follow the paths. It is easy to trip over a tombstone while you are walking around the paths. They did give us lanterns to light the way but there were not enough to go around.

The vaults are illuminated at night to follow the ghostly trail

Our next with the spirits was the ghost of Reverend John McVickar, who was the Rector at St. James Church starting in 1811. He married Eliza Bard, the daughter of Dr. Samuel Bard of Bard College and raised their nine children together.

The spirit of Reverend John McVickar telling his tales of his life in the church

Walking past the church at night

The last apparition we met that night was the spirit of Mr. Augustus C. Colman, the son of a sailing captain who invested heavily in Manhattan real estate on the advice of his boss. John Jacob Astor.

The spirit of Mr. Colman telling his tales of the City

Both himself and the Reverend went at it in the graveyard

The stained glass windows at the church

The church at the end of the tour

I decided to head home after the tour via the Kingston Bridge and drive into downtown Kingston, NY for dinner. I stopped at my favorite go to restaurant in The ‘Stockade District’ Wing Shui at 53 North Front Street. The food is consistently wonderful and extremely reasonable and you can sit down inside the restaurant.

Wing Shui Chinese Restaurant at 53 North Street in Kingston, NY

https://wingshuikingston.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g48003-d822310-Reviews-Wing_Shui_Chinese_Restaurant-Kingston_Catskill_Region_New_York.html?m=69573

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

I was surprisingly hungry even after the big burger at lunch. It got cooler that evening so I ordered the Wonton Soup, the Steamed Dumplings and one of their wonderful eggrolls. It was such a great meal and really warmed me up. For such a small hole in the wall restaurant/take out place, the food is excellent.

My dinner that evening at Wing Shui

The Wonton Soup had for large wontons that you could barely fit in your mouth in the rich chicken broth. That warmed up after a graveyard walk in the dark.

The Wonton Soup with the oversized Wontons and rich chicken broth

The steamed dumplings were plump and moist and filled with spiced pork mixture.

The dumplings here are delicious

Their egg rolls are always a treat and are the first thing that I ever tried here years ago.

The egg rolls here are excellent

Yum!

I was nice to sit in the restaurant and just warm up. The temperature really dropped that evening and it was a rather cool October in comparison to other years. There is nothing like Chinese food after a long walk in a graveyard.

After dinner, I walked around Downtown Kingston some more and admired some of the decorations and store windows decorated for the holidays. It seems like Halloween is now the lead into Christmas rather than Thanksgiving (some places have already decorated for Christmas).

The ‘Jack Pumpkin’ decoration that looked like it out of “The Nightmare before Christmas” in Downtown Kingston, NY

https://andnorth.com/kingston-downtown

From “Nightmare before Christmas”

A lot of windows were decorated for the Halloween holidays. The merchants in Downtown Kingston are so creative and here are some of my favorites.

This was displayed in the window on a North Front Street store.

The faceless entities in the windows

They face this witches hat

The skulls and pumpkins in the window. The merchants get quite creative at the holidays in the downtown area.

The Thursday before my birthday, we had a special late night at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and I finally got to tour the new Rockefeller Wing of the museum. After almost three years and COVID, the galleries have been mounted. The Oceania and African collections had been remounted with a new layout and pieces of the collection that had been in storage had been brought out. The collection looked a brighter and you could appreciate the art better.

I just needed an evening in the City to clear my head before my official birthday and I figured a night at The Met would help. It was nice to finally see these works again after several years of hiding. The galleries looked so much nicer and the works brighter and more vibrant.

The new Rockefeller Wing at the Met:

https://www.metmuseum.org/hubs/the-michael-c-rockefeller-wing

The Oceania collection now redone

The mythic statuary

Pieces from the African collection

Some of the unique pieces in the case

Faces that make a statement

Artwork that reminds you of the Halloween holidays

After I left the Met for the evening, I walked through the Upper East Side neighborhoods west of Madison Avenue and the creativity of the brownstone neighborhoods rivaled anything in that suburbs.

Walking on the Upper East Side before Halloween:

The Pumpkin glare

Black cats and Witches

From twilight to darkness, I walked all the side streets to see how people decorated. There were some very clever displays.

Outside of the grocery store

Then it got dark and the real magic began

Just at twilight

I walked down the Upper East Side from East 79th Street to East 60th Street from Madison to Third Avenues. It depended on the block but some streets were really competitive. These are the best displays I saw.

Guarding a building

Creatures that bump in the night

Halloween land

The doorway

The Headless Horseman

Guarding ghosts

Jolly pumpkins

I loved this ghoul guarding the house

I just hoped he didn’t come to life

Skeleton Parade

Ghostly lights

A happy ghost

More jolly pumpkins

The elaborate Halloween Kingdom

The Evil Witch guarding the house

Here is the witch explaining her wicked ways

More ghouls guarding the homes

A Christmas Halloween

From both angles

Boo!

Last year I did the ‘luxury’ birthday with dinner at Perrine at the Pierre Hotel and Afternoon Tea at the Lowell Hotel on top of my haircut at York Barber, and my trips to the Central Park Zoo and the Met. This year I was just content with staying home and relaxing. I have been doing nothing but running around from one thing to another in between classes.

Maricel asked me what I wanted on my birthday this year and I said ‘rest’. Having over a hundred students between three classes at various stages of their classes can be daunting for anyone especially for me. I had done the whole luxury birthday thing last year and on my birthday this year, it poured so badly during the day that I just stayed home and crashed. I stayed home and watched Michigan State get crushed by UCLA. That was rough!

For my birthday dinner that night, I kept it low key and went to Sofia’s, a Greek restaurant in Hasbrouck Heights. It was perfect because it was relaxing that night and the food was excellent.

Sofia’s at 220 Boulevard in Hasbrouck Heights, NJ

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g46497-d3468322-Reviews-Sofia_s_Mediterranean_Grill-Hasbrouck_Heights_New_Jersey.html?m=69573

For dinner I had the Shrimp Saganaki, which is a shrimp appetizer which is cooked in a tomato sauce and topped with cheese. I have loved this dish since they first opened.

The Shrimp Saganski appetizer

It is as delicious as it sounds

For dinner, I had the Gyro sandwich, which they put on their freshly made pita’s. Their sandwiches are delicious and they do not skimp on anything. I really enjoyed my meal.

My birthday dinner, the Gyro sandwich

For dessert, I had a change from the $35.00 slice of pink Dior cake at the Lowell and indulged in a slice of Baklava at Sofia’s, who much they make homemade and in house.

The Baklava at Sofia’s served as my birthday cake this year

This sweet cinnamon indulgence has layers of flaky and sugary phyllo and nuts and lots of honey. The perfect way to end the meal and the cap to my birthday dinner.

The next day Maricel took me out for a breakfast birthday at the IHOP in Hasbrouck Heights. I had not been there in a long time (and was a little shocked at the prices on the menu). I was just expecting pancakes, but Maricel knows me well enough and made the morning even more special. She greeted me with balloons. Turning 60 seemed to be a bigger deal to her than it was to me.

Maricel greeting me at IHOP on my 60th birthday

It is amazing how something as simple as this could mean so much. I love when my friends just do the simple things that touch me so much.

Now for people who say they do not like IHOP, you have never been to the one in Hasbrouck Heights. Their food and service is consistent and delicious. I have been coming here for years and have never once had a bad meal there. I love breakfast and could eat it all day long.

I had the “Two for Two” with two pancakes, two French Toast, two sausage and bacon and they even through in a side of toast. Talk about a perfect breakfast.

My birthday breakfast at IHOP at 111 Route 17 South in Hasbrouck Heights, NJ

https://restaurants.ihop.com/en-us/nj/hasbrouck-heights/breakfast-111-route-17-south-4667

https://restaurants.ihop.com/en-us/nj/hasbrouck-heights/

https://www.facebook.com/p/IHOP-Hasbrouck-Heights-100069442775972/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g46497-d620307-Reviews-IHOP_Hasbrouck_Heights-Hasbrouck_Heights_New_Jersey.html?m=69573

You can’t beat a breakfast like this

You cannot beat IHOP’s pancakes!

The staff got caught up in the excitement of our meal and came over to sing “Happy Birthday” to me and brought me a dish of Vanilla ice cream with a candle in it. I was really touched. Sometimes the simplest things people do are the most touching.

The staff at IHOP really made the morning special with kind words, a nice song and their delicious Vanilla ice cream treat! That is good customer service!

This is what a best friend is for!

She saved the best for last and gave me a birthday present. Folks, I hate getting presents! Everyone always gets me what they like and never what I like. I always have to fake a smile and my older brother says I am the worst at it.

Maricel surprised me with a Hermes gift pack of Verte cologne, which is my favorite. I used it for years at Macy’s and Tiffany’s when I could afford it. I swear she totally surprised me. I told her she ‘nailed the birthday and made it perfect!” I love when people can read me.

Maricel by the balloons

After my birthday surprise, I took turning 60 with a badge of honor. When I look at my grandparents at my age, they always so much older to me. I guess it was just the times and their life experiences. They had it so much rougher than I did and I am always grateful to them from what I can remember of the love and support they had for us when we were little. With the exception of my father’s mother, none of them lived into my adult hood.

October also meant Midterms, Team Projects and Term Papers, which some of my students just could not handle. It was a struggle in each class to get the students to do their homework. Let’s hope they get to the finish line on December 17th.

