Sunday, June 15, 2025

No Kings Day

I was not aware of a local No Kings event in Santa Clarita, but I figured if there was, it would be in the traditional location, of McBean and Valencia. I ended up being correct. The local newspaper, The Signal, reported on it, which you can see HERE.

As Sarah Kendzior always says, we live in a purple area, "purple like a bruise".

Getting any representation, is a hard battle, some of which we have won.

I tend to try to live a low key life, but I am glad to see my area peacefully protest the many things that are going wrong in this Country.

Saturday, June 14, 2025

Some of My Favorite Unplanned Travel Destinations, Part 2

Lake Shore Limited Chicago to New York Penn Station

We have taken the Lake Shore Limited many times, but just as far as Syracuse, NY. This time we took it the whole way, and learned much more about the journey. Here are some highlights.

You leave Chicago at 10PM, so Fresh-air breaks for smokers, are few and far between, unless you plan for them.

Erie, Pennsylvania is the first one after the overnight and it only lasts 6 minutes. If you are allowed to leave the train, stay right by the door.

Buffalo, New York is a longer stop, so you can manage to get out of the train, if you need to. If you ever decide to make Buffalo your stop, Niagara Falls is about 30 minutes away, and the Anchor Bar (where Buffalo wings were invented), is still there.

Rochester, New York is only 6 minutes, so if you are allowed to leave the train, stay right by the door. A real shame, because their station is right over the Genesee River high falls, which is spectacular to see in person. Over on the right is the Genesee Beer plant.

Syracuse, New York is a longer stop. You have almost 15 minutes, so if you want, get out and look around. You are on an elevated area, so you can’t go far, like into the station or anything. A similar situation to Kansas City, on the Southwest Chief.

Utica, New York is a short stop. It looks really nice, in the downtown area, but the 5 minutes they give you, won’t get you far, so stay by the door, if they let you out.

Schenectady, New York is a 6-minute stop, so again, stay by the door, if they let you out.

Albany, New York is where the Lake Shore Limited adds the passengers from the Boston area, so, it takes a bit of time. Chances are you can go into the station and take a look around. Check with your car attendant, for when you need to be back on the train.

That’s it, until you get to Moynihan Train Hall, Penn Station, New York City.

Next up, the Empire Builder.

Photo is at Albany, New York.

Friday, June 13, 2025

Full Strawberry Moon (2025)

My aquafit instructor kept mentioning that Wednesday was the Full Strawberry Moon.

On my way to bed, I went outside and managed to get a photo of it.

I don't see any strawberry color on it, but it is a nice full moon.

Very low in the sky, considering it is almost 11PM.

I hope you enjoy.

Thursday, June 12, 2025

Some of My Favorite Unplanned Travel Destinations, Part 1

Traveling by train brings you to places you would never fly to.

A long-distance Amtrak Train generally stops each hour along the journey, So when you book travel, from the beginning of the journey (most times Chicago), and the far end destination, you pass through towns and cities along the way. Some of them are small, and you are not allowed to leave the train at all, but others are places where the train crew change, and so they give the passengers a fresh-air break. A few places, they have to refuel the train, and in that case, you may get a half-hour or more, to get out, stretch your legs, and maybe explore the area nearby. An unexpected perk of travel. Always remember that the train will leave without you, so ask your car attendant what time you need to be back on the train.

Here are a few unplanned travel destinations that I have been glad to experience, along the way.

The Southwest Chief: Chicago to Los Angeles

Galesburg, Illinois is a quick smoke break sometimes. We usually can get off the train, and as long as we stay right by the door, we can take a few photos. We actually used this stop on a journey to California, leaving our original train, to then hop onto the California Zephyr, later in the afternoon. It’s a nice area, and the restaurants in the downtown area are just a quarter mile or so from the station. Glad I knew this area, and saved money, and hours more on the trains, for that one trip.

Fort Madison, Iowa is definitely a fresh-air break, though if you are running late, they may shorten it. Being we spent so many breaks in their town, we actually used it as a destination, and booked a room for 3 days, on one journey. They have taxi service, if you need it, and you can walk the riverfront area, if you decide to stay to visit.

