Day 555



Day 555

Beneath a mimosa tree

July 7th, 2013



Albizia julibrissin, not to be confused with members of the genus Mimosa (which contains some of the few species capable of rapid plant movement)

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Straw bales

July 7th, 2013



Another type of inlet protection

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Tailgating in style

July 7th, 2013



Watch the conversion from cheese wagon to Blu Bus!

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Peering through the fence at a detention basin and pond/wetland system in the Lemon Creek Bluebelt. The landscape is so densely treed that I could barely see inside, but it wasn't too long ago that it looked like this.

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Today’s forecast:

July 7th, 2013



A million degrees with a chance of snow

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Coolin’ off

July 7th, 2013



I had to join these kids on a couple of occasions to keep from catching fire in the blazing heat.

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Woodland grapes

July 7th, 2013



Growing wild, it would seem, at the edge of Bloomingdale Park

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Solar compadres

July 7th, 2013


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'49 DeSoto Custom

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Late-day clover

July 7th, 2013


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Pleasing to the eye, but not to the stomach

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Split screen

July 7th, 2013


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Ashramagogue of the day

July 18th, 2013



The former Young Israel of Jamaica is now home to the America Sevashram Sangha.

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King Manor Museum

July 18th, 2013



Standing out dramatically from the Jamaica streetscape, this house and the park that surrounds it were once part of the estate of Rufus King, a framer and signer of the Constitution (note the words of the preamble running across the top of the fence) and a US senator and diplomat. You can learn about the house's live-in caretaker and see a couple of videos of the interior here.

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Portal of the day

July 18th, 2013



This massive fence encloses a garden behind the King Manor Museum.

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Barberz #80

July 18th, 2013



Presumably owned by Cathy

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Like PS 207 in the Bronx, this public school (the Young Women's Leadership School of Queens) was originally a religious institution (the Jamaica Jewish Center).

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Red steps, green grapes

July 18th, 2013


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The ringing of tiny bells

July 18th, 2013



celebrates Surasa's 2,000th mile at the Self-Transcendence 3,100 Mile Race.

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Portable shade

July 18th, 2013



Ashprihanal, now in first place, is sporting an amazing hat (much better shot here) as a defense against the sun's brutal assault. The high today was 99-100 degrees, and the runners just kept going.

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past the world's coolest tire cover.

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Peering through the fence

July 18th, 2013



at the entrance to Aspiration-Ground

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Lookin’ sharp!

July 18th, 2013



Scrawled on the window of this '65 Pontiac is the following message:

CAR BROKE DOWN PLEASE DONT TICKET!! THANK YOU :)

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Portal of the rays

July 18th, 2013


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Mount Hebron Cemetery

July 18th, 2013



I've already paid a pedestrian visit to my grandparents in this cemetery, but I had forgotten exactly where my great-grandfather was buried — until I unexpectedly spied him through this fence at the dead end of 138th Street! That's him on the far right of the row just on this side of the little road, the tall gray stone next to the even taller black one.

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Meadow Lake

July 18th, 2013



Created for the 1939-40 World's Fair, this is the largest lake in New York City (not counting the Jerome Park and Central Park Reservoirs). Visible in the distance are the abandoned Astro-View observation towers that were part of the New York State Pavilion at the 1964-65 World's Fair.

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Meadow Lake bird blind

July 18th, 2013



Watch without being watched.

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Back here again

July 18th, 2013



Another look at the Tent of Tomorrow, with the aforementioned observation towers lurking in the background. Here's a great shot of the towers in action during the 1964-65 World's Fair.

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The Vatican Pavilion was one of the most visited sites at the 1964-65 World's Fair, owing largely to the fact that it housed Michelangelo's Pietà, which had been painstakingly packaged and shipped across the Atlantic from St. Peter's Basilica. The sculpture had never been removed from the Vatican before, and it hasn't left again since. It returned from its journey in good shape, but several years later was attacked at St. Peter's by a mentally disturbed, hammer-wielding, Hungarian-born Australian geologist claiming to be Jesus Christ. Typical.

