Ways to approach Manhattan
Monday, 12 June 2006 11:52 pmOh, and before this wine totally puts me under the table:
The best way ever to approach Manhattan, if you can fenangle it, is in a window seat, as the pilot goes all the way down the west side of the island, around the tip, and most of the way up the east side toward LaGuardia. F'ing awesome view. I'm surprised we could get so close. The capper for me wasn't flying over Shea Stadium or the '67 World's Fair site or near the Empire State Building or the UN building... it was realizing that I could pick out my Grandma Esther's old apartment building on the Upper East Side. (one of two tall buildings one block in and two blocks down from Gracie Mansion, just near the top of Roosevelt Island). [here.]
The best way ever to approach Manhattan, if you can fenangle it, is in a window seat, as the pilot goes all the way down the west side of the island, around the tip, and most of the way up the east side toward LaGuardia. F'ing awesome view. I'm surprised we could get so close. The capper for me wasn't flying over Shea Stadium or the '67 World's Fair site or near the Empire State Building or the UN building... it was realizing that I could pick out my Grandma Esther's old apartment building on the Upper East Side. (one of two tall buildings one block in and two blocks down from Gracie Mansion, just near the top of Roosevelt Island). [here.]
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Date: Tuesday, 13 June 2006 05:08 am (UTC)I've always taken the train or driven to NYC. Train highlight is still the bridge in Newark, NJ. By car, it's still kinda weird seeing the Chrysler building so prominently dominating downtown.
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Date: Tuesday, 13 June 2006 01:00 pm (UTC)Just wish I could've taken a little movie with my camera, but it was well after the "turn off all electronics" warning. (not that that's stopped people on a few flights I've been on, sigh).
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Date: Tuesday, 13 June 2006 01:09 pm (UTC)The view coming in via Amtrak from the north is also pretty spectacular, when you cross the Hell Gate Bridge, if you're into magnificently huge old steel arch bridges, that hold four parallel train tracks.
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Date: Tuesday, 13 June 2006 02:11 pm (UTC)Also, it's cool how the Greyhound bus sort of seems to take a hidden exit off the freeway to get to Penn Station.
... "Quick! to the greyhound-cave, greyhound-man!"