A Spring Sailing Around Manhattan
My wife and son and I had been wanting to see New York’s five boroughs from the water, so last Friday we took the Circle Line cruise around Manhattan, which does offer views of each borough. Unfortunately, it was a disappointment. We arrived 45 minutes early for the 11:30 AM sailing, only to find that all outdoor seats on our boat had already been taken. Worse, the guide on our boat was a pompous jerk who droned on ceaselessly during our 3-hour circumnavigation of the island. He had no feel for the history of the city; scolded passengers like a control-obsessed school teacher (“Don’t stand there!”) and was fascinated only with money. (“An apartment in that building sold for $20 million last year.”) Fortunately, about halfway through the cruise, I found us three seats on the open deck, and Kyle, Ewan, and I escaped the guide’s physical presence, if not his amplified voice. From this perspective, we were able to view Upper Manhattan, Sputen Duyvil, the waterway that connects the Harlem River to the Hudson, and the little red lighthouse as we sailed beneath the George Washington Bridge, aka the Great Gray Bridge. We also were able to ID our own apartment building from the river, a neat trick.
The best part of the afternoon came when we got home and downloaded the photos each of us took turns snapping during the cruise. Even if the boat ride regrettably didn’t feature much of the timeless magic we identify with New York’s waterways, harbor, and shoreline, such as that seen in the 1920s short film “Manhatta,” it was a grand day and we took away some great images, many of which are included here. // many pictures following . . .
- Colgate sign on Queens shoreline
- Ellis Island
- Statue of Liberty, burnished by sunshine.
- Brooklyn Bridge.
- Domino Sugar refinery.
- Queens’ Pepsi Cola sign, opposite the E. 50s in Manhattan.
- This patch of the shore looked like it could be in upstate NY.
- Encrusted brick ruin.
- Entering the Hudson from Sputen Duyvil in upper Manhattan.
- Nearing the GWB and the little red lighthouse.
- Landmarks with yellow-chartreuse shoreline.
- The Great Gray Bridge looms overhead.
- Washington Heights towers in the background, even with W. 178th St.
- The bridge stretches out like an enormous yardstick.
- An inverted ‘U’ and a red finger with a white cap
- Spanning the Hudson.
- Grant’s Tomb and Riverside Church, about even with 125th St.
- The tallest building, with the black top, is the Master, an art deco residential tower, one block north of our own building.
- Our apartment building is 9 stories high tucked between two taller buildings peeking over trees a block south of the Master.
- On the right, our building’s nestled between two taller buildings.
- Our building–a junior cousin to its neighbors.
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