Sunday, September 17, 2006
The Game
After much anticipation, I finally went to my first baseball game. It wasn't in New York, it was in St Louis actually.
As the wrap-up activity for the project I was working on in St Louis, we went to the game of St. Louis Cardinal vs Florida Marlin (thanks guys, I really appreciate you taking me there, and getting me the right-colored gear so I would blend in with the home crowd!!).
So not only did I finally get to experience the ball game atmosphere (ie. the overpriced nachos and Bud Light on draft and the roar of the home crowd cheering), I also had my own personal baseball "intepreter" explaining to me the finer points of watching baseball, what all those numbers on the board acutally meant, and the expected behavior of cheering the team on and participating in mexican waves. It was a lot of fun (especially when the fireworks go off for home-runs).
The game was slow to start with, and things were not moving until the bottom half of the 8th inning when finally, the Cardinals hit a few to load up the bases and then a home run to bring it all home (I am sure if they didn't win, there would have been a riot in the stadium). Maybe I can enjoy it even more the next time around now that I have a little more understanding of the significants of what all the numbers on the board means (I was too distracted by the photo opps, as per usual...).
Bean Town Cow Parade
Once more I was in Boston for work late August so I took the opportunity to go into town again after work. I actually haven't been back into Boston city center itself since the first weekend I got there (and visited Harvard etc).
So I was quite surprise to find lots of cows in the city. They were everywhere, in all kinds of sharps and shade. I started off at the Park Street Metro station...
Proceeded through Boston Common...
Then down to City Hall...
And finally Quincy Marketplace.
The cows all stood still on the busy streets, in the midst of frenzies and watching people zooming by... Ahem, ok.
So I read the plaque near the feet of each cow, and actually each cow had been painted by a different artist with a different sponsor. These cows were going to be auctioned off for charity. Boston was one of the participating cities in the world (offical website: http://boston.cowparade.com/)
So I was quite surprise to find lots of cows in the city. They were everywhere, in all kinds of sharps and shade. I started off at the Park Street Metro station...
Proceeded through Boston Common...
Then down to City Hall...
And finally Quincy Marketplace.
The cows all stood still on the busy streets, in the midst of frenzies and watching people zooming by... Ahem, ok.
So I read the plaque near the feet of each cow, and actually each cow had been painted by a different artist with a different sponsor. These cows were going to be auctioned off for charity. Boston was one of the participating cities in the world (offical website: http://boston.cowparade.com/)
Saturday, September 16, 2006
Miscellaneous things in August...
It is turning into a monthly update of this blog for me and it is not good. I have been going to places and have kept taking photos (of course), however I have been slack in the actually uploading and write up about the actual activities and eventually they have become so out of date they were not worth mentioning anymore!
The only way for me to catch up to the present, is to take the short-cut and do condensed entries and try to breeze through as quickly as possible what I have been up to.
I went to Brooklyn Bridge last month (and had planned to walk across it but it was like 100F out in the soon so as soon as my and my friends got to the 1st pillar of the bridge on the Manhattan side, we hid in the shade and went no further). This was also about the time when Israel started the bombing of Lebanon so there was a protest march across the bridge when my friends and I were there.
I also visited Coney Island last month. I had a vision of Melbourne's Luna Park in my mind for some reason. It was way bigger and much more alive and packed full of families (school holiday hasn't ended yet), tourists, street performers and beach-goers.
Different food, drink and souvenior stores dotted along the Broadwalk, seperating the beach and the amusement park itself. The famous Cyclone - the first wooden roller-coaster in the world - can be seen from afar. It looked a lot like the Luna Park rollercoaster except 5 times bigger and looking more likely to fall apart (there was apparently an accident not that long ago where one of the roller-carts actually came flying out from the rail and crashed into the carpark below and people were killed so this wasn't a very good joke for me to crack actually).
The other famous thing at Coney Island is of course Nathan's Hot Dog. This is where the annual hot dog eating competition is held in the summer. The 2006 champion Takeru Hobayashi ate 53.75 hot dog in 12 minutes. I am still wondering how he could POSSIBLY (physically) have 53 susages and hot dog buns put into his body - he is skinny as!! Well let's just say, we did not break any record that day eating Nathan's hot dogs (except probably the Single Most Photographed Hot Dog that day...)
The only way for me to catch up to the present, is to take the short-cut and do condensed entries and try to breeze through as quickly as possible what I have been up to.
I went to Brooklyn Bridge last month (and had planned to walk across it but it was like 100F out in the soon so as soon as my and my friends got to the 1st pillar of the bridge on the Manhattan side, we hid in the shade and went no further). This was also about the time when Israel started the bombing of Lebanon so there was a protest march across the bridge when my friends and I were there.
I also visited Coney Island last month. I had a vision of Melbourne's Luna Park in my mind for some reason. It was way bigger and much more alive and packed full of families (school holiday hasn't ended yet), tourists, street performers and beach-goers.
Different food, drink and souvenior stores dotted along the Broadwalk, seperating the beach and the amusement park itself. The famous Cyclone - the first wooden roller-coaster in the world - can be seen from afar. It looked a lot like the Luna Park rollercoaster except 5 times bigger and looking more likely to fall apart (there was apparently an accident not that long ago where one of the roller-carts actually came flying out from the rail and crashed into the carpark below and people were killed so this wasn't a very good joke for me to crack actually).
The other famous thing at Coney Island is of course Nathan's Hot Dog. This is where the annual hot dog eating competition is held in the summer. The 2006 champion Takeru Hobayashi ate 53.75 hot dog in 12 minutes. I am still wondering how he could POSSIBLY (physically) have 53 susages and hot dog buns put into his body - he is skinny as!! Well let's just say, we did not break any record that day eating Nathan's hot dogs (except probably the Single Most Photographed Hot Dog that day...)
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