Day 1081

Today’s route — 16.4 miles

December 15th, 2014

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309 Guyon Avenue

December 15th, 2014



Built circa 1901

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END

December 15th, 2014


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Adelaide Avenue channel

December 15th, 2014



For three blocks, this little drainage channel takes the place of Adelaide Avenue, severing Medina Street and Tarrytown Avenue in the process.

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Hurricane Sandy memorial

December 15th, 2014



Here at the SSG Michael Ollis VFW post, a LoBaido flag surrounds a plaque memorializing the Staten Islanders killed by Hurricane Sandy: 24 individuals plus "all unidentified victims".

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Guyon Rescue trailer

December 15th, 2014



This LoBaido-painted trailer is (or at least was) the main center of operations of Guyon Rescue, a grassroots relief organization that grew out of two people showing up here in Oakwood Beach after Hurricane Sandy to distribute donated items to the community. The group became a neighborhood fixture in the months following the storm, but some neighbors have now grown tired of the trailer still being parked here after all this time. Two women who live across the street were complaining to me about this "eyesore" quite bitterly — but I guess it's a good sign of the neighborhood's recovery that people's lives are stable and settled enough for something like an ugly trailer sitting across the street to be worth worrying about.

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The groundskeeper?

December 15th, 2014



Take a look at the grounds (post-Sandy Street View).

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Hydrant pup

December 15th, 2014



The second such creature we've seen

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on Kissam Avenue

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All that’s left

December 15th, 2014



This sign is the only remaining trace of St. John's Malankara Syrian Orthodox Church, which was swept off its foundation by Hurricane Sandy and later demolished.

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The demolition of Fox Beach

December 15th, 2014



In light of the destruction wreaked by Hurricane Sandy, the state offered to buy out homeowners (at higher than pre-storm prices) in three hard-hit, low-lying Staten Island neighborhoods, with the idea that the houses would then be torn down and the flood-prone areas ultimately depopulated and returned to nature. As is the case with the other neighborhoods, the vast majority of homeowners here in Fox Beach, a section of Oakwood Beach, have decided to take the buyout and head to higher ground. Most of the houses still standing here are vacant, boarded up, and awaiting their date with the wrecking ball (or perhaps the Caterpillar 320B L hydraulic excavator).

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Praise the LORD Jesus

December 15th, 2014



STUDENT DRIVER

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Oakwood Beach floodgate

December 15th, 2014



Built by the Army Corps of Engineers in 2000 (along with the 730-foot-long levee that it cuts through), this floodgate (or tide gate) is designed to be open during normal conditions to allow the east branch of Oakwood Creek to flow out of Fox Beach/Oakwood Beach toward Lower New York Bay, and closed during storm conditions to prevent rising seawater from entering and inundating the low-lying neighborhood. But the gate proved no match for Hurricane Sandy's 14-foot storm tide, which both overtopped it and caused significant damage to it. Here's an aerial view of the gate. Zoom out and pan around to get a sense of how the area is laid out.

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Post-Sandy solitude

December 15th, 2014



A boarded-up house in Fox Beach overlooks the east branch of Oakwood Creek.

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Oakwood Creek outfall

December 15th, 2014



This walled channel at the mouth of Oakwood Creek, along with a tide gate and the wooden seawall visible in the background at left (bird's-eye view), once protected Oakwood Beach from seawater flooding. A 1992 nor'easter caused substantial damage to the already aging seawall, leaving the low-lying neighborhood vulnerable to flooding and leading the Army Corps of Engineers to construct the newer levee and tide gate we saw two posts ago.

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PLEASE NO POOP THANKS

December 15th, 2014



(That's the same house as this.)

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A flooded Fox Lane

December 15th, 2014



in Fox Beach

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Geese moving in on the cats

December 15th, 2014



Here's a closer look at the scene.

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Ghost town

December 15th, 2014



It seems like just about everyone in the Oakwood Beach buyout zone is taking the money and running. Rows of houses are boarded up and vacant, and the only people I saw who weren't in a car were loading up a moving truck.

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Home of the Lions

December 15th, 2014



Monsignor Farrell High School

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9/11 memorial #225

December 15th, 2014



at Monsignor Farrell

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Pedestrian bridge

December 15th, 2014



over the Staten Island Railway at the Oakwood Heights station

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A resurrected masterpiece

December 15th, 2014



This excellent work of art can be found atop a refrigerator case at Guyon Market. I asked the guy at the counter who painted it, and he pointed to the old-timer (let's call him OT) standing next to me. OT told me he didn't paint it, but he acquired it when a friend of his, who had found it in the garbage, had to get rid of it because his wife didn't like it. But then OT's wife made him get rid of it as well, because she was worried that their grandkids would be negatively influenced by seeing the monkey owner's middle finger. OT thought it was a great painting though, so he brought it here to the deli, where he seems to spend a good amount of time hanging out and socializing.

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Mighty phragmites

December 15th, 2014



A sea of the pervasive, invasive reed (pronounced frag-MY-tees) at Great Kills Park in Gateway National Recreation Area

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Sunset at Great Kills

December 15th, 2014