Kansas City, Missouri is a main transfer point to the Missouri River Runner train to St. Louis, so the train stops there and it is definitely a fresh-air break. If the connecting train is late, you may be there for a bit of time, but I am unsure if I would want to try to get into the station, since it is at a much higher level, than trackside. Ask your train attendant, in regard to that. One time we spent several hours in that station, and it is quite beautiful inside. The neighborhood…not so much.

La Junta, Colorado is where a crew change happens, so we get a fresh-air break there. They warn you that you should not attempt to get some food across the street, because you won’t make it back in time (so buyer beware). Otherwise, step out and look at the train.

Raton, New Mexico just after the Raton pass, is a high elevation fresh-air break, where a crew change happens. The town is right by the station, so technically you could walk over, but that is definitely not recommended.

Albuquerque, New Mexico is a refueling stop, so the train gets serviced, and you can walk off and go into the town. The platform has venders who sell interesting wares, so you might want to check it out. You can then spend some time looking at their station. It is quite nice, and the bathrooms are good, too. There are two stores within walking distance, though I have never had a need to visit them.

Gallup, New Mexico is a quick fresh-air break, and if you have the time, it is worth getting out, for a look. The downtown route 66 road, is right there. Flagstaff, Arizona is usually busy, so it is about a 10-minute fresh-air stop. We spent several days there, and being it is the gateway to the Grand Canyon, we rented a car, and drove up to see it. The only problem with it, is the high elevation. Just a warning if you are sensitive to that.

Barstow, California is a fresh-air break, if you want to get out, stay right by the door to your car. Fullerton, California is the last fresh-air break, but again, don’t stray far from your door.

There are others, Dodge City, Kansas (Crew Change), Kingman, Arizona (Crew Change), Needles, California (Crew Change). But those are in the middle of the night, most times, so they don’t count. Middle of the night station stops are not announced, and chances are you are asleep, and have no idea where you are, if you wake up.

As you can see, the train gives you so much more than flying does.

Next up, The Lake Shore Limited.

Wednesday, June 11, 2025

Public TV Is About To Lose Their Funding

In the midst of all the chaos happening, the President is trying to pull back already allocated and approved funding for Public TV (and radio).

We have been attacked before, but usually they go after the 2 years into the future allocation.

Definitely an escalation in the normal attack on public media.

Instead of talking to people, I have been wearing my Austin City Limits shirts and my PBS Nerd shirt.

One does what one can.

I have a definite problem with contacting my representatives, at this time.

We will see if that holds.

Tuesday, June 10, 2025

Welcome To The Jungle - You Better Not Take It From Me - Year 18 Done

Guns and Roses starts us off, once again.

Year 18 is in the books. My blog has been a part of my life for so long, it amazes me, when I think about it.

So, what happed this year?

Our biggest change was the death of our beloved cat, Makenna. We miss her so much. She came into our lives shortly after I began blogging, so she has been a major player in some of my posts over the years. There are many things around the house that remind me of her, but the most important, to me, are the photos of her living her life with us. Godspeed my baby, and thanks for all the fish.

As to my Master’s degree, I have not used it in any physical form, but as our Government attacks education, women, and people who have not been in this Country for hundreds of years, I am so glad I went to the effort of getting it. It means something to me, to have learned what academia is, and why knowing history is so important. Especially now.

On the day the President announced his tariffs, my Husband and I booked a train trip across the United States. We do not trust the airlines and flying, at this time, and we wanted to see some of our Country, before it becomes impossible to do so in the future. I visited with my family, many who are not doing very well, which saddens me. I live 3 thousand miles away from them, and they will have to deal with their lives as best they can. We were glad to see each other for the first time since 2018 and I wish them well, in their journeys.