My blog on the Bergen County Firemen’s Home Association:

https://tbcfha.wordpress.com/

The grounds of the NJ State Firemen’s Home decorated for the Fall holidays

The next weekend, I was in Boonton for our quarterly Bergen County Firemen’s Home Association meeting. Both the outside and inside of the Firemen’s Home was decorated for the Halloween holidays. They really did a nice job with it. After the meeting and entertainment were over, I went up to visit Downtown Boonton to see how it was decorated for Halloween. They do such a good job. The town was decked out with ghosts and ghouls all over the Main Street.

The horrible ghoul in the center of downtown

The town was not decked out for the Halloween and Fall holidays. It was not just the Halloween holidays but the beauty of the change of seasons and the Fall foliage.

The Hill section of Boonton

The Hill section of the town in October

The beauty of the Victorian homes

Each street was so beautiful

The homes were the colors of gold, red and copper

The businesses did a nice job with the scarecrows this year. The ghosts and ghouls dotted the downtown.

The Annabelle doll

The ghouls are out

The cat in the hat

Pumpkin head

Mars Attacts outside a restaurant

This strange Teddy was outside the library

Boonton does a wonderful job of decorating during both the Halloween and Christmas holidays. The downtown is decorated with all sorts of interesting and creative artwork and beautiful lights. I recently walked around the Downtown at the start of the holiday season and it was really festive. I always get a kick out of the scarecrows decorating the town.

My blog on Exploring Downtown Boonton (a very unique downtown):

https://mywalkinmanhattan.com/tag/exploring-downtown-boonton/

The fire department, even after I retired after 19 years, still keeps me busy. We had our Fire Department Relief Association meeting the night of ‘Halloween in the Park’ and after our meeting was over at 7:30pm, I headed over to Woodland Park in our town and watched everyone get on hay wagons and ride around Woodland Park being chased by ghosts and ghouls. I do not think I have attended this since before COVID. “Halloween in the Park” is an event our town sponsors that bring hay wagons thorough Woodland Park’s small bundles of trees and woods and scares them with costume characters.

It used to be spookier but when neighboring town, Wood Ridge, built a series of condos on the border of our towns and they took down all the trees on their side of the park, all you see is the windows of condos at the back of the park. Still, its a lot of fun and residents get a kick out it.

Woodland Park in Hasbrouck Heights, NJ at night

Halloween starts for me in Hasbrouck Heights with the town’s Annual Halloween in the Park, an event that takes place each fall in Woodland Park in Hasbrouck Heights. First thing to note that since developers have built new condos on the parks edges, it has taken some of the allure from the park. You can see the lights and people moving around.

We ‘stand by’ with the fire department for lights for the event and emergency calls when we have to leave. Still it is a lot of fun watching everyone get on the hayrides and start screaming in the distance. We watch from the equipment while eating a pizza dinner which we share with our Ambulance Squad who is on hand incase someone gets hurt. The last ride of the night, we get to go on when everyone else has left.

Patrons waiting at the Pavillion

The fireplace roaring at the event

Ghouls waiting for you

The park decorated for Halloween

The DPW takes families around the park in hayride fashion with bales of hay in the trailers and everyone on the trailer is chased and harassed by various ghosts, ghouls and witches. You spend most of the evening being chased with someone with a knife or chainsaw.

The start of the haunted hayride

Video of Halloween in the park

Ghouls and creatures of the night chasing everyone

This popular event is always sold out and residents get such a kick out of it. I of course was working that night and got there in time for the last two rides and people were still screaming at 9:30pm.

Halloween in the Park in Hasbrouck Heights, NJ in Woodland Park

I did more traveling down the shore to see what was happening in both Point Pleasant and Seaside Heights beaches. The boardwalks were decorated for the holidays and there were scarecrow contests and pumpkin carving on the Boardwalks. The day started off sunny but then a giant cloud came over the towns which did not clear until 4:00pm. Just as I was leaving, the sun came out again.

Both Seaside Heights and Park and Point Pleasant and Point Pleasant Beach are getting more active during the Fall Holidays as more people have moved down the shore permanently. There are a lot of events for kids and their families families to participate in.

When I visited Seaside Park and Seaside Heights, I stopped in just after a Scarecrow Making Contest. The contest was already over by the time I got there but people were still looking them over. The kids did a really nice job with the contest. While Seaside Heights and Park don’t have the activities that its northern neighbor Point Pleasant has, the activities led to some creative ingenuity of the kids and there were interesting decorations all over the towns over the Halloween weekend.

The Scarecrow Contest in October 2025

The Scarecrows lined up

Some of the Scarecrows I liked

This one stood out

This jolly creature stood out too

The strange scared scarecrows

The town even decorated the Boardwalk more this year with skeletons and other creatures. There were not many activities on the Boardwalk on the Halloween weekend but the decorations were fun. Even on this warm afternoon at the shore, it put me in the Halloween spirit.

Skeletons on the Boardwalk

Zombies on the Boardwalk

The Boardwalk was busy with people who had just participated in a Pumpkin carving contest. The weather was overcast by the late afternoon but most of the businesses on the Boardwalk were open and there was a choice of places to eat and shop along the way. The two bars were packed with people who were watching the Giants game. I big change from when I was in Cape May and it is all Philly fans.

My full blog on Visiting both Seaside Heights and Seaside Park:

After my visit to Seaside Heights and debating on where I wanted to go to lunch, I drove up the coastal highway through the other beach communities to Point Pleasant and Point Pleasant Beach. The downtown arts community always knows how to decorate the downtown and Jenkinson’s does a nice job on the Boardwalk.

When I visited Downtown Point Pleasant, I was able to admire the decorations on both the downtown Main Street and then walk to the Boardwalk. The downtown is always so nicely decorated and I love the whimsical scarecrows that decorate the downtown. The windows are filled with creative displays that always seem to be begging for Christmas decorations even before Halloween is even over (like most stores everyone wants to rush the holidays).

Downtown Point Pleasant in the Fall of 2025

The Point Beach Arts community gets very creative in Downtown Point Pleasant with the Gazebo decorated for Halloween

https://www.facebook.com/PointBeachArts/

https://arts.pointpleasantbeach.org/events/scarecrow-contest-2025

The Winners:

https://www.instagram.com/pointbeacharts/?hl=en

The bat stares at you

The Scarecrow in the Gazebo

I walked their downtown and saw that their Arts Commission added more scarecrows to the downtown light posts.

The scarecrows from 2025

Another creative scarecrow

There was a lot of creativity in this downtown contest

The scarecrows came in all styles

Barbie display

The Phantom bride

More unusual scarecrows

They get very creative in Downtown Point Pleasant

When I walked to the Boardwalk a couple of blocks away, it was a little cooler than last year but there was still a good crowd walking around the Boardwalk. The afternoon activities sponsored by Jenkinson’s kept everyone active with their series of programs at “Boo at the Boardwalk”. They decorated the Boardwalk for the Halloween Holidays and kept all the stores and restaurants open adding to the festivities. With the Fall holidays getting warmer, it is a smart business decision to extend the Summer activities further into Fall.

‘Boo on the Boardwalk’ in 2025

https://jenkinsons.com/boo-at-the-boardwalk-2025-at-jenkinsons-boardwalk

Decorations on the Boardwalk in 2025

Limited rides and attractions were open that day

There were decorations all around the Boardwalk

These signs were all over the Boardwalk

The declarations on the Boardwalk on Halloween

The Boardwalk was busy Halloween weekend of 2025

Halloween is always fun on the Jenkinson Boardwalk. There was always something going on. The towns really get into the Halloween holidays. The park really knows how to celebrate the holidays.

My blog on Exploring both Point Pleasant Beach and Point Pleasant:

https://mywalkinmanhattan.com/category/walking-downtown-point-pleasant-nj/

https://mywalkinmanhattan.com/category/exploring-point-pleasant-beach-nj/

It was a lot of running around the shore from Boardwalk to Boardwalk but it is interesting the amount of activities these towns have been doing and the creativity that goes into them. This led me to visiting another shore town the next week when I visited Long Beach Island the Town of Beach Haven.

It was rather quiet in town when I visited Beach Haven the week before Halloween. Usually there was a lot more going on but it was probably reserved for the weekends. Some parts of the of the town were decorated for the holidays but I did not see the activities of the other shore towns that day. Still there were reminders of Halloween here and there throughout the town.

Woo Hoo at 211 South Bay Avenue

https://thewoohoo.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g46292-d7646259-Reviews-The_Woohoo-Beach_Haven_Long_Beach_Island_New_Jersey.html?m=69573

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

My first stop was Woo Hoo at 211 South Bay Avenue for some ice cream. The store was all decorated for the holiday, and they even had a specialty ice cream flavor for Halloween, Spooky S’mores. The ice cream here is a real treat as it is made in small batches on premise.

Woo Hoo carries some non -ice cream merchandise

They have now cut the menu down to just ice cream. There is no longer any ‘meal’ items like sandwiches and fries. The woman at the window explained, they will be only the homemade ice cream on their menu. I had no problem with that. Woo Hoo was preparing for the Halloween and the shop was decorated for the holidays.

Games for kids

They decorated the interiors

The store was surrounded by ghosts and ghouls

I looked over the menu and I saw a flavor I remembered from the past, Spooky S’mores, which I had when I visited the island a few years ago for Halloween. It is a Marshmallow Ice Cream with a Chocolate swirl with graham crackers and Halloween M&Ms and you only see it at this time of the year. I had to have that.

