Sunday, July 5, 2009

New York – Day 3

The pictures are:
1. Under the Brooklyn Bridge.
2, The Intrepid.
3, From the stage of Radio City Music Hall.
4. With a Rockette.
5. On stage with Rick Negron.

The hardest thing that we did today was just getting up- slept until 7 – but we did in time to walk to the waterfront and take a 90 minute water tour of Manhattan. It was a lot of fun because this was the one tour that had a volunteer from the New York Historical Society leading the tour and he was very interesting.

Then it was a short walk to see the USS Intrepid, the Navel carrier that saw action in WWII and in Vietnam.

After the Intrepid, we took a cab to Radio City Music Hall. There we took a 1 hour tour with only 10 people of the facility. Because of a combination of situations, we were able to actually go up on stage. The tour guide says that it happens about 1 in every 100 tours. We also went downstairs and then up to the executive areas on the top floor. We also had a short talk by a Rockette. The theater is huge, seating almost 6,000. The stage is 145 feet long by 85 feet wide.

There was a 10 block street festival on 6th avenue so we walked the length and marveled at all the little stands and the avenue was wall-to-wall with people.

Dinner was a wonderful small Pizza restaurant on Restaurant Row and it was true pizza from Italy and did we ever enjoy it.

At 5:00pm we got lucky and snagged two tickets to In The Heights. This musical won four 2008 Tony awards, for best musical, score, choreography and orchestrations. We were really lucky as it had been sold out earlier. Rick, the guy that we met on the subway yesterday is one of the leads in the play so it was fun watching someone we actually talked to. The music was really fun, the set was just like the City and we had a ball.

Then we decided to send a note backstage after the play and the manager that we talked to told us to go ahead in the stage door and then a stagehand took us right up to the stage where Rick was talking to another couple. As soon as he saw us he yelled “Barb – Ed – I can’t believe that you are here.” He introduced us to his friends form California and we talked for awhile and finally left. What a thrill that he remember us and our names. As we left the stage door there were probably 30 people waiting for autographs and they looked at us like – ok who are you, as we walked by them.

Later we sat on chairs in Times Square and just watched the people – what fun.

Tomorrow we are planning on going to see the UN and then go to the airport for our 3pm flight home, hopefully arriving on time at 10:49pm.

This will be our last entry – what fun to celebrate our anniversary in New York on a long 4th of July weekend – we had a ball.

Saturday, July 4, 2009

New York – Day 2



The Pictures are:
1. Our guide at Ground Zero outside the firehouse that was nearest the World Trade Center.
2. Lunch at the Blarney Stone Pub.
3. Our first seat was in this crowd on the concrete.
4. Our final seat on top of the boat dock. We were nearer the fireworks than anyone!
5. Time Square after the fireworks. This is at the entrance to the Marriott.

Well the day started out a little slower than yesterday. Ed got up and had breakfast and they we both left and went to the Flea Market in Hell’s Kitchen. It was interesting, but we didn’t buy anything.

Then we hopped a cab to go to Ground Zero. We took a tour from the official World Trade Center site office and our tour guide had been in Tower #1 when the first plane hit the 93rd floor. He was on the 82nd floor and his tale of getting out was very emotional.

After the tour, we went to a pub that the tour guide had recommended and Barb had huge pastrami and Ed had a roast beef and they were very good.

We then went to Chinatown and Barb bought a purse and a couple of other items.

Then onto the subway and to Rockefeller Center when we went to the Top of the Rock and the view from the top was breathtaking and the weather was perfect. We met an actor who was in a play, The Heights, on Broadway. We had fun talking about New York on the long subway ride from lower Manhattan to Mid Town.

At 6:30pm we headed for the Hudson River to join “millions” of our friends and watch the fireworks. It was totally unlike Chicago last year. Security was very tight and there were police at each entrance to 12th street, which was the river road. We squeezed into a space on the concrete and then got very lucky. Ed had talked to a security person who was guarding the entrance to a Circle Lines boat dock and a ½ hour when Ed went back, he said that they had a couple of tickets left for the second story of the boat dock. There was no question that it was the best place to see the fireworks.

The fireworks started at 9:30pm and they went for 30 minutes – they shot off 1,000 fireworks a minute from a total of 6 barges in the Hudson. Unbelievable – they said that it was the largest display of 4th of July fireworks in the United States!

It then took us 45 minutes to walk from the pier to the hotel and every street was closed to traffic – what a mass of people.

Into the room and it is now time for sleep – a fun day.

New York City – July 3, 2009

What a day – we left the house at 4:45am on the way to the airport. A flight to Atlanta followed by a flight to New York City and we were here at 12:30pm.

The pictures are:
The view from our room of Times Square
Times Square.
Carriage ride in Central Park
Petal cab ride to dinner.
Katz Deli

The Marriott New York Marquis is right in the middle of Times Square. As a matter of fact, you can hardly see the hotel because of all the billboards on every piece of real estate in Time Square.

They upgraded us to a beautiful mini-suite on the 30th floor, overlooking Times Square.

As usual, we took off walking, first stopping at a hot dog vendor on the Square for a New York hot dog, another gourmet lunch!

We walked the Diamond Market, a block on 47th street with 2,600 individual vendors, it is quite a sight and Barb didn’t buy a thing.

