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Posts Tagged ‘opentop bus’

New York! New York!

Well, the epic journey may be over, but we’re all now kicking around in New York. After the sort of anticlimax of parting at the bus, most of us met up again in Greenwich Village, in a pub. Unfortunately we couldn’t all sit together and celebrate the end of the Ozbus trip as a group, which was a great shame. So, as it was Pat’s only evening in New York, we decided to leave after the meal and explore Greenwich Village, a local ice cream parlour and then Times Square – where a NY policeman was coerced into a Rocky moment on camera! A great way to spend our first evening in the city. The last time I was in New York was in 1969….42 years ago. The Empire State Building was the tallest building in New York then, as it is now.

And now, the hostel, which has to be described fully to understand the beauty of this Urban Oasis (yes! that’s its name!). It’s on West 31st Street, just a few metres from the corner of 5th Avenue. A hundred metres the other way is Broadway. From the fire escape you can see the Empire State Building on 34th Street – check out the photo – and sorry it’s a bit diagonal. The only way to fit it in the frame…! The hostel is owned by a Hungarian/Egyptian/’other European’ couple who started it up on the top floor (10th) a couple of years ago, then got occupancy of this floor (9th) about 9 months ago. It’s all furnished in fresh, blond-wood IKEA, with stainless steel/wood kitchens on each floor, all mod cons, lovely rooms and a lift (not an option really). The shared bathrooms are beautiful, well organised and SO clean. And believe me, after months of coping with strange wash facilities, some good, some bad, I know hostel quality when I see it! I guess you could say this is a ’boutique hostel’ and probably influenced heavily by ‘Friends’ loft living and sitting on fire escapes to chill out. I like it! Outside on the block there’s a Indian restaurant, a chic cafe-restaurant, a post office, and in the hotel opposite you can book the shuttle to the airport. What more do you need? So central, just a little oasis…..

I’ve managed to see quite a lot of New York so far, been on three open top hop-on hop-off buses all over Downtown and Brooklyn. One of them, driving through midtown, downtown and Brooklyn, was endured in lashing rain and we were issued with white rain capes which made us look like a Klu Klux Klan parody. A lot friendlier, I should add. Anyway, that’s what I will do that again tomorrow, but on the Uptown bus which will take me to the Lincoln Centre and the Metropolitan Museum and Central Park as well as Harlem and the Guggenheim. So that’s where I’ll be spending my last day – a very busy day! – before leaving on Sunday for London. I made a list of possible places to visit – enough for about 2 weeks in New York. I’ll be leaving without seeing some of them – so will have to come back again in another 42 years…..


Just a few last minute photos….

And a few more….

more….

and the last few….

Chicago! Chicago!

This has to be the best hostel yet. The Getaway Hostel with a logo of a man in a gangster’s hat getting away… It has a great common area, with leather sofas, lots of PCs, a wonderful kitchen and eating area, and an outside space on two levels with loungers. We arrived early in the day and stored our luggage – even had a free breakfast before going out to explore. We finally got a train into the city – standing room only, and excruciating as my knee got trapped and I couldn’t move. So painkillers from Linda and then a short walk to the John Hancock building and the open-top city tour bus. Much the best way to see a city if you haven’t got much time. I suppose the tour took about two hours, with a very good guide who knew his stuff. I fell asleep at one point and maybe missed something, who knows! I have learned to sleep on buses since travelling Green Tortoise. Hopefully this doesn’t mean that I’m now programmed to drop off, stretched out on the back seat, every time I catch the No. 96 from Barry to Cardiff.

Chicago has the most amazing architecture – old mixed with new. I suppose they had a second chance of getting it right after a fire, about a century ago, destroyed all the wooden buildings and left plenty of room for town planning to reconstruct the city. It is certainly a very pretty city, with lots of water: the river that runs through the city, bordered by skyscrapers, cafes and restaurants; and the lake itself, Michigan, with its miles of beaches, boats and parks. Both days we explored the city, using the buses to get around.

On the evening of the first day, some of us went out to Kingston Mines, a blues club fairly near the hostel. Great music from Eric ‘Guitar’ Davis and another couple of bands. Most of the group left after the main act, but Pat and I remained with Michele for a while longer. Great atmosphere and music! A sort of mixture of blues and rock. On the way back to the hostel we stopped at a night pharmacy as I needed something to kill the pain and itch of the bites on my neck and face. Got a telling off from the sales assistant for asking her advice; she refused on the grounds that I might sue her. Let’s hope this particular level of litigation-fear never hits the UK.


The next day we took a taxi to downtown Chicago and strolled through the park, got ourselves our free Chicago Trolley and Opentop Bus T-shirts, and had a bit of a gander at the famous bean. This is a massive shiny silver bean that you can walk around, and under, and see yourself and the buildings of Chicago reflected/distorted in. Quite a show-stealer! Pat went off to do some shopping in Macy’s and Linda and I went off on the opentop bus again, with me falling asleep again, unsurprisingly. While searching for a toilet sometime later, on the Golden Mile, we discovered a gem of a restaurant with the most amazing decor. A few more days here wouldn’t go amiss. So much to see!

In the evening, before leaving on the bus at midnight, a few of us went on a river and lake cruise. It left the pier at Michigan St. at about 7.45pm and went upriver, then returned and went through the Chicago Lock and out on Lake Michigan. The city looked amazing as the light faded and all the buildings lit up. But windy! Actually, that’s not why Chicago is named the windy city, but rather because its politicians can be a bit windy, full of hot air. Now I never knew that before!

So here I am, sitting in the hostel waiting for the off. In an hour’s time I’ll be swaddled in my sleeping bag, lying like a sardine on one of the mattresses on the bus, on the way to Lake Erie and Niagara Falls, and only three days away from New York, and the end of this journey. But I’ll come back to Chicago again when I get the chance.