The Spooky S’mores flavor

It was delicious

The Spooky S’mores was loaded with graham and M&Ms in every bite and the ice cream was so rich and creamy. Going to Woo Hoo at the holidays is the best!

They now have ice Cream making classes

The service could not be friendlier. The staff is very accommodating and will help you make a selection from the various choices. Not only that but the staff knows the island really well and can point things out for you to see.

I spent the rest of the afternoon exploring Beach Haven, walking through the stores and amusements areas which were still open this late into October. The warm weather over the weekend really attracted a lot of people and watching people play miniature golf this late into the season was interesting. The shore towns in New Jersey really are going full season.

Beach Haven Bay during the day

It was a nice snack to enjoy after walking on the beach or exploring the island. I walked down the block at the end of Dock Road and enjoyed the views and watched the boats sail by. I also got a great tan.

Beach Haven, NJ by the bay is just beautiful

Just sitting by the bay relaxing

Admiring the boats while I digested

The creative artwork by the shore

It was fun to just walk around Beach Haven’s downtown that afternoon and enjoy the warm weather. They had a Chowder Cook off going on down the road, so the town was packed with people that afternoon.

My blog on Exploring Long Beach Island and Beach Haven, NJ:

I saw by the weather report that Hurricane Melissa was coming up the coast and I knew that this would knock the foliage down all over the state so I made one last trip down the Route 46 Budd Lake to the Delaware Water Gap. I started at the Delaware Water Gap to take the pictures of the foliage in the sunshine and then I worked my way back, stopping at farms along the way and in Hackettstown to take more pictures. I wanted to get the pictures of the foliage before the storm knocked it all down.

The Delaware Water Gap at River Road off Route 209 in 2025

https://www.nps.gov/dewa/index.htm

I was able to stop at the U turn on Route 80 West and park in the beginning of the trails that go through the park. Since it was so gloomy out and it was getting late in the afternoon, I stuck by the Visitors Center, which was closed for the season and walked along the river. Most of the foliage had been knocked off the trees by the two recent storms but there were still hues of gold and yellow with the trees that were left. It is a breathtaking view of the mountain range.

The foliage from the highway

When I returned in October of 2025, I timed it so that the trees would be at their peak and it was before a major rain storm the next day. I figured this would be the best time to come. Plus it was going to be the last nice day of that week. The trees were just past peak but because there had not been much rain that summer, the leaves changed earlier than in past years.

The mountains at the Delaware Water Gap from the Visitors Center in the Summer months

https://www.nationalparks.org/connect/explore-parks/delaware-water-gap-national-recreation-area

The Gap in the Fall of 2025

The Visitors Center in the Fall of 2025

The river in the Fall of 2025

I continued my path down Route 46 East, taking pictures of foliage and stopping at the Marshall Farms to see the Halloween decorations. Sometimes you will pass a farm stand and you see the standard pumpkins, peaches and apples outside. When you pass Marshall’s Farm Stand in Delaware, NJ, you see a whole farm experience with orchards of fruit, corn fields and a property that is decorated for the upcoming Halloween holidays.

The side of the Marshall’s Farm Stand at 114 Route 46

http://www.marshallsfarmmarket.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g46387-d3571725-Reviews-Marshall_s_Farm_Market-Delaware_New_Jersey.html

My review on LittleShoponMainStreet@Wordpress.com:

The other side of the farm stand stocked high with pumpkins

The festive pumpkin sat on the roof of the building

The whole front of the farm was stocked with all sorts of early Fall produce, honey, jams and jellies and delicious baked goods including pies, cakes and rolls and their specialty, their mini Apple Cider doughnuts.

The fresh Jersey produce

The cream rolls and homemade pies, including apple, berry and Shoo Fly pies

The best is their mini Apple Cider doughnut. One bag of these and you are content for the afternoon. I can barely get out of the parking lot with indulging in one or two of them before my drive down Route 46 to the Delaware Water Gap.

The farm stands addictive Apple Cider doughnuts

These sugary delights are so good!

What I also enjoy is their delicious apple cider. I found out though that they do not make it in house but a farm close by makes it both for their farm and Marshall’s. It is sweet and very refreshing and only comes in gallon containers.

I love walking through the stand, walking past the pumpkin, produce and the crafts display.

The pumpkin display in the parking lot

After I put my purchases in the car, I walked around the farm, looking at all the decorations they had for the upcoming Halloween holidays. The farm has pumpkin picking, corn mazes and a hayride where the $5.00 cost includes along with the hayride a cup of apple cider and a doughnut. I could handle that.

The sign for the weekend hayrides

The witch sign in the parking lot near the Corn Maze

The witch painting at the start of the corn mazes

Ghosts decorating the field

The Corn Maze was still tall and green and I am sure led all around the property. Each part of the front part of the farm was decorated for Halloween festivities which would happen the next weekend.

The cemetery in the back of the farm stand

A horrible ghoul

All the Halloween decorations at the start of the hayride

Here is my blog on the whole trip down Route 46 East and West from Budd Lake to the Delaware Water Gap:

Hurricane Melissa came up the coast the week of Halloween and a lot of functions were either cancelled or had to move inside. I had no desire to go into the City when it was pouring rain. So I missed some of the museum and Central Park events that had been cancelled and stayed home. We really lucked out on Halloween night, and the weather was a brisk 58 degrees. It was clear and the perfect night for the parade. The parade this year went off without a hitch. I got to the parade after a long day at work and I made it into the City by 4:00pm.

We started the sign in for volunteers at 4:00pm

I met my counterparts at the start of the shift and I really lucked out. We had a really good group of people who would answer ‘no’ to people. I was able to see a little bit of the puppet rehearsals before people started to arrive for the event. There was a lot of excitement as everyone got ready to start the parade.

The puppets ate the beginning of the parade

Puppet rehearsal before the parade kick off at 7:00pm

I met many creatures, witches and things that go bump in the night at the beginning of the parade and they enjoyed showing themselves off.

This Sea Maiden joined us at the beginning of the parade

This group of friendly witches and warlocks joined the parade early

As the sun went down and the parade was about to begin, balloon creatures joined as the Good Witch led the way. The parade of costumed characters was in full swing by 5:30pm as people entered the gates for the parade.

The Good Witch with the balloon creatures

The Good Witch with the insect

Even Frankenstein joined the parade

Moon creatures joined this Witch of Darknes

Ghosts and ghouls with balloons

Then the parade start was getting closer between 5:30pm and 7:00pm, it got crazy at the gate and people tried every which way to get into the gate. I kept and to talk and finally yelling at people to keep it organized. I swear I have never seen adults act like little children. We have more people try to sneak through the gate with every excuse. I have learned to put my foot down and it is by pass only.

Then the golden hour of 7:00pm came and the parade started. As the floats were heading uptown, people were still scrambling, trying to get in. At 8:00pm, this woman walks up to the gate one hour into the parade and tells me she was here as a volunteer. I told her we were closed at that point and have a nice night and see her next year. It amazes me how people use excuses to get in.

Watching the parade from inside

We finally closed the gate at 8:30pm and the police took over security from there. I was able to walk in and watch where the parade begins. It is always interesting to see how the parade works and how this organized.

Watching the parade progress uptown from the sidelines

The chutes where the floats come out combined with the number of costumed people is carefully done and I have never seen so many people marching in the parade. Later on, someone told me the police were turning people away because too many people were showing up.

The parade from Dominick Street heading uptown

I could not believe how crazy it got in the park as the parade progressed. I have to give the guys who are the volunteers who coordinate the parade so much create. They do an amazing job. They really are worth their weight in gold.

More of the floats heading uptown

The video shows the true magic that goes into the parade from behind the scenes

The last of the floats heading uptown

The last of the floats start to head uptown by 9:00pm and after that, it is all costumed people, not just New Yorkers but people from all over the world who had come to walk our unique parade.

People walking uptown in full drag

The weather cooperated and their was an over flow of people marching and enjoying the parade

The costumers enjoying themselves

I loved the creativity of the costumes

The last of the floats heading uptown

I loved these costumes. The headless guy was pretty gruesome

A better look at the headless Spector

The last of the floats heading uptown

The last of the floats starting uptown before the costumers took over

I left the parade route and walked through the parade to get to at least 8th Street before I veered off on to Seventh Avenue. I walked uptown to join some of the volunteers after the parade for dinner.

Walking through the Village and looking at the decorated windows and homes

Some of the private homes are so beautifully decorated in Greenwich Village

Another great decorated home in Greenwich Village

The West Elm right next to the restaurant on West 12th street

I am sorry but to decorate your store to the hilt on Halloween night is really rushing the holidays. They did this the year before as well. Who ever heard of looking at a Christmas tree on Halloween night?

Still the store looked gorgeous and their visual people did a marvelous job

It was nice to sit down to dinner that night. I was starved rushing from work to the City and then to the parade route. I did not get to eat anything and was famished.

Joining friends for dinner at Da Umbertos at 107 West 17th Street

https://daumbertonyc.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d423279-Reviews-Da_Umberto-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=69573

It was nice to meet some of my counterparts and swap stories about the parade.

Meeting with friends for dinner that night

The restaurant had a wonderful buffet that evening

The Penne Vodka and Sautéed Shrimp were wonderful

The dinner I enjoyed was wonderful

After dinner and some wonderful conversation, I said my goodbyes. I had been going strong since 4:30am that morning and was beginning to run out of steam. I just wanted to head home and go to bed.

I decide to walk back to the Port Authority from the restaurant since it was such a beautiful night. The weather really cooperated and it was a crisp and beautiful night.

