Day 780

Today’s route — 11.1 miles

February 17th, 2014

Day 780

Snake Road

February 17th, 2014



This isolated section of Brookville Boulevard, winding nearly a mile through the wetlands of Idlewild Park Preserve at the edge of New York City, is known as Snake Road to locals. This aerial view gives you a good sense of the area's unique geography.

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Used hubcaps

February 17th, 2014



Sold at 120th Street and Rockaway Boulevard; perplexingly advertised in small type on a marshland fence that runs alongside Snake Road. Check it out in Street View.

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Snowy wetlands

February 17th, 2014



Idlewild Park Preserve preserves the name of Idlewild Airport. (The airport's name was officially changed to New York International Airport before it opened, but it was still popularly called Idlewild.) In late 1963, after the assassination of John F. Kennedy, the airport was renamed in his honor. Looking out over the marsh here, you can see the JFK air traffic control tower off in the distance.

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Safe!

February 17th, 2014



A brief forensic investigation concluded that this safe has been sitting here beside Snake Road since before the snow fell, but was recently moved, perhaps in a failed bid to liberate its contents. A closer look reveals at least one unsuccessful attempt to pry the door open.

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A lonely call box

February 17th, 2014



stationed beside Snake Road

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Turf ‘n’ surf

February 17th, 2014



Land duck 'n' water duck, found by the remains of an old boat in the marsh

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Welcome to Warnerville

February 17th, 2014

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This forgotten little fork of a neighborhood, along with nearby (and equally obscure) Meadowmere, is hidden away at the eastern edge of Queens, cut off from the rest of the city by water and marshlands. The two tiny communities didn't even have sewers until just a few years ago. (To get a better understanding of the crazy city boundary in this area, check out today's route map and zoom in on the lower right part of the map. The shaded areas are Nassau County, while the rest is NYC. The border is a little crudely drawn, but it gets the point across.)

The treed property visible on the other side of Thurston Basin is part of JFK Airport, which explains the two otherwise out-of-place-seeming signs mounted on posts in the water, visible midway through the video. The signs read "KEEP OUT SECURITY ZONE".

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Wings over Warnerville

February 17th, 2014

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Standing at the edge of New York City, I'm taking this photo from the wooden footbridge over Hook Creek that connects Meadowmere, Queens (on the left) with Meadowmere Park, Nassau County (on the right). These two tiny neighborhoods, nestled together with each surrounded almost entirely by the other's county, constitute something of a geographical yin and yang. This map will help you understand what I'm talking about; the dashed line is the city boundary, with Queens generally to the north and west and Nassau to the south and east.

The story of this area has long been that Meadowmere Park is the nicer neighborhood, with its well-paved streets and sewers and tidy lawns, while Meadowmere is largely forgotten by NYC, its low-lying streets more susceptible to flooding and its general appearance more ragged. (The city didn't actually have title to its streets until 1995.) Recently, however, the city has started paying some attention to Meadowmere, finally building sewers in the neighborhood a few years ago.

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#1 First Street

February 17th, 2014



This sign is a good indication of how isolated the community of Meadowmere is. It's one of the very few places in Queens where the borough's standard hyphenated addresses are not used. And the street numbers (1st through 3rd) are an anomaly as well. Starting a century ago, a single massive, messy street grid was imposed on almost all of Queens, with the notable exception of the Rockaway Peninsula, which has an independently numbered set of streets. But there are still a couple of renegade pockets of the borough that have their own street numbers, and Meadowmere is one.

The street pictured above is one of three different First (or 1st) Streets in Queens. The one that belongs to the borough-wide grid is in western Astoria (map), and there is another in the almost-as-obscure-as-Meadowmere neighborhood of Ramblersville (map). Interestingly, while there's no Second or Third Street in Ramblersville, 102nd Street and 104th Street (and a handful of avenues/drives/roads) from the main Queens grid do manage to sneak in and mix it up with their low-numbered cousin.

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Depicted above are a couple of features already familiar to us: the wooden footbridge connecting Meadowmere Park to Meadowmere (a popular summertime diving spot for neighborhood kids) and an airplane screaming overhead.

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That's some World Trade Center steel at left, but this doesn't count in my official 9/11 memorial tally since it's in Nassau County.

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Sunny side up

February 17th, 2014


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Before talking to them (the Department of Justice, the New York Police Department, and the FBI), talk to me.

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JFK landing lights

February 17th, 2014



Built out into the wetlands north of the airport. Compare to what we saw at LaGuardia.

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Portal of the day

February 17th, 2014



I have no idea what that name means.