Secrets Too Well Kept?
What is it that drives so many tourists, once they've paid the exorbitant costs to get to New York and house themselves, to go to dinner at the Olive Garden? It's something I'll never understand.
I had a similar thought the other day as we were waiting to board the Pioneer, the South Street Seaport Museum's 1885 steel-hull schooner. I've blogged about the Pioneer elsewhere and even wrote about it for my first post here last fall; I won't go into too many details again.
But let me just say that on our sunny afternoon public sail we had only 6 passengers on the boat. (It holds only 40 passengers max.) Meanwhile, a group of day campers in screaming loud tie-dye swarmed on board the obnoxious Shark one pier over, and right next to us hundreds of European tourists (and the few midwesterners who are braving the city this summer) waddled on board the Zephyr as if it were Noah's Ark. I don't know how many passengers the Shark holds, but the Zephyr can take up to 600!
Why would anyone choose to restrict themselves to a narrow seat, crammed in with a million other people, only to float around so removed from the water that you feel like you're merely watching this all pass by on TV? Is this part of reality culture, that we want our real experiences to feel as if they're on screen?
I'll take a splash of the water over the side and help hoist my own sails anytime.
To find out more about sailing on the Pioneer click here.
p.s. Eliasson's waterfalls? Completely underwhelming. How can they not be stacked up against the Brooklyn Bridge or the skyline itself?
But let me just say that on our sunny afternoon public sail we had only 6 passengers on the boat. (It holds only 40 passengers max.) Meanwhile, a group of day campers in screaming loud tie-dye swarmed on board the obnoxious Shark one pier over, and right next to us hundreds of European tourists (and the few midwesterners who are braving the city this summer) waddled on board the Zephyr as if it were Noah's Ark. I don't know how many passengers the Shark holds, but the Zephyr can take up to 600!
I'll take a splash of the water over the side and help hoist my own sails anytime.
To find out more about sailing on the Pioneer click here.
p.s. Eliasson's waterfalls? Completely underwhelming. How can they not be stacked up against the Brooklyn Bridge or the skyline itself?
Categories
Neighborhood Scenes , Port of New York0 TrackBacks
Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: Secrets Too Well Kept?.
TrackBack URL for this entry: http://ahistoryofnewyork.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-t.cgi/46
1 Comments
Leave a comment
Tag Cloud
- 9-11
- 9/11
- Aaron Burr
- adaptation
- advertising
- African Americans
- angels in america
- anime
- anthropology
- art
- baldwin
- banks
- Barnum
- baseball
- batman
- Batman
- Bethesda fountain
- bicycles
- bicycling
- bicyling
- blackface
- blogs
- bogart
- bohemians
- books
- bowery boys
- Brian Eno
- bridges
- broadway
- Brooklyn
- Brooklyn Bridge
- bryant
- burlequsue
- Bush
- caleb crain
- Cambridge Companion
- CBGB
- celebrity
- celluloid city
- cemeteries
- central park
- Chabon
- charles brockden brown
- children's literature
- chinatown
- circus
- clinton
- Columbus
- comics
- conference
- cosmopolitanism
- crane
- crime
- cycling
- dance
- Dark Knight
- David Byrne
- democracy
- diaries
- disasters
- documentary
- Don DeLillo
- downtown scenes
- Dreiser
- DUMBO
- dutch
- DVD
- dvd
- Dvorak
- Dylan
- Eakins
- Ellington
- Empire State Building
- environmentalism
- Fales Library and Special Collections
- fashion
- feminism
- ferry
- fiction
- Fifth Avenue
- film
- fire hydrants
- food
- football
- Frank Miller
- fringe festival
- gay new york
- gentrification
- geography
- Giuliani
- godspell
- goldman
- Gopnik
- grandcentralstation
- greed
- greenway
- Greenwich Village
- harlemrenaissance
- hart crane
- history
- hudson
- hughes
- immigrants
- jackie o
- james
- jazz
- jolson
- Joseph O'Neill
- joseph o'neill
- Kevin Baker
- KISS
- knickerbocker
- Knickerbocker Village
- leaves of grass
- LES
- Life on Mars
- literary history
- Lydia Thompson
- melville
- Melville
- mets
- minimalism
- Moby-Dick
- moby-dick
- modernism
- money
- museums
- music
- neighborhood history
- netflix
- netherland
- new york novels
- New York Times
- New Yorker
- newamsterdam
- newjersey
- newnetherlands
- novel
- NOW
- NYC holidays
- NYU English
- O'Keeffe
- O'Neill
- o'neill
- Obama
- obama
- opera
- outdoors
- painting
- parenting
- parks
- patti smith
- performanceart
- philadelphia
- poets
- politics
- protests
- public art
- publishing
- punk
- race
- radicalism
- radio
- railroad
- real estate
- reality TV
- rent
- Richard Price
- riis
- river
- Robert Moses
- robert rauschenberg
- rock'n'roll
- rollingstones
- schools
- schoonerpioneer
- science fiction
- scorsese
- seaport
- slavery
- stagecoach
- starwars
- statenisland
- statueofliberty
- streets
- subway
- summer
- superman
- Tammany
- tattoos
- teaching
- television
- tenement talks
- theater
- thoth
- Times Square
- tony kushner
- tour guides
- tourists
- traffic
- travel
- Union Square
- upstate
- visual arts
- walking
- walking tours
- Wall Street
- Washington Irving
- washingtonsquare
- waterfalls
- Wharton
- wharton
- Whitman
- whitman
- Williamsburg
- willsmith
- women
- woodyallen
- wordle
- World Trade Center
- Writing New York
- WTC
- wyler
- yankees
About Us
Search
Recent Posts
- First U.S. Sighting of the White Whale
- Call Me Barack
- Take the RFK to JFK
- The Original Knickerbocker and the Fallen Founder
- Roundup Postscript
- Post-election Roundup
- Where's the Times?
- Union Square, 1:45 am, November 5 -- Obama Day
- Change You Can Listen To
- Pop Music as Cultural History (PLUS: Lurker Amnesty!)
Categories
Keys to the City
- ArtCal
- Bike Map
- the bowery boys | New York City History
- Brooklyn Vegan
- Castle Garden
- City Lore
- Forgotten NY
- The Gothamist
- Hop Stop
- Lower East Side Tenement Museum
- Manhattan User’s Guide
- Municipal Art Society of New York
- Museum of the City of New York
- New Netherlands Institute
- New-York Historical Society
- New York Public Library
- The New Yorker
- NYC Stories
- South Street Seaport Museum
- The Village Voice
- Virtual New York City
Sites We Like
- 3 Quarks Daily
- About Last Night (Terry Teachout)
- Association of American University Presses
- ArtsJournal
- common-place
- David Byrne's Journal
- The Edge of the American West
- The Girl Who Ate Everything (Robyn Lee)
- Mr. Beller's Neighborhood
- Night Haunts (Sukhdev Sandhu)
- Overheard in New York
- The Rest Is Noise (Alex Ross)
- Steamboats Are Ruining Everything (Caleb Crain)
- Trauma & Violence Transdisciplinary Studies
- The Walt Whitman Archive
- WFMU
- WNYC
- Robert J. C. Young

Perhaps you should give Eliasson's waterfalls a second chance -- on the Pioneer ... at night!