We then walked to Grand Central Station and up Park Avenue to see St. Bartholomew’s Church and St. Patrick’s Cathedral, they are beautiful.

Then we walked up to Central Park and took a carriage ride through part of the park. The next stop was the Apple Store which was crowed with hundreds of people buying the new Apple phone. We could not believe the number of people in line to buy.

Walking down 5th Avenue we arrived at the NBC Studios where we had a 5:30pm tour of the Studios and finally got to sit down for awhile during the tour.

We then walked back to the hotel to drop some stuff off and took a pedal cab for about an hour to lower Manhattan to what is supposed to be one of the best delis in the City, Katz Deli.

After splitting a Reuben, we took a cab back to Times Square and walked for a little bit and then crashed at about 10:00pm. I was too tired to even type so this is being written on the second morning as we are getting ready for day 2.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

New York, New York

New York here we come. We leave Friday morning at 5:50am on AirTran for Atlanta and then onto New York City. We will be staying at New York Marriott Marquis, right at Times Square.

Barb and I have each only been to the City once in recent years and we are both looking forward to going, relaxing and seeing the July 4th fireworks with millions of our new best friends from New York and around the world.

We will return on Monday afternoon, June 6, arriving in Bloomington at 10:00 pm.

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Bowling Green - Day 4

We were up and at the Museum for a tour of the countryside with 68 other Corvettes.

The pictures are:
1. Cars ready for the tour at the drivers meeting.
2. The Bluegrass band and yes we enjoyed them!
3. 1954 Gold Certified and in the Museum.
4. The 2010 Grand Sport – just displayed today. Is this what Tom Hill will be driving to the show?

The trip took us up to Owensboro, KY to the Bluegrass Museum. At the Museum we were treated to an hour concert by a local bluegrass group. I must say, it was really good.

After a tour of the Museum, we then all headed to the Moonlight Barbeque Inn in town for a buffet that was pretty good. During the trip we talked to a number of the owners about Bloomington Gold and found out that a lot do not even read Corvette magazines so how could they know about Bloomington Gold.

After the trip back, we then went back to the Corvette Museum for a meeting with the New Corvette Delivery Manager and he gave approval to put a Bloomington Gold show flyer and tickets to the show in every new Corvette that they deliver! That ought to get us noticed.

Then the show at the Museum was over and it was back to the hotel to get ready for the evenings entertainment at the convention center in town, which is just across the street from our hotel. The theme of the dinner and evening is “Margaritaville” so we wore our best, most colorful outfits.

It was a fun evening and we made a number of really good contracts with the Museum and C5/C6 people.

Tomorrow is back home and we will leave about 8 in the morning for the 7 hour drive.

Hope everyone has enjoyed following our trip – it was well worth going and we can’t thank Carol and Mike Stypolkowski enough for coming with us – they are a great couple to travel with and an asset to Bloomington Gold.

See you on our blog the next trip – Barb and Ed.

Friday, April 24, 2009

Bowling Green - Day 3

Day 3 started in Memphis and we left early and headed for Bowling Green, KY.

The weather was perfect, finally.

The pictures are:
1. Onto Bowling Green.
2. At the Museum.
3. Barb’s sampler platter.

The drive was a fast 4 hours and we first checked in at the Marriott and then over to the

Museum and checked in there. Shortly afterwards, we headed over to the Corvette plant for our tour.

It was fun to see the cars from start to finish and we saw everything except the painting process.


Then it was back to the Museum for the rest of the afternoon. I talked to a lot of vendors who have been at the show and are planning on being back, even though they haven’t sent in their money yet – so that was good to get the commitments that I did. Saw and talked to a number of the staff that I have been dealing with at the Museum so it was a very, very good first day at the show.

Afterwards we went downtown to a great restaurant that had been recommended by two of the staff of the museum. They were cooking crawfish outside in the street for the restaurant and after we ordered, Ed went out and asked for some samples. As you can see, they gave him a full tray, so Barb got her appetizer.

Tomorrow we have a tour with 68 other Corvettes before heading back to the Museum.

See you in tomorrow’s blog.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Bowling Green Trip – Day 2

Memphis

Well this was to be our fun day in Memphis and we started at 9:00 am heading for Graceland. It was a little cloudy and had just rained so the tops stayed up.

The pictures are:
1. The living room at Graceland.
2. Some of the gold records and clothes of Elvis.
3. The ducks leaving the Peabody Hotel fountain in the lobby.
4. Party on the roof of the Hotel

We spent from 9:15am until 3:00pm and what fun we had. I was a fun time and we walked and walked and walked.

After Graceland, we went downtown to the Peabody Hotel and sat in their magnificent lobby until 5:00pm when it was time for the famous ducks to leave the fountain in the center of the hotel and go to the roof for the evening. The ducks come down every day at 11:00am and go back at 5:00pm. Dozens and dozens of people watched the ducks leaving on a red carpet to the elevator.

We went to dinner at a famous rib place and it was fine but not the best as far as we were concerned. The 17th Street Bar & Grill in O’Fallon was better.

The downtown was filled with horse drawn carriages and Carol had never been on one so we took a tour of the city in one for 30 minutes.

Then we went to the Peabody roof top for an open air party.

Then it was down to Beale Street, much like New Orleans and finally back to the hotel.

We leave at 7am for Bowling Green. Night, Night.

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