By Vladimir Brezina
Ailsa’s travel-themed photo challenge this week is Deep.
You never know how deep it is until you wade in…
New York City, December 2010. More snow photos from that winter are here and here.
By Vladimir Brezina
Ailsa’s travel-themed photo challenge this week is Deep.
You never know how deep it is until you wade in…
New York City, December 2010. More snow photos from that winter are here and here.
Posted in New York City, Photography
Tagged Deep, New York City, Photography, postaweek, postaweek2013, Snow, Travel, Weekly Photo Challenge
By Johna Till Johnson
Photos by Vladimir Brezina
Every so often, two great ideas combine to form an even better one.
That’s what happened this past Saturday. Last fall, Vlad suggested we go to the Bohemian Hall Beer Garden for Oktoberfest. This was more than just a yen for drinking beer outdoors—Vlad is actually from the original Bohemia, and he enjoys discovering hidden flashes of the “old country” all the way here in NYC. (Another discovery is Hospoda, an eastside Czech restaurant, but that’s for another post.) Anyway, we didn’t make it last year, but the idea stayed on our list.
Bohemian Hall is in Astoria, Queens. It’s actually very near to where we live—as the crow flies. We can almost see it from our apartment. The problem is that between us and it flows the East River.
But, there is a bridge…
We paddle under it all the time. But I’ve been wanting to walk across the Triborough (now Robert F. Kennedy) Bridge for the past few months since my friend Marc mentioned it was possible. The Triborough Bridge was built for cars, with pedestrians a grudging afterthought. But is can be done—Marc lives in Astoria and regularly hikes across the bridge into Manhattan.
And looking at the map, talk about serendipity: It turns out Bohemian Hall is just a couple of blocks from the bridge’s pedestrian exit in Astoria.
What could be more perfect than a walk over the bridge culminating in a visit to the beer garden? To top it off, this weekend, for the beginning of Oktoberfest, Bohemian Hall was featuring authentic roast pig in addition to the usual sausage, sauerkraut, and beer. And the weather was absolutely perfect: A golden early-autumn day.
Posted in New York City
Tagged Astoria, Beer, Beer Garden, Bohemian Hall, New York City, Oktoberfest, Queens, Triborough Bridge
By Vladimir Brezina
Or is it Saturated Relaxing?
In any case, The Daily Post‘s Photo Challenge this week is Saturated, and Ailsa’s on Where’s my backpack? is Relaxing.
And the two came together very nicely yesterday, on the first day of Oktoberfest in one of the few remaining beer gardens in NYC.
Full story is here.
Posted in New York City, Photography
Tagged New York City, Oktoberfest, Photography, postaweek, postaweek2013, Relaxing, Saturated, Travel, Weekly Photo Challenge
By Johna Till Johnson
Photos by Vladimir Brezina
“Do you think we can make it to Piermont Pier?”, I asked.
“I know of no reason why not,” Vlad replied. A small alarm bell rang at the back of my head: he hadn’t exactly said, “Yes.” And Vlad is a man who uses words very precisely.
But I brushed it off. We’d come quite a distance up the Palisades—just over 19 nautical miles, in fact. Aided by a stiff flood current, we were almost at Italian Gardens, and we were deciding whether to stop there or continue onwards.
Piermont Pier, the long finger of land extending into the Hudson just south of the Tappan Zee Bridge, was only two miles away. We hadn’t been there yet this year, and the summer was almost over.
And though we’d had a brisk northerly breeze in our faces the whole way, we’d come thus far with no trouble. As Vlad said, there was no reason why we couldn’t make it the rest of the way.
So we set off into the wind-against-current chop ahead of us.
Posted in Kayaking, New York City
Tagged Hudson River, New York City, Palisades, Photography, Sea Kayaking, Wind
By Vladimir Brezina
After the stasis of deep Summer, when NYC’s Central Park remains, it would seem forever, darkly lush and green, there are now unmistakable signs of the end. It’s still sunny and warm, and busy insects are still feeding from the late-summer flowers. But new colors are appearing here and there, as the days now with increasing rapidity take us into Fall…
(click on any photo to start slideshow)
These and a few more photos are here.
Posted in Nature, New York City
Tagged Central Park, Fall, Fall Colors, Insects, New York City, Photography, Summer
By Vladimir Brezina
This week’s Photo Challenge is From Lines to Patterns.
Here are some of the lines and patterns of New York City—
And here are some more natural lines and patterns.
By Vladimir Brezina
It’s interesting to look occasionally through the search terms that people have entered to reach your blog. And recently, quite a few people have been arriving at Wind Against Current with the query “how many bridges circumnavigating Manhattan”. They’ll have been disappointed in not finding an answer—until now!
Another popular query is “how many islands in New York City”. Unfortunately, that question does not have a definite answer—it depends on what you consider an island, and on the state of the tide.
But “how many bridges circumnavigating Manhattan” does have a very definite answer. And the answer is…
Posted in Kayaking, New York City, Science and Technology
Tagged Bridges, Manhattan, New York City, New York Harbor, Photography
By Vladimir Brezina
Ailsa’s travel-themed photo challenge this week is Multicolored (or Multicoloured, but let’s not get into that…).
That theme sends me straight to this past summer’s Coney Island Mermaid Parade, the most multicolored event I ever saw. Here are just a few of the multicolored highlights.
And even more multicolored photos are here.
Posted in New York City, Photography
Tagged Coney Island, Mermaid Parade, Multicolored, New York City, Parade, Photography, postaweek, postaweek2013, Travel, Weekly Photo Challenge