Sunday, July 28, 2019

Days 32-34: Start spreading the news, I'm leaving today

Traveling, New York City

(June 24-26)

June 24:  We work up, ate the hotel breakfast, then carried our bags to the bus stop.  It had rained during breakfast, but stopped when we had to walk to the bus stop.  Then it started in earnest on the hour-long bus ride there.  Luckily, the bus stops under the main awning at the airport, so we stayed dry.  We went through the security at the main door,  then went through immigration and security again, then got our boarding passes.  Next we went to our gate where we went through a thorough security check once more--one to check our boarding passes, one to check our passports, one to hand search and swab our carry-ons, and then a pat-down search.  We didn't have to wait long before boarding.  We were split up--Randy was up near the front with some weird people and Joshua and I were near the back.  Watched movies and had a few meals.  They gave us this cute little case with slippers, socks, eye mask, lip balm, and toothbrush/paste.



We arrived in New York around 5:30.  We took the air train from JFK, then the A train to Brooklyn to Anneliese's apartment.  She had just gotten home from a film job to meet us (her roommate was backup to let us in in case she got back late).  We talked for a bit, then Joshua stayed with her (they had plans for an evening of video games and getting Chinese delivered).  Randy and I took our bags to the Jane Hotel, then walked to a restaurant I knew of in the neighborhood, The Corner Bistro, and had burgers and fries.  The burgers were huge--the patties were easily an inch and a half thick, then add the cheese, bacon, fixings, and bun.  We then went back to the hotel.  Our internet connection was weak, so we weren't up late.

June 25:  The next morning, the plan was to meet Anneliese and Joshua at the Vessel in Hudson Yards (between Hells Kitchen and Chelsea).  We walked the High Line there and they took the subway in from Brooklyn.  We stopped on the way to the High Line at a cafe I knew and picked up bagels.   I ate mine, but Randy saved his for Anneliese and Joshua in case they didn't have time to eat.  They had overslept and were a few minutes late (also having stopped for coffee/hot chocolate on the way). 

Artwork we saw as we walked the High Line


An interesting building along the High Line



I missed my own coneflowers!

The Vessel is a landmark structure that is an interactive art installation.  It is a series of interconnecting staircases that are in the shape of a vessel.  There is no entrance fee, but you have to sign up for tickets ahead of time online.  We had signed up last night, so they just had to scan the confirmation on my phone. 

Randy waiting for Anneliese and Joshua

The Vessel


Anneliese

me!


Anneliese



Me at another art installation behind theVessel.



After climbing around on the Vessel for awhile, we walked to the Intrepid Sea, Air, and Space Museum.  The Intrepid had been an aircraft carrier and it now housed a museum.  We went into an actual submarine, into the workings of the aircraft carrier, and  saw planes,helicopters and the space shuttle.  We also did an interactive experience about women in space. You put on a headset which displays a holographic guide who talks about women in the development of space exploration and their contributions.  That was pretty interesting.  The others enjoyed the rest of the museum, but I didn't have a lot of interest in it.  It was a good museum with a lot to see. It had an interactive area for children that was a lot of fun, even a stage with a "show" of a woman talking about being a little girl and learning to fly an airplane long ago, even meeting Charles Lindbergh. 

Joshua on the way to the Intrepid

the Itrepid was an aircraft carrier

Family photo (minus Shelby)

A submarine control room

Where the officers slept

Where  the non-officers slept

The Concorde

Chains for the ship

displays inside the hangar

Part of the space display

Joshua and Anneliese heading into the sky!

On the deck

Anneliese in front of the space shuttle

The Intrepid


After that, we took the bus to an Italian restaurant that Anneliese knew of in the Village.  You get a card and go to the counter to order your meal.  A chef is on the other side of the counter and cooks it for you while you watch.  They ask about spices you want, etc.  And all of it is fresh, even the herbs.  Then they punch in your order and you swipe your card to put the price on the card.  Then you go to the bar to get a drink or a cup for the soft drink machine and swipe again.  At the table are pots of fresh basil and rosemary that you can pick off and add to your meal if you wish.  Then after your meal, you take your card to the cashier at the door to pay.  Really good food! 

Then, we were divided as to getting last minute tickets for a show or going to a movie, but the movie won out.  We took the subway and saw Midsommar at a movie theater with super comfy recliner seats, each with its own little table for snacks--pretty cushy!  The movie was kind of uncomfortable and grisly, but thought-provoking.  Afterward, Joshua and Anneliese went back to Brooklyn (discussing the movie), and Randy and I walked to the Jane (also discussing the movie).           

June 26:  The next morning, Anneliese and Joshua met us at the subway station near the hotel.  We were flying out of Newark, so our choices were to go to Penn Station and take a train from there or call an Uber.  There was about a $20 difference in price.  We decided to go with the Uber because it was easier with our bags and everything.  Got a meal at the airport (we knew that Sun Country would not feed us), then boarded the plane.  After we arrived, we took the light rail and walked home (Shelby was still at work).  Good to be home.  Tomorrow I tackle my jungle of a garden.  Now my 2 weeks of summer begin before heading back to school.  We saw a lot, learned a lot, and experienced new things.  Good trip, but not one to experience in summer again!

Anneliese seeing us off


Saturday, July 27, 2019

Day 31: Boats, and Trams, and Funiculars, oh my!


Istanbul, Turkey

(July 23, 2019)

Today was our last day in the Eastern Hemisphere.  After breakfast, we took a tram to the harbor to check on ferries.  Randy had taken a ferry cruise when he was here before that was very enjoyable.  It is five hours long and travels along the Bosphorus Straight, stopping at towns along the way.  It stops just before reaching the Black Sea at a small fishing village.  It stays there for an hour and a half (long enough for a meal), then returns the same way.  Most tourists take the shorter ferry cruises of two hours on faster boats.  The two-hour cruises cost about $40 per person, while the five-hour costs about $4 because the longer one acts as transport for locals and is a slower boat.  We chose the longer one, but we had to wait until right before the boat left at 1:00 to purchase tickets.  

