Saturday, April 9, 2011

Washington DC

I had to get up early to catch the train from New York to Washington DC.  It was a fairly short trip about 3-4 hours.  It would probably be quicker to go by train than fly between the 2 cities.  When I got there I found that the Union Station was probably the best train station I had seen in the United States.  It had a large food court downstairs with probably 20 different places to eat and upstairs there was a selection of shops.  The ceiling had over 70 pounds of Gold on it.  The place I had booked to stay in Washington DC was a bit of a gamble, as the site had no reviews on it at all when I had booked it.  I later found out this was because they had just opened a few days before on the 1st of April.  They said it was easy to get to, but I thought after walking there with my 2 backpacks, it was a bit further than I had liked.

When I finally arrived at the place, I was wondering if I had made the right decision about the place to stay as it had a for lease sign on the front of the building.  I knocked on the door and a guy with Tattoos on his arms came down and let me in.  Over the course of the week I got to know Tom and AJ, who were the staff at the time.  It turned out that this place was probably the best place I stayed at for the social interaction. 






At the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum I got to see the Apollo 11 Command module, along with a whole heap of other interesting planes and space vehicles.  It was probably one of my favorite parts of Washington DC.

I did a lot of walking up and down the national mall, seeing all the different sites.


While I was in Washington DC, the Cherry Blossom festival was on.   Each year, the National Cherry Blossom Festival commemorates the 1912 gift of 3,000 cherry trees from Mayor Yukio Ozaki of Tokyo to the city of Washington, DC. The gift and annual celebration honor the lasting friendship between the United States and Japan and the continued close relationship between the two countries. 




As you were not meant to take photos of the Pentagon,  I had to settle for a photo from Arlington cemetery.  I found it funny in a sad kind of way that the important people got unique headstones at the top of the hill whereas the soldiers and their wives got the same headstones in fields almost indistinguishable from one another.  In the end they were all dead.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

New York

I arrived at New Yorks Penn Station and spent a bit of time trying to work out how to get to Hotel Alexander where I was staying.  I eventually found where I had to go and found how to buy a ticket.  I had picked a hotel because the reviews for the hostels in New York didn't look encouraging and many of them seemed to be in poor locations.  Hotel Alexander was a few blocks walk from the 96th St train station and the line went straight down to downtown.

The first day I spent time finding where everything I wanted to see was and had a quick look at Wall St.  I found it a bit of a disappointment, I think partly because you couldn't go in anywhere because of security concerns.  I say an obstructed view of the Brooklyn bridge, saw the Statue of Liberty and Empire State Building at a distance.  After I had found where I had to get the ticket to go across to the Statue of Liberty, I walked back across the park to the "Charging Bull".  The bulls is not actually on wall st but is  a short walk away.  There was constantly crowds around the bull, getting photos of themselves with the bull.  The bull had several places where the bronze was much more polished than the rest of the bull from where people had touched the bull when they were getting their photo taken.
During the following days I went and was an audience member of the "Late Show with David Letterman", Went to the 86th and 106th floors of the Empire State building, visited the Museum of Modern art and the Top of the Rockefella building, Climbed to the top of the Statue of Liberty and looked out through the crown, Saw the site of the World Trade Center had a play on the big piano in FAO Schwarz, walked from one end of Central Park to the other end, went to Time Square, became familiar with the New York subway system.

On the 30th I went to the Ed Sulivan theater and signed up to be an audience member.  It is a lottery who will get seats and I put down for the 30th and the 1st of April.  I got a call back at 11:30, saying that I had been drawn to be an audience member.  So first I had to go back to theater at 2:00PM to pick up the ticket.  I was on "Jacks Gold List".  Then I had to come back at 3:45 when they would let me in.  Before they started recording the show, they told us what we had to do and what we couldn't do.  They also had a comedian to warm the crowd up.  The show started recording at 4:30 and took a little over an hour.  President Obama was on the upper level of the crowd, where I was... and waved multiple times throughout the show.  The guests were Regis and Snope Dog.
While I was in the area I went into the Hello Deli and ordered a Shaffer sandwich.  All the sandwiches are named after the cast of the Late show.  Rupert G was just like he is on the show.



I walked through Central Park with a friend of a friend I had meet in Chicago.  Central park goes from 106th St down to 56th street.  On the first day, we made it down to 72nd st.  The next day I went from 72nd st down to 56th street, past the stone arch bridge and lots of Baseball fields.


It got to Monday on the last day I was going to be at New York and I hadn't seen the Brooklyn Bridge.  So I went on the train and took a few photos.  It was dark and getting late, so I didn't investigate any further than taking a few photos like the one shown below.

Saturday, April 2, 2011

Niagara Falls

On the Thursday I caught the Train from Chicago to Niagara Falls at 9:30PM.  The train got to Buffulo, where I had to wait for 4-5 hours till the connecting train that was going to Niagara Falls came.  When it got into Niagara Falls it started to snow and I realized my plan of walking to the hostel I was staying at was a bit ill conceived.  So I ended up getting the station attendant to call a taxi for me.  It was the first time I had used a taxi in my life.  The place I stayed at was called Wonderfalls Hostel.  It was basically a converted 3 story house.  I was paying to stay in a dorm room, but it ended up I was the only one in there for my stay.

The next day I was told that I should go over to the Canadian side of the falls because they look better from there.  I was wondering whether there would be any problems, but it was quite easy - all I had to do was walk across a bridge to the other side, where a Canadian officer asked me a few questions, stamped my passport and then let me on through.  On the bridge they have a plate that shows where the actual US and Canadian border is.  Walking across would actually be faster than taking a car across - at least at this time of the year.
Compared to the United States side of Niagara Falls, the Canadian side is much more alive.  It has all the usual touristy things as well as theme park sorts of attractions - a little tacky.   I started walking along the path along the side of the falls - along with hundreds of other people. 

While I was walking along a met a couple, and we continued to talk as we went along the side of the river.  After we had finished exploring the falls, we went and had lunch at a place that was done up like a rainforest - it had animatronic animals all around that moved occasionally and there was even "lightning" and "thunder".  Once we finished lunch we went for a short drive to see what else we could find in Canada.

Near the water falls there is a mist that causes the snow on the trees to turn into ice.  These then gradually melt in the sun and fall off.  One piece falling off high up can cause a chain reaction and make multiple bits of ice lower down fall.

The next day I got a ride to the train station and got on another Amtrak train to New York.