Further back, last September, we did manage to take a short vacation to Fort Madison for the River and Rail weekend. Things did not go as well as we would have liked, as to connecting with a car rental, but we made do, and had a real nice time by the Mississippi River (and meeting railfans from across the Country). From that trip, I saw the Rocky Mountains (all the way across) for the first time, and it was beautiful. Glad we did it. Unfortunately, our cat was not thrilled that we left, and felt that we abandoned her. I think that partially was why she went downhill so fast, in the Fall. Sigh…

We were feeling a little safer this year, so traveling was a bit easier in the Spring, but we still mask, when we need to. Especially on the trains, if we are not in a private room. As to the future, I am less sure about how safe we will be when traveling, but we will continue to get vaccinations, as we are able, and again, we always mask in crowded spaces.

As to this blog, I think I will continue for a bit, and if I am lucky, I will reach 20 years in 2027, and shut the thing down. Something to plan for, moving into year 19.

Bring it on!

Monday, June 9, 2025

Ferry Riding, Always An Adventure

My Water Post For Today.

Back to our ferry trip in 2015, from Orient Point, to New London, Connecticut.

10 years ago, I just can't believe it has been so long.

This shot was taken looking out at the water, and you can see the passageway on the ferry itself.

It's always an adventure, traveling on Long Island Sound.

I hope you enjoy.

Sunday, June 8, 2025

Orecchiette with Brussel Sprouts

I bought Brussel Sprouts on Friday.

On Saturday morning, I found this recipe on Pocket, and decided to make it, since we were going to refill our water bottles, outside our local market. Yes, they had Orecchiette, so I bought some. Wish me luck.

Orecchiette with Brussel Sprouts

Ingredients

Servings: 2-3 (makes about 4 1/2 cups)

• 1/2 teaspoon fine salt, plus more as needed
• 8 ounces dried orecchiette
• 2 tablespoons salted butter (regular or nondairy)
• 1 tablespoon olive oil
• 1 small yellow onion (6 ounces), chopped
• 2 garlic cloves, finely grated or pressed
• 8 ounces Brussels sprouts, trimmed and thinly sliced
• 1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper, plus more to taste
• 1/4 teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
• 1/4 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes
• 1/3 cup (about 1 ounce) finely grated regular or nondairy parmesan cheese (such as Violife or Follow Your Heart), plus more for serving
• 1/4 cup heavy cream or full-fat coconut milk
• 6 fresh sage leaves, thinly sliced

Directions

1. Step 1
Bring a medium pot of water to a boil over high heat, and season with salt. Stir in the orecchiette and cook according to the package directions until al dente. Reserve 1/2 cup of the cooking water and drain the pasta.

2. Step 2
While the pasta is cooking, in a large (12-inch) skillet over medium-high heat, heat the butter and oil. Once the butter starts to foam, add the onion and cook, stirring occasionally, until softened, about 4 minutes. Add the garlic and cook, stirring constantly, until fragrant, about 30 seconds. Add the Brussels sprouts, 1/2 teaspoon of the salt, the black pepper, nutmeg and red pepper flakes and cook, stirring frequently, until the sprouts start to soften, about 5 minutes. Add the parmesan, cream or coconut milk, and sage, stir to combine, and reduce the heat to low so the mixture gently simmers while the pasta finishes cooking.

3. Step 3
Add the pasta and 1/4 cup of the cooking water to the sprouts in the skillet. Toss together until well combined and the sauce coats the pasta. Add a little more cooking water to loosen the sauce, if needed. Taste, and season with more salt and pepper as needed.

4. Step 4
Divide among individual bowls, top with more parmesan and serve hot.

Substitutions
Orecchiette: fusilli or farfalle.
Brussels sprouts: green cabbage.

To make it spicier: increase the red pepper flakes to 1/2 or 1 teaspoon, depending on your heat tolerance.

Saturday, June 7, 2025

Cartellate

Cartellate or Cuccidatta?

My Dad's family is from Bari. I struggle with the fact that none of the recipes that my aunt made for the family, still exist.

Today, looking for something else, I came upon this photograph of a sweet treat made by people from Bari.