Even the Empire State Building was decorated for the holiday

I was lucky that I walk fast. I made the 11:50pm bus out of Manhattan and got home by 12:30am. It had been a long night. The night was still young and I still did not see the spirits of the night except parading up Sixth Avenue.

Even when I reached Hasbrouck Heights, the decorations were still up and lit. It was nice to see that holiday spirit strong in town.

The houses were still lit and decorated when I got home

Residents love to decorate their homes in Hasbrouck Heights

It always amazes me of homeowners creativity

Post Halloween:

There were still traces of Halloween even after the holidays. Stores and homeowners kept their displays up but the lure of Christmas and the warm weekend meant that people started to take things down so the Christmas declarations could go up.

I went down to Mill’s Bakery to check out their Halloween treats and there was still some things left. The sweetest things were available in all the bakery cases.

The front of Mill’s Bakery at 275 Valley Boulevard in Wood Ridge, NJ

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g46937-d4735011-Reviews-Mills_Bakery-Wood_Ridge_New_Jersey.html?m=69573

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

I loved the festive Frankenstein cake. Talk about creative!

The festive and creative cupcakes

The fun loving cupcakes

I loved the Halloween cookies and a little pricy at $5.00 each but were well worth it. I bought a few for snacks.

The mummy cookie was so good!

So was the Pumpkin

The ghost was good too!

Mill’s Bakery does such a good job at any holiday

I took my cookies and went back to Downtown Hasbrouck Heights to tour the window paintings from the contest a week earlier. The sweetness of the cookies gave me a sugar rush.

Walking in Downtown Hasbrouck Heights for the Halloween holidays

Downtown Hasbrouck Heights was still decorated for the Halloween holidays with festive window displays and the kids window paintings from the recent Window Painting contest.

Some of the window painting downtown

These kids are so creative

The weekend of Halloween (Halloween fell on Friday night this year), I took my best friend, Maricel to the “Pumpkin Blaze” on Croton on the Hudson, NY. I go to this annual event as part of my membership to Historical Hudson Valley. I love walking through the old Van Cortlandt Estate and seeing the creativity of the carvings and displays.

The entrance to the Pumpkin Blaze

https://www.instagram.com/pumpkinblaze/?hl=en

We started off early and had dinner at one of my favorite Chinese restaurants that I feature on my blog, DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com, Dong Happy Gardens at 440 South Riverside Avenue in the ShopRite Mall. The food and service are excellent and the family who run it are really nice.

https://hudsonvalley.org/explore-area/listing/listing/dong-happy-garden

https://donghappygarden.restaurants-us.com/menu#google_vignette

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g47560-d4616434-Reviews-Dong_Happy_Garden-Croton_on_Hudson_New_York.html?m=69573

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

I love the food here. It is white tablecloth quality for a small take out place in a strip mall.

I had the Orange Chicken with Pork Fried Rice and an egg roll and Maricel had the same with but with Barbecue Spareribs. I can’t tell you how wonderful the food is in this tiny take out place but you have to try it for yourself. I have never had a bad meal here.

The Orange Flavored Chicken with Pork Fried Rice is excellent

Then we shared some Panfried Pork Dumplings. They really hit the spot on a cool night.

The Panfried Dumplings were a nice addition to dinner

Dinner was a chance for us to catch up and talk. So much has been happening in our lives and we never get a chance to talk.

After dinner, we headed over to the ‘Blaze’ and then the fun began. The parking lot was packed with people and the weather really cooperated. It was cool but not cold and walking through the pathways was nicer than we thought.

The Spider display

A close up shot of the spider

Maricel in front of the rainbow flag that was on display at the entrance of the displays

We started our tour through the Blaze walking through the rows of pumpkin carvings. I noticed there were less of them this year than in years in the past. Still there was some interesting pumpkins.

The first row of carvings I thought were interesting

An interesting face

Another interesting face

The Haunted Pumpkin Windmill

Frog swimmer

The Pumpkin Octopus

Visiting the Hudson River Sites

Pumpkin sling shot

Me in front of the Statue of Liberty sculpture

The Statue of Liberty sculpture

Walking through the Light Tunnel

Maricel and I in the Tunnel of Lights

This is the experience you get when you walk through the Tunnel of Lights

Then we reached the Van Cortlandt Manor, home to the Van Cortlandt family. The house had been closed for years for touring since the renovation but been open for the Blaze.

The cemetery was moved from here to earlier in the tour with a Circus in its place.

The ‘Under the Big Top‘ pumpkin sculpture

The beauty of the Van Courtlandt Manor at night

The Wonderful Lightshow at the manor house

We then toured the amusement area. The Merry Go Round with its eerie sounds and glowing pumpkins made it foreboding.

The eerie Merry Go Round

The Merry Go Round

Maricel though it would be more cheerful with a picture of me

We then looked over the Halloween Circus train that passed us by. I loved looking at all the Circus animals.

The Haunted Circus Train

My video of the Circus Train

We then walked through the end of the display with all sorts of ghosts and ghouls that included a Pumpkin man and the Headless Horsemen.

The Headless Horseman

Chasing poor Ichabod Crane

The evil Pumpkin man showed himself towards the end of the tour

The end of the tour looking back at the lights and displays. There were all sorts of lit pumpkins as we exited the tour.

This was my favorite

Me at the end of the Pumpkin Blaze with one of the flying monkey’s behind me.

It may have been a Halloween with less activities and far less running around but it was far better than my years of Trick of Treating as a kid! Yuck!

Happy Halloween everyone! Until next year!

Boo!

The eerie evening and holiday had now passed

Happy Halloween! Here comes Christmas…….

Day Three Hundred and Sixty Two Exploring the Hudson River Valley on a Fall Day Sheep and Wool Festival and Cemetery Walk October 18th, 2025

It was a beautiful afternoon in the Hudson River Valley with the leaves changing and a clear sunny sky. I was exhausted from all the running around with classes and needed a break from everything. With Midterms next week, I figured that I needed a change of pace and decided to head to the Sheep and Wool Festival at the Duchess County Fairgrounds.

Looking at the beautiful foliage on Route 87

I finally was able to sleep in after many early mornings and relax and enjoy breakfast. I got on the road after 10:00am and it seemed like everyone was headed in the same direction. The highway was packed until we got to Route 84 and then things calmed down.

Route 87 going up to New York

I had to stop several times just to take pictures of the foliage on the New Jersey side of the border. Unfortunately the best angles I could not get due to the fact there was no shoulder to step at on the highway. Still the colorful mountain was a site to see.

The foliage on the way up

With a rain storm coming up the coast, I wanted to be sure I got pictures of all the foliage with this brilliance.

The mountains were so beautiful I had to stop the car and photo them

Going through Hyde Park first, I stopped at the Hyde Park Farmers Market. I have been coming to this Farmers Market for years and it is always so nice.

The Hyde Park Farmers Market

https://www.hydeparkny.us/541/Pauls-Hyde-Park-Farmers-Market

https://www.facebook.com/farmersmarkethydepark/

It must have been just as the Market was closing because it was so quiet. All the vendors had time to say hello to me.

Walking by all the tents of produce and freshly made products

There were all sorts of produce, baked goods and craft products. The one thing I did notice was how expensive things have gotten. Egg Custards for $3.50 and breads for $10.00.

The colorful display of Fall produce

The Fino Farms who always has such great product

I took a quick walk through the market and then headed to the fairgrounds. That was just as packed as well.

The sign for the Sheep and Wool Festival in 2025

https://sheepandwool.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

The entrance of the festival on a beautiful sunny afternoon

The Sheep and Wool Festival is not as big as the Dutchess County Fair but had a lot of the same food and merchant vendors. On a smaller scale, it is much more manageable but with the number of people who attend this every year, they could use more food vendors for the event.

The sign and directions in the fairgrounds

The foliage was so beautiful that afternoon

The Festival takes place the second week of October just when the Duchess County foliage is coming to its peak. The fairgrounds were covered in golds and reds.

Entering the Midway at the Sheep and Wool Festival where the food vendors were located. The foliage was at peak color.

The Midway was not as packed with vendors as the fair but is had a nice selection of food vendors

Entering the middle of the festival was getting busy

The foliage was amazing both inside and outside the fairgrounds

I got up to the fair late this time, not arriving until 2:00pm ( I thought the festival ended at 6:00pm but it ended at 5:00pm) and needed to get done lunch. Amongst all of my choices, I still always head to Janek’s, the barbecue/hamburger truck that has been my favorite for years.

Janek’s food truck is always at the same location

For years I have been getting the Piggy Back burger with Cheddar cheese and pulled pork on top(which I highly recommend) but I decided to do something different and have the Burger with freshly made Pastrami and Swiss Cheese. A very nice substitute.

The Pastrami and Swiss burger

The burger was perfectly cooked with slices of smoked pastrami on top

Yum!

The dining areas of the festival were busy from the time that I got there until the festival closed that evening. Even up to closing time and just after, people were ordering food.

The crowds kept getting bigger at the Midway at lunch and dinner time

After a good lunch and getting my energy back, I headed over to the animal pens and the craft stalls to see all the handmade products. My first stop was the Sheep pens, where sheering was going on and they were many contests to showcase the livestock. The Sheep were being shown, sheered and were talking amongst themselves as we walked around the pens admiring them.

