I'm walking every street in New York City.
This is the counterpoint to
my walk across the US. Instead of seeing a million places for just a minute each, I'm going to spend a million minutes exploring just one place. By the time I finish walking every block of every street in all five boroughs, I'll have traveled more than 8,000 miles on foot — all within a single city.
Details!
Email me at
matt@imjustwalkin.com
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Your donations allow me to keep walking full-time. If you think what I'm doing is valuable and you'd like to offer some support, I would be very grateful. On the other hand, if you think I'm a worthless bum, feel free to email me and tell me to get a job, bozo. Both are excellent options!
found him- behind the sofa
I don’t understand….is all the stuff at the curb being thrown away? Cute cat.
You probably don’t want to know why it is there. Most likely involves either an eviction or someone abandoning an apartment. My son used to have contracts to paint apartments after tenants moved out and he found that there were a surprising number who just left everything and moved, leaving the cleanup to the owner. Ideally, they might store valuables but in many cases that is just not practical. In an apartment complex, it fills up the dumpsters. Here, obviously they have no choice but to put it at the curb. Likely in a day or two it will all be freecycled.
or hoarded in someone elses junk pile.
That was too easy Matt. Unless there’s another one hiding somewhere else. Cute cat though. Here kitty kitty kitty!
As for the stuff, could it be from Sandy?
Hey, there might be some novice cat-spotters out there who appreciate an easier challenge every now and then.
As for the stuff on the curb, this neighborhood is too far inland for there to have been any flooding from Sandy, so I doubt she had anything to do with it.
Thanks for the input Thomas. I was not familiar with the term “freecycled”, but it a great term!