Yes, I said! That is one of the desserts that my aunt made.

They say it is called cartellate, and it is fried and then honey, or vincotto, is poured on top of it.

Honey I have done for struffoli, but the other dessert had something prune-like on it. The vincotto is grape juice that is boiled down until syrupy, and it has a flavor that is prune like. Could it be what I remember?

I have no idea, but I think I will check it out.

Cartellate

1 kilo (8 cups) of flour
40 gr (1.5 oz) yeast (cake type), disolved in a bit of water
200 ml (6.5 oz) olive oil
2 glasses of white wine
1 tsp salt
Olive oil for frying
Vincotto or Honey

Place the flour on a work surface, and make a well in the middle. Add the olive oil, wine and yeast and work it into the dough, kneading utill the dough is soft and elastic, (kind of like pizza)

Let it rise for a couple of hours, then punch it down. Divide into small balls.

Roll out each ball as thin as possible. With a zig-zagged edge pasta cutter (the rolling kind) cut strips that are 4 cm wide and 20-30 cm long. Fold each strip in two, length wise, so that the long edges are touching each other. Pinch the dough together with your fingers every 4-5 cm. Then roll the strip up, to form a kind of rose.

Heat a large pot of oil, and fry the roses until golden. Drain and let cool, on paper towels.

Bring a small pot of vincotto (or honey) to boil. Gently dip in each cartellate, swirling and pushing it under, so that it absorbs the vin cotto. Place on platter.

Once made, these will keep a couple of weeks.

Friday, June 6, 2025

Other Rail Trips This Summer?

We have been home from our grand tour of the United States for the past 2 months.

For a while there, the last thing I wanted to do, was get back on a train (a story for another day).

Now that we are both healed and feeling good again, things are going through my mind.

I would like to travel back to Flagstaff and catch the shuttle to Williams, Arizona. The next morning a train takes you within feet of the Grand Canyon. We are both seasoned visitors to the canyon, so we know how to get around without a car. It would be nice to return to it, and get the train ride both ways.

Another trip I am seriously thinking of, is taking the bus and train to Merced, and getting another bus to take us into Yosemite National Park. It is not expensive for the train and busses, but getting a hotel room is not an easy thing to book. So that one is also on hold, while I do more research.

El Paso via the Sunset Limited is also on my mind, which would get me close to Las Cruces/Mesilla, New Mexico.

New Orleans (without water problems) would be nice, also via the Sunset Limited.

Note: each train begins in Los Angeles, so it is easy for us to travel.

I hope I can get one of these going, fairly soon.

Thursday, June 5, 2025

We Had Thunder And Hail

On Tuesday afternoon, at around 4PM, we start hearing thunder!

We almost never get thunder, ever!

We assumed there was also lightning, but we did not see any.

After about a half hour of that, along came the rain, that I could show you.

No hail or anything, but just getting rain and thunder, is pretty rare here.

2 tenths of an inch, but we take what we can get.

Tuesday, June 3, 2025

It Was (Once Again) The 3rd Of June

This was posted on the morning of June 3rd, by Sarah Kindzior. She gets it right, always.

The photo is from Life Magazine.

=========================

It was the 30th of December, and I was driving the Natchez Trace Parkway, looking for Bobbie Gentry.

I didn’t want to find her. I only wanted to know she was out there, eluding everyone.

I wanted her to outwit every man who did her wrong. Many are dead: Bobbie Gentry is in her 80s. She hasn’t appeared on stage since 1981, when, after a series of music industry disputes, she left public life behind with a steadfastness unrivaled.

I was not the first to explore Chickasaw County, Mississippi and other Gentry haunts, hoping for a glimpse of the singer. For over forty years, no stranger has tracked her down. Gentry wanted to disappear and she got her way. She is rumored to be happy. I am likely angrier about the treatment of Bobbie Gentry than Bobbie Gentry is.

It’s only fair when a trailblazing woman gets burned that younger women pick up the torch.

