RandyWanger
Je suis rôti de boeuf
Got told yesterday I need to start traveling for work again. First stop, NYC. Life used to be easy, traveling now seems like a hassle.
Got told yesterday I need to start traveling for work again. First stop, NYC. Life used to be easy, traveling now seems like a hassle.
Got told yesterday I need to start traveling for work again. First stop, NYC. Life used to be easy, traveling now seems like a hassle.
Staying in Harlem for three nights later this year as part of a NY stay and could do with a bit of advice on things to do locally to Harlem i.e. where to eat and drink, music (jazz preferably) and where and what to avoid! Thoughts?
My wife and youngest son are off to NY in October with the mother in law for 3 days before cruising back on the QM2.
They're really excited to be going, but as the M.I.L is very limited with her mobility these days, is there anything that is an absolute "must see" for such a short time in the city, and that is relatively easy to get to / around for the disabled?? They're staying in the heart of midtown on the Ave of the Americas I think, just a few blocks south of Central Park....
Some really useful stuff on this thread. We're going next month, in part to catch Roger Waters in concert at MSG. The view from Top of the Rock looks decent - have done ESB on my previous two trips (glorious art deco in there) but looks like going to have to do the alternative as well (going with our sons this time - their first visit to the large apple, so there's loads of stuff they want to do).
Will be doing the 9/11 museum this time - saw the memorial last time, with the (surprisingly small) footprints of the original towers. Had a pause when I found Robert Eaton's name amongst the many, many there. Not bothering with the Statue of Liberty as my sons aren't interested in visiting it, just want to see it from a distance (whether that's on land, or on water, is yet to be decided). First time, with a friend, we did the crown, which was tiny and felt a waste of time and effort, so when I returned, with my wife, we only did the main inside visit. One of those things to tick off, I guess, but not somewhere to rush back to. Felt the same about the Grand Canyon which was fine, but hard to reconcile the size and distances involved. (Side note, when we were at the GC, there were a couple of New Zealand girls who turned up when we were having a good look; they got to the edge, and said with big disappointment, "Ah, it's just a bunch of frigging rocks!", a phrase that has lived with my wife and I some 25 or so years later! )
The best steak house EVER! https://gallaghersnysteakhouse.com/ Right by Broadway. Book a show and eat at Gallaghers after, gotta book it all up first though. Real old school restaurant. All the stars from Broadway have eaten there...
You lot need to swerve Rockefeller & Empire State and check out The Edge at Hudson Yards instead. Much better
I work at 10 Hudson Yards, never been to The Edge, not even one employee has suggest it to me. How strange. I'll check it out when I'm back over, looks amazing on Google Images.
I first saw the Grand Canyon with a flight in a small plane from Las Vegas, we landed, had a look, then flew back. It was okay. A few weeks later when we were driving we visited the park in Flagstaff. Although it was many years ago now I still remember the feeling as I walked to a viewing point amongst trees and having this sense of things being close-by, talking to a friend, and then suddendly seeing the canyon...the sheer size, the vastness, the eery silence was literally breathtaking. It was way more impressive than I'd seen in my previous visit from LV.