Süleymaniye Mosque from the harbor

Walking to the mosque

 Next we walked to Süleymaniye Mosque.  It was all uphill from the harbor (!).  Randy wanted Joshua and I to see a Mosque whose ceiling was not covered up due to renovations.  It was nice and we enjoyed seeing it.  It is built on one of the seven hills of Istanbul and a plaque at the site says that it is considered the greatest mosque of Istanbul.  It is noted for it’s stained glass windows, acoustics, granite columns, and several other amenities.  The complex of the mosque covers 63,000 square meters.  A fund was set up to fund the mosque that had 271 properties, which 2 islands and 217 villages.  The fund paid for the wages of the 275 personnel of the mosque and the 311 personnel of the other buildings in the complex.  The mosque was damaged by fire in 1660 and all of the columns were covered up by plaster and oil paint.  In 1956, the pain was scraped off and the minarets, domes, and vaults were restored.



mosaic arabic writing (probably from the Quran)

All of the chandeliers in Turkish mosques hang very low to where
the people are.







Next we took the very crowded tram to see the old city walls.  They were built around 400 CE.  Constantinople was built on a tip of land along the Bosphorus Strait.  The city wall went across to protect that tip of land (from the Sea of Marmare to Golden Horn) from invaders.  Much of it still exists but we were only able to spend a little bit of time there so that we could be back in time for the ferry cruise.  A major road goes through the wall, but it is built up on each side of the road so I am guessing that an older road once went through there and there were gates there. 





The road goes through this section of the wall.  It continues in the background

The space between the inner and outer walls is being used as an events space




Then back on the tram to the harbor.  The tram was absolutely packed.  We were squished together.  When it stopped, people would usually look and proceed to a different door.  A few times they didn’t, and they just pushed through, squishing everyone even tighter.  It was a nice day, but the temperature in the tram from all of those people was quite warm.  It was such a relief to get out at our stop!    

We arrived at the harbor at 1:00 to buy our tickets for the 1:30 trip, then waited around with everyone else for the ferry.  Once on the boat, we found seats next to the railing on the back deck.  We were surprised by how large and nice the houses along the strait were.  Some were mansions and government buildings.  There was a nice breeze.  Joshua found a cat and laid down with it in a corner and fell asleep for part of the journey.  When we arrived at the furthest stop, every one disembarked.  The wharf area was stuffed with cafés.  We went to the nearest one and ordered.  The food was fabulous!  Definitely a step up from where we had been eating before!  Then we had a little time, so we wandered around the little village, looking into the shops until it was time to get back on the ferry.  On the way back, the breeze was not as strong and the later afternoon sun was making the deck hot.  I was exhausted, so I went inside, found a bench, laid down, and fell asleep.  I wasn’t the only one sleeping on a bench in there!  Several other people had the idea before me. 


Top Kapi Palace








An old fort

The Turkish flag

Joshua sleeping with the kitten

A lot of gray boats--maybe a military installation?


The new bridge.  Just beyond that is the Black Sea

We all tried the balaklava


I awoke shortly before we arrived back in Istanbul.  When we landed, we set off on foot across the bridge to see the Galata Tower.  We wanted to check out sunset from the top of the tower.  The tower is on a hillside and one of the earliest funicular services that hill (it’s very steep).  We had trouble finding it at first because they call it a Tünel and because it was located inside a building with a small sign announcing that it was the tünel.  We figured it out and took it up using our transit pass, then had to walk down a short bit because the tower is not at the top of the hill.  It was built in the early 500s CE by the Byzantine Emporer Anastasius as a lighthouse tower.  It was mostly demolished during the Fourth Crusade in 1204, then was rebuilt using masonry stones and the Walls of Galata by the Genoese in 1348 and named “The Tower of Jesus.”  It was heightened in 1445 and 1446, then renovated and reparied in each century after it was taken by the Turks  in 1453.  In the 1500s it was used as the shelter for Christian war captives who were put to work in the shipyards.  It became an observatory for the well-known astronomer Takiyuddin from 1576 until it was closed by the religious authority in 1580.  It was given by the government which was unusual at that time.  Evidently, the work that he did there was phenomenal and very instrumental in developing the field.  It is unknown why they closed it down.  It was then used in the late 1600s by Hazerfen Ahmet Celebi who in 1638 flew from the tower across the Bosphorus Strait using wings that he designed himelf.  It has been used as a fire watchtower since 1717.  They would announce a fire by playing a big drum.  The tower was ironically damaged by fire around 1800 and 1831.  Its cone fell over in a storm in 1875 and it was repaired again in 1967.  It is 70 meters tall and its walls are 3.75 meters thick!  The walls were made of untreated rubble stones. 

We had to wait in a LONG line to get in.  You go up in an elevator to the restaurant level, then use stairs to go up the last bit.  Then it is an open air balcony to look around.  I did see a marriage proposal (she said yes) at one point.  People were squished together (one man squished a bit too much against me if you know what I mean) and all became frustrated trying to move around and take pictures. 

Galata Tower

This little girl was SO EXCITED about the kitten!  She was jumping
up and down and smiling--it was so cute to see her joy!

The area above the elevator to go up



The Hagia Sophia (most signs label it as the Ayasofia)


Looking straight down to the square





We finally left and walked to the tram which we took back to our neighborhood where we stopped for dinner before going back to our hotel to pack and sleep.  

Accommodation for the hills in Istanbul