In 1967, Bobbie Gentry destroyed the Summer of Love. The Beatles crooned “All You Need Is Love”, flower-haired hippies swayed — and in July, Bobbie Gentry released “Ode to Billie Joe”, a spare acoustic ballad about a suicide whose true horror was the politesse and apathy which with it was greeted.

What America needed was not love. America needed truth served cold and clever. “Ode to Billie Joe” framed cruel indifference as mystery. Americans ate it up like a southern noontime dinner.

Ode to Billie Joe knocked Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band off the top spot. It made Gentry, who wrote and sang the title track, a massive star. The genre-defying hit — “I don’t sing white or colored; I sing southern,” she explained — dominated the Hot 100, country, easy listening, and R and B charts. Gentry was indefinable, independent, and confident in her dark lyricism.

As a result, she had to be punished. America loves to blame the messenger, especially when the message presages darker days. Some believe the flower power era ended with the Manson murders. “Ode to Billie Joe” suggests the sunny sixties never existed.

“Ode to Billie Joe” is the first-person tale of a family eating dinner on the third of June, “another sleepy dusty Delta day.” They are discussing Billie Joe McAllister, a local boy who died after jumping off the Tallahatchie Bridge. Later, it is revealed that not long before his death, a preacher saw Billie Joe throw something — never named — off the bridge while accompanied by the female narrator of the song. The family members portray Billie Joe’s death as inevitable (“Nothin’ ever comes to no good up on Choctaw Ridge”) and unimportant.

They care more about their meal than his suicide. The song’s most chilling line is “Pass the biscuits, please.”

The parents do not notice how Billie Joe’s death shakes the narrator. In the final verse, it is a year later, and she spends her time throwing flowers off the Tallahatchie Bridge. During that year, “There was a virus goin’ ‘round and papa caught it and he died last spring, and now mama doesn't seem to wanna do much of anything”.

She recites these horrors like a grocery list.

* * *

In the years after 2020 — when covid ravaged America and protests raged over the brutal murder of George Floyd, only for both tragedies to ultimately be abandoned in favor of apathy — I listened to “Ode to Billie Joe” hundreds of times.

The Summer of 2020 was no Summer of Love. But it was a summer that was supposed to mean something. The next few years were aimed at convincing us that it didn’t, and that we were foolish to believe it would. The real crime was compassion. The real crime was noticing and caring and wanting to make it right.

The biggest villains, in the Biden years, were the messengers: epidemiologists and activists and documentarians of tragedy battling a brigade of pundits and politicians who wanted us to pass the biscuits, please, and ignore that body under the bridge.

* * *

One would think that after “Ode to Billie Joe” — a commercial success and lyrical masterpiece housed in the University of Mississippi library next to Faulkner — Bobbie Gentry would be allowed to do whatever she wanted.

To believe this is to not understand how women are treated in creative industries. When a woman has an unconventional hit, the reaction is often to try to contain her, even sabotage her. Success does not protect female writers — not even from their own publishers.

Instead of gaining support, Gentry found her abilities questioned. “I am a woman working for herself in a man’s field,” she told an interviewer in 1974. Reporters insulted her intelligence. Men took credit for her ideas. She was entangled in industry lawsuits, which she won. She became so wary of management contracts that she limited them to six months to ensure her freedom. Every career move was a tightrope of painstaking navigation and vindicated paranoia.

Her follow-up, The Delta Sweete, was true to Gentry’s vision: enigmatic ballads, raucous soul, and dark southern covers, including “Sermon” (popularized by Johnny Cash as “God’s Gonna Cut You Down”) and “Parchman Farm”, about the notorious Mississippi prison. The US press largely ignored the album and it sold poorly.

“No one bought [The Delta Sweete] but I didn’t lose any sleep over it,” said Gentry in 1968. [1] I don’t know whether to believe her, but I’m glad she said it.

When America lost interest in Gentry, she became the first female songwriter to host a variety show on the BBC. She often co-directed, but the BBC would not give her formal credit, and she left.

