By Vladimir Brezina
I always think that this next one would make a perfect Ayn Rand book cover…
More New York City scenes are here.
By Vladimir Brezina
I always think that this next one would make a perfect Ayn Rand book cover…
More New York City scenes are here.
By Vladimir Brezina
The popular paddling site Paddling.net runs a Photo of the Week contest. Over the past several months, I’ve submitted a few of my photos. Two won—
(see here and here on the Paddling.net site)
and one was runner-up—
Looking through these and other photos that won, it seems that what’s required is not so much a technically great photo, but rather a photo of a compelling paddling scene—as it should be! All three of my successful photos show paddling situations that, to most Paddling.net readers, will be a bit out of the ordinary. As it happens, they are all urban photos, taken in New York Harbor. But if ever a seal hauls up on my kayak deck, or an eagle perches on the bow, I’ll be sure to submit that photo. And you should too!
Posted in Kayaking, New York City, Photography
Tagged Contest, Kayaking, New York City, Photography
By Vladimir Brezina
Yesterday I took a walk along the jogging track that encircles Manhattan’s Central Park Reservoir (more properly, I guess, the “Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Reservoir”).
.
On the reservoir side of the jogging track, beyond the black cast-iron ornamental fence, is a steep embankment leading down into the water. In this micro-enviroment, just a few feet wide but 1.6 miles long, fall is in full swing…
Posted in Nature, New York City
Tagged Central Park, Central Park Reservoir, Fall, Fall Foliage Colors, Manhattan, New York City, Photography
By Vladimir Brezina
A week ago, on October 28th, 2011, Lady Liberty celebrated her 125th birthday. There were celebratory events: a parade of ships, fireworks of course… These have come and gone. But remaining permanently—let’s hope!—are some amazing webcams installed by EarthCam on the Statue, looking both at it and out across New York Harbor.
Posted in New York City
Tagged EarthCam, Manhattan Panorama, New York City, New York Harbor, Statue of Liberty, Webcam
By Vladimir Brezina
Halloween. But I was stuck at home working. It was clear I wasn’t going to make it to the Halloween Parade in the Village this year.
But around 5 p.m., unusual sounds from the street below began to penetrate my concentration. I discerned excited voices, children’s squeals, and then—the beat of dance music!
When I emerged to take a look, I found that my block of 92nd Street, between Madison and Park Avenues, had been blocked off and the First Annual Carnegie Hill Halloween Block Party was in full swing!
It was mostly for children. Little ghosts, goblins, skeletons, witches, dragons, tigers, superheroes, knights in armor, princesses, pumpkins, bananas, cobwebbed barrels and even tubs of popcorn, some young enough to be held in arms by their parents who clearly were having just as much fun, cavorted in the street. A little later there was a tiny parade, and prizes were awarded for best costumes. Then, the main business of the evening: trick-or-treating from house to house. Many houses in that block have for days been festooned with their own cobwebs, giant black spiders, and grinning skeletons in anticipation.
Here are a few photos.
Posted in Art, Culture, New York City, Society
Tagged Costumes, Halloween, Manhattan, New York City, Photography
By Vladimir Brezina
The snowstorm that came through New York City a couple of days ago wasn’t much as winter storms go. But it was so early—it’s nowhere near winter yet! New York City has had measurable snow in October only three times previously since records began in 1869, and this storm, dropping 2.9 inches in Central Park, set a new record by far.
The trees weren’t ready. They still had almost all their leaves—the fall colors haven’t even peaked yet in Central Park!—and the weight of the snow accumulating in the foliage brought down branches and whole trees everywhere.
Posted in Nature, New York City
Tagged Broken Trees, Central Park, Manhattan, New York City, Snow Storm
By Vladimir Brezina
Yesterday:
Today:
More photos from both days to come. (Update, November 18, 2011: they are here.)
Posted in Nature, New York City
Tagged Central Park, Fall, New York City, Snow Storm, Weather, Winter
By Vladimir Brezina
The Upper East Side of Manhattan takes Halloween very seriously. Halloween is still some days away, but decaying bodies, chained skeletons, and giant black spiders have festooned the area for weeks. The block of 92nd Street between Madison and Park Avenues is particularly worth seeing… here are some photos from that block and a couple of adjacent ones.
Posted in Art, Culture, New York City
Tagged Halloween, New York City, Photography, Street Decorations
By Johna Till Johnson
Photos by Vladimir Brezina
Autumn is a time of melancholy, of dreams and mists. It’s also a time of intense beauty—and a reminder that everything in life is transient.
That’s particularly true when it comes to catching the leaves turning along the Hudson: Bare hints of color one day, blazing the next, and then fading—all in the space of a week or two.
For New York City kayakers with day jobs, the challenge is that the currents are right for a weekend trip up the Hudson only once every two weeks—which means there are only two October weekends to catch this ephemeral color.
The first weekend with a daytime flood current was October 15-16. Either weekend day would have worked, but since I’d just gotten back from an intense week of traveling, Sunday was the better fit. Plus, Saturday’s winds were pretty severe—predicted and ultimately proving to be over 20 knots. So we agreed to go Sunday.
By then, the winds had calmed somewhat. Vlad and I set off on a crystalline, perfect, early-autumn day.
Posted in Kayaking, New York City
Tagged Alpine, Binghamton Ferryboat, Fall, Fall Foliage Colors, Hudson River, Kayaking, Manhattan, New York City, Palisades
By Vladimir Brezina
… to set budding more,
And still more, later flowers for the bees,
Until they think warm days will never cease …
John Keats, To Autumn
This past weekend was beautiful: dry, calm, sunny and warm—Indian Summer weather. In New York City’s Central Park, still mostly a fall-denying green, a fresh crop of flowers was out. And the park’s bees and butterflies, like the city’s human inhabitants, were out in force.
Posted in Nature, New York City
Tagged Bees, Butterflies, Central Park, Fall, Flowers, Indian Summer, Insects, New York City, Photography