I found that the sheep looked really relaxed and seemed to have more fun staring at us

This little guy kept smiling at me watching him

While the livestock contest was going on to a huge crowd, I toured the Crafts stalls. In the Summer for the fair, this was full of cows and goats, it now had all sorts of wool vendors, knit items, handcrafts and cosmetic items.

The colorful wool items on display

These wool dragon sculptures I thought were really interesting

Bonny’s Beasts were back with more creative gifts

Bonny’s creative beasts

More creative beasts

I also revisited my favorite wood carvers to see their Santa wares. This was the first year that my mother did not want something!

The Santa Carvings

The Santa Carvings

After touring the stalls and the open museums on the fairgrounds, I decided just to take a walk around and see what things were open since the fair.

The 4H Building was closed and there were no milkshakes now. Just coffee and hot beverages. I thought I saw someone walking around with a milkshake.

The foliage around the fairgrounds was just dazzling

By 4:30pm, they kept making announcements that the show would closing by 5:00pm, so I just wondered around and observed everyone having a good time on this warm and sunny afternoon. I had been watching the football games on my phone to watch Michigan State lose again to number three Indiana. Cornell won the Bucknell game so I figured Bucknell must have been pretty bad.

The last of the patrons at the end of the afternoon with the beautiful foliage in the background by the food vendors

As I left at 5:00pm at the end of the show, I observed the old signs from previous shows. Time has flown since my first show a decade ago. I still can’t believe it will be 2026 soon.

The shoe sign from 2021, post COVID

The last show I went to pre-COVID in 2019

After the show was over, I decided to tour around Rhinebeck. I was going to attend the Cemetery walk at St. James Church again in Hyde Park at 7:30pm so I had plenty of time. I had taken this tour back in 2021 just as everything had opened up and it was a lot of fun.

St. James Church before twilight at 6:15pm

The staff was just setting up the lights at the cemetery (technically a graveyard)

The inside of St. James Church in Hyde Park, NY, parish of the Roosevelt family

https://www.facebook.com/stjameshydepark/

https://www.dutchess.org/events/st_james_historic_graveyard_tours

My review on TripAdvisor:

I got to the church an hour before my tour and just relaxed and admired the beauty of the church. I never saw an hour fly by before my tour started. Then darkness came and my tour started.

Darkness came by 7:30pm and the cemetery looked much different

We started the lantern tour with a talk of the spirits who were buried in the grave yard. Each of the actors was waiting for us at each stop. I still could not believe these actors were waiting alone in the dark in a graveyard for people to walk by the them.

Each of the actors told their tales of when they were living and stood beside the place that they were buried. It was very intriguing.

The first person we met was Mrs. Emma Victoria Pitkin Marshal

Mrs. Marshall was once known as the ‘Poet Laureate’ of Dutchess County. She was well known in the world of publishing.

The second spirit I met was Mrs. Harper, Mrs. Mill’s housekeeper up at the Staatsburgh mansion. She told us the story of her life working for the Mills and Livingston families.

Mrs. Catherine Kennedy Harper

Mrs. Harper told us about her life working for the Livingston family and her relationship with Ruth, who she was her nanny and then housekeeper.

Our conversation with Mrs. Harper

Our next spirit we visiting was the ghost of Gertrude ‘Gerdie’ Livingston who talked about her time in the Hudson River Valley and in New York City.

Gertrude ‘Gertie’ Livingston

Mrs. Livingston telling her tales of the Hudson River Valley

In between our conversations with the spirits of the past, we walked through the graveyard as twilight gave way to darkness. The graveyard was illuminated with lanterns and lights to follow the paths. It is easy to trip over a tombstone while you are walking around the paths. They did give us lanterns to light the way but there were not enough to go around.

The vaults are illuminated at night to follow the ghostly trail

Our next with the spirits was the ghost of Reverend John McVickar, who was the Rector at St. James Church starting in 1811. He married Eliza Bard, the daughter of Dr. Samuel Bard of Bard College and raised their nine children together.

The spirit of Reverend John McVickar telling his tales of his life in the church

Walking past the church at night

The last apparition we met that night was the spirit of Mr. Augustus C. Colman, the son of a sailing captain who invested heavily in Manhattan real estate on the advice of his boss. John Jacob Astor.

The spirit of Mr. Colman telling his tales of the City

Both himself and the Reverend went at it in the graveyard

The stained glass windows at the church

The church at the end of the tour

After the tour was over, I drove to downtown Kingston , NY to talk pictures of the Dutch Reformed Church at night.

There was no cemetery walk this year here and I just wanted to visit this graveyard looked like at night with the full moon. It was more intriguing than scary.

The Kingston Old Dutch Reformed Church at 272 Wall Street

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Dutch_Church_(Kingston,_New_York)

https://www.facebook.com/OldDutchChurch/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g48003-d7232701-Reviews-Old_Dutch_Church-Kingston_Catskill_Region_New_York.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

The graveyard was well lit at night

The church from the front

Even without a graveyard tour the ground can be a little spooky

After my tour of the Old Dutch Church and the graveyard, I walked around Downtown Kingston. I have never seen a town like this that rolls up its sleeves so early in the evening. It seems like a majority of the restaurants close at 8:00pm. I can understand the stores but the restaurants?

I stopped at my favorite go to restaurant in The ‘Stockade District’ Wing Shui at 53 North Front Street. The food is consistently wonderful and extremely reasonable and you can sit down inside the restaurant.

https://wingshuikingston.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g48003-d822310-Reviews-Wing_Shui_Chinese_Restaurant-Kingston_Catskill_Region_New_York.html?m=69573

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

I was surprisingly hungry even after the big burger at lunch. It got cooler that evening so I ordered the Wonton Soup, the Steamed Dumplings and one of their wonderful eggrolls. It was such a great meal and really warmed me up. For such a small hole in the wall restaurant/take out place, the food is excellent.

My dinner that evening at Wing Shui

The Wonton Soup had for large wontons that you could barely fit in your mouth in the rich chicken broth. That warmed up after a graveyard walk in the dark.

The Wonton Soup with the oversized Wontons and rich chicken broth

The steamed dumplings were plump and moist and filled with spiced pork mixture.

The dumplings here are delicious

Their egg rolls are always a treat and are the first thing that I ever tried here years ago.

The egg rolls here are excellent

Yum!

I was nice to sit in the restaurant and just warm up. The temperature really dropped that evening and it was a rather cool October in comparison to other years.

After dinner, I walked around Downtown Kingston some more and admired some of the decorations and store windows decorated for the holidays. It seems like Halloween is now the lead into Christmas rather than Thanksgiving (some places have already decorated for Christmas).

The ‘Jack Pumpkin’ decoration that looked like it out of “The Nightmare before Christmas” in Downtown Kingston, NY

https://andnorth.com/kingston-downtown

From “Nightmare before Christmas”

A lot of windows were decorated for the Halloween holidays. The merchants in Downtown Kingston are so creative and here are some of my favorites.

This was displayed in the window on a North Front Street store.

The faceless entities in the windows

They face this witches hat

The skulls and pumpkins in the window. The merchants get quite creative at the holidays in the downtown area.

I walked back to my car and contemplated the upcoming Halloween holiday and all the interesting events I planned to see. It is no longer just Trick or Treating anymore.

The front of the Old Dutch Church at night

While waiting for a friendly ghost to come and greet me.

Here comes Halloween. Boo!

Hamden Covered Bridge Park Route 10 Hamden, NY 13782

Hamden Covered Bridge Park

Route 10

Hamden, NY 13782

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamden_Bridge

Open: Sunday-Saturday 24 Hours

My review on TripAdvisor:

The Hamden Covered Bridge

I was driving through Hamden on my way to Ithaca and had just left Delhi and wanted to travel through the back roads of the state. I came across the Hamden Covered bridge while driving down the highway. I had never seen one that looked like this and had to stop to see this interesting bridge.

The historic sign

The History of the Covered Bridge:

(From the New York State Covered Bridge Society)

The Hamden Covered Bridge is one of six covered bridges still standing in Delaware County. It is one of three bridges owned and maintained by Delaware County; the other three bridges are
privately owned.

Built by Robert Murray in 1859, this 128-foot-long, single span structure incorporates the Long truss design patented on March 6, 1830 by Lieutenant Colonel Stephen H. Long of Hopkinton, New Hampshire. It is New York’s only covered bridge that incorporates a pure Long truss design, unassisted by an arch or Queen post truss and is rare to northeastern covered bridges. The Hamden Covered Bridge is one of three covered crossings that still carry traffic across branches of the Delaware River. A contract to construct the bridge was signed between Mr. Murray and the Town of Hamden on April 27, 1859, for the sum of $1,000.

The beautiful little park that surrounds it

The little park does not have the best parking (as I had to park by the side of the highway) but this is a beautiful and picturesque little park. I loved walking through the gardens and taking a break from all the driving. Its a nice place to take a rest.

The beautifully landscaped park

The signage tells the story of the town, the rail system Upstate and the communities that was affected by it.

The history of the Bridge and the surrounding area

The history of the town

I had never walked through a old covered bridge before and found it fascinating. I loved the architecture and the history behind it. I imagined all the horses and wagons and cars that must have traveled through it over the years.

Touring the bridge

I want to share my tour of the bridge with all of you so you can see how magnificent this little historical bridge. It is amazing and nice to see a part of our history.

My walking tour of the inside of the bridge

The inside of the bridge

Take your time to take this walk through the bridge.

