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 GURU 

TwoWheeler
Male
46
Staten Island, New Brighton
In NYC Since: 1962

Staten Islander, bicycle commuter, parent, consultant for non profit, preservationist, foodie, traveler, etc.

 

October 29, 2008

It’s the Great Pumpkin, Rev. Jen, and other Halloween Classics



It’s almost Halloween, and you can’t decide where to go. -basically, anywhere but the parade. Watch that on TV. Maybe hit up the after party at Webster Hall instead. Personally, I’d rather skip the crowds all together and head out on Wednesday night to check out Reverend Jen’s live-action TV special, It's the Great Pumpkin, Reverend Jen! at the Bowery Poetry Club. The self-proclaimed hero of the uncool will lead her usual band of misfit comics, actors and performers in a heart-warming Halloween special – Lower East Side style. (Wed., Oct. 29, 10 p.m., $5) Performers include local favorites: Reverend Jen and Jen Jr. of course (Chihuahuas with attitudes are “in” you know), Bower poet emeritus Faceboy, The O’Debra Twins (ooh-la-la), Mr. L.E.S., and Mayor Mike’s least favorite well-informed teen Rachel Trachtenberg.

You may prefer to get out of Manhattan altogether. The hipster heaven Union Pool becomes Union Pool of Blood for the night with Union Ghouls, The Underthings, and Wizardry. Dressing in your most over-the-top costume is assumed of course. Best of all, admission is free!

Out on Staten Island, the annual Rocky Horror Picture Show screening at Snug Harbor Cultural Center has taken on a life of its own. Live stage show, costumes (duh), and a goodie bag so you don’t have to bring your own props. And the mostly-restored Music Hall with its rough edges is a glorious environment for the classic of film debauchery. Starting shockingly early at 9:30 p.m., you’ll still have time to catch a ferry back to Manhattan (maybe the 12:30 or 1 a.m. boat) back to the real world. Tix are $10 and the participation back is another $2 on top of that. Since it’s two block from my homestead, this is where I’ll be headed. So if you pop in, say “Hi” to the guy in the pirate hat.

If you do stay home to watch the parade on NY1, be sure to keep a special eye out for Brooklyn's own Hungry March Band.  Inside word is their theme for this year is simply spellbinding.

Photo from the Village Halloween Parade website.


Tags:   bower poetry club, bowery, brooklyn, hungry march band, ny1, reverend jenn, staten island, union pool, village halloween parade


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Posted on 10/29/2008 ( Permanent Link )
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October 13, 2008

Fall Pumpkin Picking in Joisey



Back in the day, we grew up believing that apples, pumpkins, all our veggies and even our milk all came from the corner store. We’d heard of places called “farms” where suspendered hayseeds coaxed our food stuffs out of the ground, or –yech- out of the under parts of large mammals. Now a-days city kids get much closer to the origins of our food at our local greenmarkets. Here farmer Joe comes to life and smiles at us as we buy our corn-fed eggs (who knew they had teeth!), but the actual farming life is still just as real as Green Acres reruns on TV Land.

If this description rings true to you, get thee and thyne to Johnson’s Corner Farm in Medford, NJ.  It’s down the NJ Turnpike to Exit 5, just about as far as Philly.  The farm is one of the best day trip experiences in the region, a virtual county fair of rural fun. First, line up to get your tickets for the hayride and pumpkin picking. The tractors pull visitors out into the pumpkin patch where your little darlings can roam the corn-maze and choose the biggest pumpkins poor Daddy will have to carry. This year my heirs managed to find giant specimen that overloaded the digital scale back at the cashier station, nearly “squashing” the tiny little cashier who had to lug it to the oversized scale. The verdict: a 50 pounder / about $25 dollars worth of pumpkins, plus a smattering of odd gourds in various shapes and colors that should never be found in nature.