Another feature of the Vatican Pavilion was the Chapel of the Good Shepherd, much of which — most notably the beautiful stained glass windows — has since been incorporated into Saint Mary Mother of the Redeemer Church in Groton, Connecticut.

In 1975, this monument to the pavilion took on new life when it became home to the shrine of Our Lady of the Roses, serving as a gathering place where Veronica Lueken, a housewife from Bayside, Queens, would be visited by the Virgin Mary, Jesus, and an assortment of saints, relaying the often apocalyptic messages received in her ecstatic visions to her throngs of devotees. The group originally met in Bayside, but moved here to Flushing Meadows after a local civic association sought an injunction to prevent the hordes of worshipers, sometimes numbering in the thousands, from descending on the neighborhood. Lueken died in 1995, and her followers subsequently split, bitterly, into two factions. As far as I can tell, both still hold regular prayer vigils here.

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The Unisphere

July 18th, 2013



Since our last visit back in April, the centerpiece of the 1964-65 World's Fair has come to life, offering the youth of Queens a drenching refuge from the blazing July death-sun.

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Blast off!

July 18th, 2013



I saw several kids, like the one at left, using the Unisphere's powerful water jets to launch various objects and articles of clothing into the stratosphere.

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Merry Christmas

July 18th, 2013



from your friends at Gatorade.

(A less colorful version of this.)

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Corona Plaza

July 18th, 2013



Now pedestrianized!

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The millstones are back!

July 20th, 2013



I wasn't officially walking today, but I noticed something that I don't think was here when I passed through Queens Plaza early last year: this millstone!

The history of this stone and its companion (millstones come in pairs) is not conclusively known, but it seems likely that they were used in a nearby tidal gristmill that existed from about 1650 until 1861. They've been preserved in one manner or another ever since, spending much of the past century inconspicuously embedded in a traffic island. They were removed and put on display at a neighborhood library during the recent reconstruction of Queens Plaza, but have now returned to their old stomping grounds. (I didn't see the other stone with my own two eyes — I was hurrying by and talking on the phone — but it's apparently sitting somewhere close by here in Dutch Kills Green.)

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Another excellently named business run by followers of Sri Chinmoy. Ashrita Furman has set dozens of his records here, including most jelly eaten with chopsticks in one minute and most eggs crushed with the head in 30 seconds. Many of his Guinness certificates can be found hanging on a wall inside the café.

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Portal of the day

July 23rd, 2013


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Queens chromosphere

July 23rd, 2013



(What's Queens chrome?)

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A ferocious tiger lily

July 23rd, 2013



Note the bulbils (better shot here) growing at the base of many of the leaves.

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Bright Lights, Big City

July 23rd, 2013


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You’ve been warned

July 23rd, 2013


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Barberz #81

July 23rd, 2013


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Whoa.

July 23rd, 2013


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Mary Immaculate

July 23rd, 2013



Another one of the four Queens hospitals that closed between 2008 and 2012

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Hail to the Chief

July 23rd, 2013


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A jawless James Brown

July 23rd, 2013



Someone probably ripped it off in a fit of terror.

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Addisleigh Park

July 23rd, 2013



This suburban neighborhood, recently designated a historic district, was developed around a century ago as an all-white community, with racially restrictive covenants (prohibiting the sale of real estate to African-Americans) later put in place by some property owners in an attempt to keep out the well-to-do black families that had begun showing interest in moving here. These efforts were largely in vain, however, and by the time the US Supreme Court ruled in 1948 that such covenants were legally unenforceable, Addisleigh Park had already become "a synonym for black affluence and elegance."

The neighborhood is not well known today in most parts of the city, but the list of famous residents who lived here in the 1940s, '50s, and '60s is truly staggering: Ella Fitzgerald, Lena Horne, Count Basie, Fats Waller, Milt Hinton, Illinois Jacquet, James Brown (back when he was still jawed), W.E.B. DuBois, Joe Louis, Jackie Robinson, and Roy Campanella, among others.