The historic sign

The beauty of the road trip down Route 10

The surrounding around Route 10 is just breathtaking in the summer and I can imagine what this is like during the Fall foliage. I took my time to drive down Route 10. It is just so beautiful to drive down and stop and take pictures.

Driving down Route 10

Driving down Route 10 is worth the trip

A better look at the lakes and rivers

The views are amazing

Day Three Hundred and Fifty-One Summer Events in the Hudson River Valley-The Yankee Brass Band at the Clermont Estate Historic Site July 24th, 2025

The Clermont Estate in Germantown, NY the seat of the Livingston family for seven generations

https://www.friendsofclermont.org/

https://parks.ny.gov/historic-sites/16/details.aspxhttp:/clermontstatehistoricsite.blogspot.comwww.friendsofclermont.org

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g47780-d263704-Reviews-The_Clermont_Mansion-Germantown_New_York.html

My review on Visitinga Museum.com:

During the Summer months, the Hudson River Valley, especially towns in Dutchess County host all sorts of events. They are so numerous you have to pick and choose. Plus it’s the distance from New Jersey where I live where you have to plan accordingly.

The Friends of Clermont, the home of the Livingston family holds a series of concerts every summer, of which I never have time to attend being that the estate is two and a half hours away. When I saw that they were hosting a Victorian era Brass Band, with instruments and music from that era, I made a special trip up to the Hudson River Valley to see them.

I started my trip after my class met and headed up to the Hudson River Valley in spectacular sunny weather. The day may have been hot but the cool breezes off the river made it better to walk around.

The concert did not start until 6:00pm, so I had time to explore and visit cultural spots and towns that I had not been to since the early Spring. Everything changes so much during the seasons and Summer is especially beautiful up here. My first stop was Marist College to see the Marist Art Gallery.

Marist College Art Gallery

https://www.marist.edu/communication-arts/art-digital-media/gallery

https://www.facebook.com/maristartgallery/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Profile/R4960NKjustinw/photo/815531525?m=19905

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

The museum was closed for the summer but it gave me a chance to see the new section of the campus that had been built. The building is amazing as is the art school. I can’t believe how the campus has changed in the last twenty years.

Since I had to be at the Clermont Estate by 5:00pm, I decided to do some touring around the area and stopped in Rhinebeck next. The town was packed with day trippers and there was not much parking available.

The Dutchess County Historical Society at 6282 US 9

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g48443-d27084954-r1020821515-Dutchess_County_Historical_Society-Poughkeepsie_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on VistingaMuseum.com:

I stopped at the Dutchess County Historical Society at for a visit. The last time I had been it was when it first opened. The museum now is mostly being used for research and people were using the library when I walked in. I walked through the Portrait gallery.

The portrait of local resident Edward Martin

The portrait of Judge and Mrs. Soutenburgh

A Farm scape of one of the local farms

The museum has an extensive Map Collection

The museum was just about ready to close for the day so I headed for my next destination of Red Hook for lunch. I decided on Village Pizza III, which has some of the most delicious food at reasonable prices.

Village Pizza III at 7514 North Broadway in Downtown Red Hook, NY

https://www.instagram.com/explore/locations/113437418688745/village-pizza-iii/recent/?locale=us

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g48473-d819096-r1020820206-Village_Pizza_III-Red_Hook_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

Knowing that there would be no time for dinner on the way home, I ordered a Lasagna dinner for myself. They make the most flavorful red sauce and it brings such flavor to their food. Everything that I have tried at Village Pizza III has been excellent and I have always enjoyed my meals here over the years.

The Lasagna dinner at Village Pizza III

The food is excellent here. The portion sizes are very large and the prices are reasonable (though they just went up a few dollars). Everything was delicious.

The garlic bread was loaded with garlic and olive oil

The Lasagna was a gooey delight of sauce and cheese

After lunch was over, I walked around Downtown Red Hook and it is funny, just like the pizzeria everything seems to be going up in price. The other restaurants that used to be so reasonable have gotten a little more expensive. I guess the Rhinebeck prices have finally found their way to Red Hook. That was the one thing I always liked about Downtown Red Hook, the merchants were meant for the locals. Now they have gotten very gifty and more expensive. Just like the other Hudson River Valley, these cute little towns have gotten expensive with the City expats.

Downtown Red Hook, NY in the Summer of 2025

Here’s my blog on Exploring Downtown Red Hook, NY:

https://mywalkinmanhattan.com/tag/downtown-red-hook-ny/

After I walked Downtown Red Hook and noticed all the new shops and gourmet grocery stores, I figured that the hipsters and artists have finally found their way to Red Hook when I saw the selection of stores that have opened and replaced the ones that had been there for a long time. It is funny when you see a town change the way I have over time. Rhinebeck did the same thing about a decade ago.

I left Red Hook and decided to go up to Tivoli, a small town by the river before I left for Germantown, NY, where Clermont Mansion is located. Tivoli was really quiet on a late Thursday afternoon and I just walked around the downtown area and took some pictures. It is such a great little downtown to walk and explore.

Downtown Tivoli by the Hotel Tivoli

https://hoteltivoli.org/

Review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Hotel_Review-g48732-d1069233-Reviews-Hotel_Tivoli-Tivoli_New_York.html?m=19905

Downtown Tivoli galleries and stores

Walking through the neighborhoods and coming across this funky barn

The Tivoli Tile Works sign on the side street

https://carolinesclayworks.com/

Queen Anne’s Lace growing on the side of the road is just beautiful

After my tour of Downtown Tivoli, I left for Germantown and the estate. I decided to first walk the grounds and the gardens to work off my early dinner. The estate looked amazing with everything in bloom and everything was green with longs lawns lining the river. It was just gorgeous.

Walking towards the mansion through the lawns and gardens on the Clermont Mansion

I decided since I had an hour before the concert that I would tour the house and grounds. All the gardens were still in bloom and were still at peak blossom. It was nice to take my time and not be rushed as I walked the estate.

Walking though the Lilac Gardens

First I walked through the Lilac Gardens, which had been out of bloom since the summer, but the trees were lush with green. The lawns had just been cut and the estate really looked beautiful.

Clermont Mansion in the summer

A rabbit was posing for myself and other photographers

The South Spring Garden is right next to the mansion and is one my of my favorite gardens on the estate. I love visiting here first.

The South Spring Garden is right of the mansion

The South Spring Garden

The South Spring Garden in full bloom

The Root Cellar for food storage before refrigeration

The ruins of the Root Cellar

I then walked over to the Walled Garden which was under renovation at the time. It was still in full bloom and nicely landscaped. This is one of the nicest gardens when in full bloom.

The sign for the Walled Garden

The entrance to the Walled Garden

Inside the Walled Garden

Inside the Walled Garden

The Walled Garden in full bloom

The Back of the Walled Garden

Leaving the Walled Garden to go to the Cutting Garden

The Cutting Gardens and the Children’s Playhouse by the old Greenhouses

These gardens were created for the foundation of other gardens and for flowers for the house.

The Gazebo in the Cutting Gardens

The Cutting Gardens in bloom

The flower beds in full bloom

Walking through the gardens

The flowers in full bloom

The ruins of the greenhouses

The Gardening shed was converted to a playhouse for the children

The Children’s Garden has now been restored and in full bloom

I then left this part of the estate gardens and headed back to the house and toured the Wilderness Gardens next.

The sign for the Wilderness Gardens

The bridge from the Cutting Gardens to the Wilderness Gardens

The Wilderness Gardens in the late afternoon

The pool in the Wilderness Gardens

The Wilderness Gardens near the woods

The gardens were just amazing that afternoon. Everything was so well taken care of and the new gardener the park had was doing such a good job maintaining things.

I headed back to the house and toured the lawn near the river where the concert would take place.

The mansion in the late afternoon

The lawns in the late afternoon

Walking by the Hudson River

Walking by the Hudson River and admiring the views

The concert lawn is right next to the river so we could enjoy the cool breezes

By the time I got back to the concert grounds, the band was getting ready to play. The crowds had also grown as well. When I arrived at 5:00pm, there were barely any cars in the parking lot but the crowds swelled right before the concert.

The Yankee Brass Band preparing for the concert

The History of the band:

(from the band website)

Since 1986, the Yankee Brass Band has entertained audiences in New England and beyond with historically informed performances of nineteenth-century American brass band music. Using antique brass and percussion instruments from the period, painstakingly restored by their owners, the Yankee Brass Band presents the music of the “Golden Age of Bands” played in much the same manner as in the mid- to late nineteenth century.

To recreate this music, the band plays close attention to the aesthetics, performance practice, and concert attire of an earlier time. For one week each summer, the members of the Yankee Brass Band assemble from across the country to preserve this unique musical legacy through a series of live performances. Each year’s tour repertoire is developed through careful study of period programs, personal papers, manuscripts, and early printed music, along with all sorts of band ephemera.

The musicians of the Yankee Brass Band volunteer their time and talents to bring this music to life. The band is supported by the generosity of tour hosts, donations, and Friends of the Yankee Brass, Inc (a 501(c)(3) organization).

The start of the concert

The first set of songs

(The performance of the “Victoria Gallop” by the Yankee Brass Band)

The horn solo and duo of the “Duet from “Il Puritani”)

Part One (before someone walked in front of my camera)

The Duet from “Il Puritani”

Part two to finish the duo

The concert was wonderful. The Yankee Brass Band played all the traditional marches from the 19th and early 20th Centuries. All the musicians came from all over the country for a week to play together and all performed on antique instruments.

