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If Music Be the Food of Love, Play On!

5/30/2019

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Join BSM Students for This Evening of Music, Wine and Cheese on June 6

By Caitlin Hawke

Neighbors, it's free and right in our neighborhood: Adult Students of the Bloomingdale School of Music in recital and discussion.

You are invited to join on Thursday, June 6 at 7 p.m. 
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Seen in the Neighborhood

5/27/2019

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Old Glory Goes to Half-mast at Soldiers and Sailors 75 Years after D-Day

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By Caitlin Hawke


A holiday, the opening shot of summer, and a day to remember the fallen and our veterans.

Terence Hanrahan shared these two photographs from the nearby service in honor of our veterans today. And it got me thinking.

I've always had a thing for Memorial Day. It brings out the Main Street USA in all of us compelling young and old to stop and reflect. This year, it struck me as inconceivable that D-Day was 75 years ago. A VA estimate calculated nearly half a million WW2 vets are alive. That, too, is an incredible number, given it's out of more than the 16 Million who were enlisted. Those with personal knowledge of the combat are rarer than ever.

When I was 11, I met a middle-aged visitor who, I was told, was my cousin and had been taken prisoner and survived a concentration camp. It was hard for me to understand how this dashing foreigner with his exotic accent could be related, much less a survivor of something I couldn't much comprehend.  (He was in fact my grandmother's first cousin and hence my first cousin twice removed thanks to the two generations separating us). Over the years, I learned much more, not all good.

Family memories have probably garbled information that was passed to me, but the name of Texan Jack Williams looms large in my mind today. I was told by a great aunt that Williams was a 1st Commander in the 6th Infantry Division of the US Third Army led by General George S. Patton; the division was the liberating force at the Buchenwald concentration camp. Williams was put in charge of the Buchenwald refugees. Those refugees weren't at the camp when it was liberated because they'd been forced on a death march in advance of the US arrival by skittish guards who feared for their lives knowing Patton was upon them. In those confusing days after the camp's liberation, Jack Williams was good to my great, great uncle and his son in some of their harshest hours, Hungarian survivors of the war. To them, America was the greatest nation on earth.

For Memorial Day 2019, I find myself remembering all this, thinking of Jack Williams and the people in his division, all sparked by these photos of our neighborhood's commemorations.

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(credits: Terence Hanrahan)

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Sunny Day, Sweepin' the Clouds Away

5/24/2019

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Where the Air Is Sweet: W. 103rd Street on Yard Sale Day!

By Caitlin Hawke

​Last Saturday, the sky gods smiled on our streets by providing a delicious spring day for the Block Association Street Fair. Terence Hanrahan was out there early and captured the first images of the day, all below.

So did you dig through your closets and get yourself a space to turn all those things that no longer spark joy into cold cash?  Worry not if you didn't have time. There's always next year and it's never too early to start planning.  We've got a vendor space with your name on it!

To all the volunteers who make this event happen for our community, (and especially to Bob Aaronson who digs deep every year and comes back ready to field marshall this fair), Mother Nature spoke to you loudly with her chrome heart shining in the sun.

​And she said, and I, too, say: Long may you run!

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Goatapalooza

5/22/2019

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Pictures from Billy Goats Bluff in Riverside Park

By Caitlin Hawke

It's day three of the chewfest also known as Goatham, and they've turned out in droves. Not the goats, mind you. The spectators.  You'll have lots of time to go behold the caprine beauties at work. But to tide you over, gentle readers, I give you this gallery of goats.  If you have pictures, email them to me and I will add them:[email protected].

I'd also love several pix of the area in these early days to compare to the postprandial site late this summer. Send me what you've got!

Who knew that we'd get such a kick out of this. I suppose it's the incongruity. Or maybe it's the ingenuity. With everything pointing to A.I, you'd not have blinked if some outdoor version of the Roomba had been deployed. But outsourcing this job to goats? Whoever thought of it deserves a bonus.  And now, behold the beauty.  (Click on the first image to launch the slide show gallery.)

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h/t to photogs N. Schneider, C. Campbell, P. Sperling, D. Zetlan....
Hey 13, That's Bleata Franklin (credit: N. Schneider)
Nap attack! (credit: N Schneider)
They came in droves (credit C. Campbell)
The gals got straight to work. (Credit. D. Zetlan)
Spectating the spectators (credit: D. Zetlan)
A union meeting (credit: P. Sperling)
Safety in numbers (credit: P. Sperling)
You looking at me? (credit: P. Sperling)

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Bloomingdale by Name

5/21/2019

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Bloomingdale by Nature

By Caitlin Hawke

April 20th was Spring Planting Day in these parts.  Since then, you may have noticed the shipshape tree wells popping with impatiens and marigolds, begonias and petunias.  Thanks once again go to the green team of the Block Association, to all the members who came out and to Mother Nature her own self.

Read more in the June newsletters due on newsstands in a few short weeks. In the meantime, enjoy the bloomage!

h/t to Hedy Campbell for the photo.
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Got Any Grass?

5/20/2019

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I Kid You Not: It's Going to Be a Goat Morning

By Caitlin Hawke

Move over Summer Solstice. Hang on Manhattanhenge. Today is the launch of Goatham! And it all starts at 11 a.m. in Riverside Park at the level of W. 120th Street.

The plan? From the official website: "Riverside Park will host a herd of goats starting today, May 21, 2019. They will roam a two-acre area — within a fenced enclosure — located between approximately 119th to 125th Streets, feasting all the while.

Throughout the season, the goats will continuously consume the weeds all the way down to the roots, which stunts the plants’ normal growth trajectory by making them start all over — only to be eaten again. After a few months, the plants’ ability to grow will have been weakened, and perhaps eliminated altogether.
"

What could possibly be baaaad?  It isn't nanny of my business, but it's a bleating shame it didn't happen sooner.
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Saturday is Street Fair Yard Sale Day! See You on W. 103rd St!

5/17/2019

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Be There!  May 18 from 10 am to 4 pm. W. 103rd between WEA and RSD

By Caitlin Hawke

Neighbors!  Lest anyone forget, Saturday, May 18 is yard sale day, AKA the greatest day on the block. Come, run, hop, skip on over to West 103rd Street from Riverside Drive to West End Avenue to find the great find, eat the yummy homemade treat, get local news, schmooze, amble, and gamble on the split-pot raffle. It's all done by your friends who are volunteering with the Block Association and it's all in the name of our wonderful community. For older adults in the area, be sure to check out the BAiP table and look for some BAiP members and their artwork. And for all ages, look for the Bloomingdale School of Music table and much more!

I dare you to comment below that you didn't have a ball.

​Enjoy!
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Local History Lecture at DOROT

5/9/2019

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Update on Friday, May 17 talk

By Caitlin Hawke

This is a reminder about the talk next week on Lost Riverside Drive. Register by phone or email 917-441-3745 or [email protected].

Please note the updated "suggested contribution" of $5 on the flyer below. Still well worth all 500 pennies if you make the contribution.


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