Back at the market, Johnson’s has the pumpkins and gourds pre-picked for those who’d rather skip the hayride. The also have racks and racks of fresh pies – pumpkin, apple, and pecan, in addition to peach berry as well as strawberry apple tarts, blue berry muffins, apple cider donuts, and an lightly-sweet apple crumble bread that explodes over its tin. A festival atmosphere prevails with live music – country, rock, bluegrass; delicious BBQ pork sandwiches; and fresh ice cream from Bassett’s of Philly. A Johnson’s specialty is the brain freeze – apple cider slushy over their own soft serve ice cream.

My kids love the animal pen where you can feed dry corn to the farm critters and play in a home-made obstacle course. By mid-day the animals are stuffed, except I did find one hungry goat who couldn’t help sneezing whenever you’d reach out your hand to feed him off your cob. Remember kids, use the sinks outside the pen and scrub those hands good. Johnson’s has also opened an area for the 2-8 crowd called Discovery Barnyard with more critters and things to climb on. And don’t miss the gift shop, which this time of year carries all kinds of fun Halloween craft items.

On recommendation from the locals, we stopped off at Tarantella Restaurant, a nearby Italian restaurant, deceptively located in the Medford Plaza Center strip mall at Hartford Avenue and Route 70. An encouraging sign was that I could hear the staff speaking to each other in Italian from the kitchen. The friendly staff was welcoming and offered good recommendations. The northern Italian menu has a creative menu that includes lobster manicotti, jumbo shrimp scampi, tortellini Alfredo, and a seasonal pumpkin ravioli, all in the richest sauces imaginable. Desserts include the usual suspects of pound-packing cheesecakes, cannolis, pies, and more. Check out the fruit sorbets served in natural bowls of hallowed-out pineapples, mangos, lemons, and so forth. We were all well stuffed when we left, taking a crate-load of leftovers home with us to eat the next day.


Tags:   apples, halloween, medford, new jersey, october, pie, pumpkin


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Posted on 10/13/2008 ( Permanent Link )
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October 10, 2008

Lighthouse Becomes a Darkhorse



The past few years have been a remarkable time for museums in New York City, with new, expanded and re-launched museums marking the revitalization of the post 9-11 city: the Museum of Finance, the Sports Museum of America, the Museum of Arts & Design, and the literally re-launched Intrepid Museum of Sea, Air and Space. But one museum has not joined this list.

On the Staten Island waterfront, next door to the Staten Island Ferry Terminal sits a unique historic site. The site of the former United States Lighthouse Service, home to five historic buildings and an underground cavern where whale oil was once stored to supply lights along the East Coast. In fact most of the historic lights along the Atlantic were born in the shops of the Lighthouse Depot.

More than a decade ago, New York rallied with the mayor’s office and the borough president’s office both pledging their support to bring the National Lighthouse Museum to New York City. A board of trustees was formed, money was raised, several of the buildings were protected from the elements, a website launched, and plans were laid to use the entire site for exhibits, libraries, classrooms and dining. The developer was enlisted and enthusiasm was high. Then…nothing.

In its immeasurable wisdom, the Economic Development Corporation managed to crush the project with the same iron handed tough love that has thus-far prevented any successful development of Staten Island’s North Shore from the ferry to Rosebank – primarily, the Lighthouse Depot and the abandoned Staten Island Navy Homeport site. Numerous plans and dreams have been stifled, from movie studios to multiple income housing. Nothing has come to fruition.

The good news is that the Lighthouse Museum’s treasurer has projected the funds raised to date, and if a new board is formed, there may be a head start on getting the funds together to begin work on the first structure. There is talk of an organization called Lighthouse Action and Mobilization Partners pulling together to get the project back on track. There are plenty of community leaders and arts administrators on Staten Island willing to get involved and pull this together, and perhaps they can do so without deeding much of the historic site to overbuilding and commercialization.

The story has been reported in the Staten Island Advance, and more info is online at the Lighthouse Action and Mobilization Planners [LAMP]. You can even check out the project overview at the old National Lighthouse Museum website, by visiting their site at the Internet Archive Wayback Machine.


Tags:   lighthouse, museum, staten island


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Posted on 10/10/2008 ( Permanent Link )
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