The second half of the concert and patriot music played

The song “Our National Union March” by the Yankee Brass Band

After the concert was over, it was still early at 7:30pm and the sun was shining bright. While other people prepared to leave I walked around this part of the estate.

The river front by the Hudson River

I walked around to see the ruins of Arryl House, the home of Robert Livingston which buried down in the early part of the twentieth century.

The sign for Arryl House

The ruins of Arryl House

The ruins of Arryl House

After the tour, it was time to go home. I had over a two hour journey home but it was a productive and fun way to spend the afternoon. I think I just needed a break from everything. The views of the river and the tour of the gardens really relaxed and refreshed me and was a great way to end the day.

Until the next trip.

John Burrough’s Slabsides and Nature Sanctuary 500 Burroughs Drive West Park, NY 12493

John Burrough’s Slabsides and Nature Sanctuary

500 Burroughs Drive

West Park, NY 12493

(845)384-6320

https://www.hudsonrivervalley.com/sites/John-Burroughs-Slabsides-/details

https://johnburroughsassociation.org/

Open: The Second and Forth Saturday of the month when in season. Please visit the website for the days open. The cabin is open from 12:00pm-4:00pm when in season.

My review on TripAdvisor:

The entrance to John Burroughs ‘Slabsides’

The entrance to Slabsides is located on a local country road off another local country road off Route 9. Use your Google Map carefully when visiting or you will miss the turn off. The parking lot is really small and holds only about eight cars so please make the turn around on the road above and park facing down from the parking lot (word of advice on parking).

The pathway from parking lot to the house is really beautiful and lush in the summer. It seemed more desolate in the cooler months and just empty. Still it is only about a five minute walk from the parking lot to the cabin.

The original cabin “Slabsides” from the pathway. This one room cabin was used by Naturalist John Burroughs as a home away from home to write and to think.

The lawn outside the cabin

The historic sign outside the cabin

The porch of Slabsides in the summer

John Burroughs work area inside the cabin and his kitchen

John Burroughs work station overlooked the woods and rock formations

The fireplace and resting area

The kitchen area in the back of the cabin

The bedroom and sleeping area of the cabin

The bedroom of the cabin

The pictures of Walt Whitman and John Burroughs in the bedroom

https://www.britannica.com/biography/John-Burroughs

https://exhibits.archives.marist.edu/s/marist-heritage-project/page/Esopus-Community-John-Burroughs

John Burroughs as a young man

https://johnburroughsassociation.org/about/about-john-burroughs

(From the John Burroughs website)

John Burroughs was one of the most popular authors of his day and is credited with creating the modern nature essay. Using easily understood prose, he described nature that was familiar and local, bringing the natural world to his readers. He encouraged them in the art of observation by sharing a sense of place and purpose in the land. Burroughs wrote more than three hundred articles published in leading magazines and in twenty-seven books over sixty years. Through his writings and friendships with influential leaders he had a profound impact on the emerging conservation movements.   

Born in the Catskill Mountains in 1837 he settled on a nine-acre fruit farm on the west bank of the Hudson River north of Poughkeepsie that he named “Riverby.” Poet Walt Whitman and Burroughs tramped through its surrounding woods during Whitman’s several visits, moving Burroughs to call these woods “Whitman Land.” In 1895 he purchased a nearby tract of land and built a two-story cabin as a place to write and entertain, calling it “Slabsides.”  

Though Burroughs was a writer particular to the Hudson Valley region, his travels were widely known and celebrated. In 1899 he joined the Harriman Expedition to Alaska and wrote the “Narrative” of the expedition. He accompanied Roosevelt into the wilderness of Yellowstone, telling the story in Camping & Tramping with Roosevelt, which provided the narrative for a segment of Ken Burns’s The National Parks. Burroughs also traveled to the Grand Canyon and Yosemite with John Muir and went on elaborate camping trips with his industrialist friends Henry Ford, Thomas Edison and Harvey Firestone. Accounts of these events are in Burroughs’ journal archived at Vassar College. 

Burroughs received honorary doctorates from Yale, Colgate, and the University of Georgia, and the Gold Medal of the American Academy of Arts and Letters.  

The ceiling of the cabin

The stairs to the upstairs loft

The cabin was small and is pretty much one full room with one or two walls partitioning the rooms. This seems more like a summer cabin. Still it had its charm.

We then finished the tour outside along the trails outside the cabin.

I admired the outside woods from the patio

(From the John Burroughs Association website)

The land around Slabsides informed many of his essays in which he described nature close at hand. Through works written here, John Burroughs inspired national leaders to preserve land and its wildlife and generations of readers to head out-of-doors. For nearly three decades Slabsides drew devoted readers and prominent friends. There are nearly seven thousand signatures in his Slabsides guest books. Among the early signers were ornithologists Frank Chapman and William Brewster, conservationist John Muir, leader of the Arts and Crafts movement Gustav Stickley, and his friends Theodore Roosevelt and Henry Ford, who gave him a series of three Ford cars. The young journalist Theodore Dreiser interviewed Burroughs at Slabsides.

The trail outside the cabin which Aldo served as the lawn when it is not full of vegetation from all the recent rain.

The trail signs

Looking down the trails outside the cabin

The rock formations outside the cabin on the trails

One last look back at the cabin before I left that morning

Walking along the trails outside back to the car

Walking along the trails bank to the car

Walking along the trails

Walking along the trails

The parking lot before I left that day

It was a wonderful private tour with Joan, who is the President of the organization. She explained who John Burroughs was, his significance in writing and his life. It was a very interesting tour.

The pathways were so beautiful and there is a full series of trails to follow throughout the property to explore.

Beacon Historical Society 61 Leonard Street Beacon, NY 12508

Beacon Historical Society

61 Leonard Street

Beacon, NY 12508

(845) 831-0514

https://www.beaconhistorical.org/

https://www.facebook.com/BeaconHistoricalSociety/

Open: Sunday- Wednesday Closed/ Thursday 10:00am-12:00pm/Friday Closed/Saturday 1:00pm-3:00pm

Admission: Free but donations are accepted

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g47291-d15772700-Reviews-Beacon_Historical_Society-Beacon_New_York.html

The Beacon Historical Society at 61 Leonard Street at Christmas time

The outside of the building in the Summer

The sign for the Beacon Historical Society at Christmas time

The outside sign in the Summer

The Mission of the Society:

(From the Society pamphlet

The Beacon Historical Society was founded in 1976 to preserve, collect and interpret the rich history of the City of Beacon and its predecessor Villages of Fishkill Landing and Matteawan.

History of the Society:

(From the Museum website)

Established in 1976, the Beacon Historical Society showcases Beacon’s history through exhibitions, collections, programs, books and an informative monthly newsletter. The Beacon Historical Society is proud to serve as Beacon’s repository of rare photographs, paintings and prints, Hudson River ship models, objects and ephemera from local factories and Main Street businesses, records of local cemeteries and Civil War veterans, maps of Beacon, Fishkill Landing and Matteawan.

I recently did a walking tour of Downtown Beacon, NY and was impressed by the numbers of restaurants, bars and stores in the downtown area. It is an impressive downtown with very few empty stores and impressive and lively street life. On my first trip to the Beacon Historical Society I learned this was not always the case.

I recently visited this small historical society packed with information on the history not just of the City of Beacon but the surrounding Hudson River area. The museum gives an in depth view of the industrial history of the area and the highs and lows of many of the river communities. These small communities have seen a renaissance over the last decade especially during COVID and many of the older towns have seen new life being breathed into them.

The first exhibition I looked at was the Photographer Patrick Prosser exhibition (being shared with the Howland Cultural Center) ‘Work in Decay: The City of Beacon NY’.

Artist Patrick Prosser

https://www.facebook.com/groups/Beaconphotogroup/posts/30007658412154532

Photographer Patrick Prossner was born and raised in Beacon and a graduate of Beacon High School and SUNY New Paltz with BFA. His work on this project started in 1982 photographing the decay of his home town (Author’s Bio on BHS website).

The photographer moved to the area in the early 1980’s during a time when Beacon’s mills and factories were closing and the downtown was boarded up. It shows what the downtown business district looked like and the changes that were made to shape it today.

The sign for the exhibition

Pictures of the former industrial zone

The pictures showed a once vibrant industrial community and the changes once these factories closed.

The changes in the surrounding area

The exhibition really shows the transformation of these towns from the once industrial hubs to the artsy communities filled with galleries and bars that many of them have become.

Downtown Beacon today filled with art galleries, shops and small restaurants

The former mill is now a luxury hotel and restaurant overlooking the same waterfall that used to power the mill

These small communities factories have now become hotels, lofts and in some cases new cottage industries have moved in. Time transforms areas and what is old becomes new again.

The first floor gallery

The second exhibition that I walked through was the ‘From Haverstraw to Beacon: Inside the Brickyards the built New York City’, an extensive look at the brickyards and the clay deposits that once lined the Hudson River that build most buildings in the City in the end of the Eighteenth, Nineteenth and early Twentieth centuries.

The exhibition sign

The map of the location of the brickyards along the Hudson River. This depended on the location of the clay deposits.

Transportation of freight and people for both recreation and business was described in this display of different boats down the Hudson River.

The display of understanding the brick business

Display of the different companies and processes of making bricks

The display of people that make up the industry

The process of mining, making, drying and creating the bricks that would end up in New York City

Some of the bricks and the companies from the New York market that were created in the region

Another display on the companies

More of the companies and processes to making bricks

The exhibition was a very interesting look at what was once a dominant industry in the area but like any industry as the clay ran out and building materials changed, the industry diminished in the area and that way of life changed. With it as well was the transformation of the area.

The former brick factories

The Brockway Brick Company that built Macy’s original building in Manhattan

There were smaller exhibitions as well all over the two floors of displays. First there was a handmade dollhouse on the first floor that is a favorite of the elementary school students.

The handmade dollhouse on the first floor

On the seconded floor is a display is the socially prominent Van Nydeck family. The family donated their family tree and many family heirlooms and portraits.

Part of the Schenck Van Nydeck family tree

The Van Nydeck family heirlooms

There was also artwork and artifacts from the surrounding community on display all over the museum.

The painting is by a local artist and the pottery is locally made

The window is a Tiffany window from a local church that the Historical Society saved for the museum

The first floor gallery

The docent told me after I toured the exhibition that there are more exhibitions being planned for the future.

Touring Downtown Beacon, NY:

After the trip through the Historical Society, I ventured and walked Downtown Beacon. The neighborhood has certainly changed since the early eighties.

Downtown Beacon today

Downtown Beacon today with Mount Beacon in the distance

The beautiful floral arrangements in the downtown today

Day Three Hundred and Forty-Three Attending the Strawberry Festival at the Brinckerhoff House-The East Fishkill Historical Society-A Local Journey June 1st, 2025

The entrance to the Brinckerhoff Historical Homstead

The Brinckerhoff farm and estate. This used to cover hundreds of acres

The entrance to the property before the festival began

The Brinckerhoff House before the start of the Strawberry Festival

https://eastfishkillhistoricalsociety.org/

https://destinationdutchess.com/listingsv/the-brinckerhoff-house-east-fishkill-historical-society

https://www.facebook.com/p/Brinckerhoff-House-Historic-SiteHome-of-East-Fishkill-Historical-Society-100057186982344/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g47922-d24829233-Reviews-Brinckerhoff_House_Historical_Site-Hopewell_Junction_New_York.html

My review on VistitingaMuseum.com:

https://visitingamuseum.com/tag/east-fishkill-historical-society/

When the festival began and before the Strawberry Shortcakes came out that afternoon, there were all sorts of activities and docent led tours. The first one that I went to was the 1820 Schoolhouse.

The historic sign for the 1820 One Room Schoolhouse of Upper Hopewell

The entrance to the schoolhouse

Even though the schoolhouse is from the early part of the 1800’s, it is amazing how it still relates to classrooms of today. I am still convinced it is the connection that students have with their teachers establishes the fundamentals of a good education and learning.

The schoolhouse from the back of the building

The inside of the classroom has not changed in two hundred years

The schoolhouse classroom is similar to today

I will be quite honest in saying that outside the potbelly stove, the classroom here is pretty much the same as the lecture halls that I see at our college campus.

Games and books of the past are similar to those of today

The items of the classroom of the 1800’s. I am not too sure the use of the Apple press but the children may have had chores to do outside the classroom.

A discipline system that should be brought back

After the tour and talk at the schoolhouse and a talk with other educators on the status of the modern classroom (we all had a lot to say on this), I went over to tour the barn.

The Van Wyck Barn

The historic sign of the mid-1800’s barn

The historic marker of the 1845 barn

The actor who was working at the barn told us about wood making and about saws and how to maintain them for work on the farm.

Next to the barn, there was a small blacksmith building where the volunteer was demonstrating items that would have to been made or maintained to keep work on the farm going. Never a dull moment on the farm.

Keeping the fires going and a certain amount of heat is needed to fix these items and create the objects needed on the farm.

The objects and items made at the blacksmith

I know that these tours may seem hokey to some but the volunteers who were at both the barn and the blacksmith were really interesting in their demonstrations. There was a lot of time, talent and creativity needed to keep these aspects of the farm in working conditions.

The rains had really made the grounds lush and all the flowers and trees were in full bloom. The gardens were really well maintained and it was really pretty to walk arounds the grounds of the house.

The gardens by the schoolhouse

In the little pen by the Ice House, they set up a small petting zoo with little goats who looked terrified of us. If we had something to feed them, trust me they would have been less shy.

These little lambs were so cute

I was trying to wave them down but they huddled together

Walking around the grounds

The Icehouse was closed that day

The crowds were starting to get bigger around 1:30pm because that was when the Strawberry Shortcakes were being served.

Since they were a little behind as the high school students were inside preparing the Strawberry Shortcakes, I decided to tour the Brinckerhoff House again. They had a Butter Making class going on in the old kitchen section of the home and there were early American displays in all the cases. All the first floor rooms were open and I got a chance to see some of the new artifact donations.

There were all sorts of displays of clothing, furnishings and assorted dish ware on display in the Living Room and Dining Room.

Early American display of women’s clothing

Early American display of Men’s clothing

The Dining Room on the first floor was all set for tea

The Dining Room led to the bedrooms and the old kitchen

The old Main Bedroom on the first floor

Some the artifacts in the second floor bedroom

Some of the paperwork and artifacts in the main foyer

As I exited the house, I passed the door to the roof cellar. I did not think they would put this on the tour. Only the first floor of the house is open to the public.

The door to the root cellar

I took a tour around the grounds and passed the old outhouse

As soon as I finished the tour of the house and grounds the first trays of Strawberry Shortcakes started to come out and I never saw such a mad dash to get something.

The tent set up to sit and relax and eat

As I went to reach for a Strawberry Shortcakes on one of trays. I swear this woman grabbed two off the tray and practically barreled into me. I know they looked good but I could not believe the way some people behave. These were plenty of trays coming outside.

After I avoided the collusion, I was able to get one of the shortcakes off the tray and sit down. The Historical Society had plenty of seating under the tent and what was nice was they had ice cold lemonade as well. It made the perfect afternoon snack and the reason why everyone was here. When I had taken the initial tour of the property three years earlier, the tour guide told me that they went through 600 of these. I could believe it.

The Strawberry Shortcake with homemade whipped cream

I hate to say this but I waited almost four years to finally try this shortcake and admittingly it was well worth the wait.

The strawberries were so juicy and fresh. I was not sure if they were from a local farm but by the sweetness and juiciness these were not imported.

Yum!

While we were eating the entertainment began. They had a wonderful guitarist playing on the patio and we could hear him down at the tent further away on the lawn.

The guitarist was wonderful. He played all sorts of songs from the 1960’s and 70’s.

Here is a short clip of the concert on the lawn

After relaxing and enjoying the shortcake, I saw that they were starting up the hayrides around the property and the first riders were leaving. I thought it looked like fun.

The first group of riders leaving

I got on the second ride and there was plenty of room on the flatbed. Even though it was a short ride, it was a lot of fun. The sun peeked out for a bit and it made the ride pleasurable.

Us passing the woods at the start of the trip

The start of our journey around the grounds of the Brinckerhoff house.

The start of the journey

The end of the journey

As I exited the flatbed, there was a pretty long line to get on the ride. As simple as this ride was it was so relaxing to just drive around the neighborhood and see the beauty of the house grounds. The volunteers do such a wonderful job of maintaining the house and gardens.

By 3:00pm the crowds had gotten larger and more trays of shortcakes were being devoured under the tent and people were having such a wonderful time. It was almost like a 1970’s event with families spending time together and I did not see one person playing with a cell phone in sight.

Since there was only an hour left of the event, I decided to beat the crowds out of there and explore historic Fishkill. There are a lot of great things to see in town.

The Reformed Dutch Church and its historic cemetery

https://www.facebook.com/FirstReformedChurchofFishkill/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g47724-d263921-Reviews-First_Reformed_Church_of_Fishkill-Fishkill_New_York.html

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

The historic cemetery is filled with loved ones passed with names like Brinckerhoff, Van Wyck, Hopper and other known names from the region.

Downtown Fishkill, NY

https://www.fishkill-ny.gov/

Downtown Fishkill, NY City Hall

After walking Downtown Fishkill and noting some of the restaurants I would like to visit in the future, I headed to a pizzeria that I enjoyed on my last trip up and stopped at Antonella’s Pizzeria at 738 US 9 for dinner. I ordered one of their Stromboli’s with a red sauce and it was the perfect dinner.

Antonella’s Pizzeria and Restaurant at 738 US 9

https://www.antonellasrestaurant.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g47724-d5112543-Reviews-Antonella_s_Pizzeria_Restaurant-Fishkill_New_York.html?m=69573

The inside of Antonella’s Pizzeria

My dinner, a Stromboli with Italian meats and a Coke

The Stromboli here are excellent and are filled with three different types of meat and two cheeses

Yum!

It really was a wonderful and relaxing afternoon. It was like I was put back into a Time Machine pre-cellphones and families just talked and enjoyed each other’s company. I think that the Historical Society did an excellent job on the event and I look forward to it again next year.

The Strawberry Festival is the first weekend in June as the strawberries start coming in. It’s an enjoyable afternoon.

The Armour-Stiner Octagon House 45 West Clinton Avenue Irvington, NY 10533

The Armour-Stiner Octagon House at Christmas time

The formal Dining Room

The Second Floor Christmas tree

The first floor Reception Room

The history of the Armour-Stiner Octagon House with the Irvington Historical Society

Irvington Historical Society 131 Main Street Irvington, NY 10533

The Irvington Historical Society at 131 Market Street in Irvington, NY

The Permanent Collection on the history Irvington, NY

The permanent collection

The permanent collection at the museum

The Main Gallery of the Museum