When America regained interest in Gentry, she headlined Vegas revues and partnered with Glen Campbell, becoming an Americana sex symbol and a southern gothic intellectual all at once. A bandmate described her as “an overpowering presence” who micromanaged her elaborate shows [2]. In Vegas, she married a rich man 31 years her senior and divorced him four months later, making lots of money. She signed on to an “Ode to Billie Joe” movie, making lots of money again.

Enough money to vanish in style.

The 1970s brought the voluntary end of Gentry’s career and some of her best songs. In 1969, she headed to FAME Studios in Muscle Shoals, Alabama to record Fancy, released in 1970, under the production of Rick Hall, one of few men to consistently champion her talent.

While on book tour this April, I visited FAME. I stood under the Fancy cover: a painting of Gentry wearing the red velvet high-slit gown of her album’s protagonist, a teenage girl named Fancy who slept her way out of destitution and into independence, unrepentant about doing what she needed to survive.

The tour guide played “Fancy” in the very room where Gentry recorded it. I felt like I was seeing a ghost, but it was the indomitable spirit of the song: Gentry’s second and final hit. Like Fancy, Gentry rewrote the rules of a rigged game before she quit it.

Gentry’s 1971 album, Patchwork, was another commercial failure. Produced solely by Gentry, it alternates between character vignettes; musical interludes; and wry, sad confessions — in particular, the closer, “Lookin’ In”:

I'm packin’ up and I'm checkin’ out, I'm on the road again
Feelin’ like I'm in a pantomime
But the words will come to me in their own good time
Tumblin’ and stumblin’ over in rhyme
And the ugliest word that I ever heard, my friends, is sacrifice
It’s an easy out for all you should have been…

She never made another record.

* * *

Bobbie Gentry was so ahead of her time that she had to leave it.

She sang of the south, where she was raised. She lived in Greenwood, Mississippi in 1955, the year Emmett Till visited and was murdered by racists who threw his corpse in the Tallahatchie River. Gentry was thirteen, a year younger than Till.

Was “Ode to Billie Joe” inspired by Till’s murder? No one knows. Gentry refused to reveal what was thrown off the bridge, believing it incidental to the indifference expressed in the face of tragedy. Scholar Kristine M. McCusker hypothesized that the song reflects changing attitudes of southern whites — including whether to show guilt — at the time Gentry penned the lyrics.

“Ode to Billie Joe” reflects 1955 and 1967 and 2025. American cruelty masquerading as respectability is timeless. What’s hard to fathom today is a cutting social critique becoming a mainstream hit. The music industry has been drained of its power to reflect the people, despite Gentry’s themes resonating now more than ever.

This is particularly true since 2021. The pandemic “ended” when officials decided to bury public health data: another sleepy Delta covid day. Sedition went unpunished until public memory became blurred enough to rehabilitate a coup plotter. Promises made in 2020 to end racist police brutality were not only broken but mocked by the very politicians who made them. (In one particularly grotesque example, Nancy Pelosi thanked George Floyd for dying.)

On social media, anyone could join the callous chat. Americans mourning loved ones were berated. Americans hit by natural disasters were told by distant strangers to “just move.” Americans stripped of rights were ignored by former allies. Emotional breakdowns in public places were filmed and posted online so that a person having the worst day of their life could have an even worse one. Americans were told they deserved what they got and what they got was horrific: the agony, and the apathy.

Cruelty was incentivized for profit and boosted by algorithm. Good-faith arguments could not happen when both “good” and “faith” had vanished. But Americans were not supposed to discuss that: not in a way that acknowledged collective pain. We were told to “move forward”, politician code for “turn your back”. Move forward, they implored, justice is divisive to the unjust.

Gentry is foremost a storyteller. Her songs are not overtly political. But tragedy feeds politics, and politics breeds tragedy, and Americans have been both the predators and the prey. There are few who convey the cruelty of abandonment, and its maddening ambiguity, like Bobbie Gentry.

“Ode to Billie Joe” is known as a sad song. But its sadness lies in the absence of mourning. Death came and people shrugged. If they grieved, they grieved alone.

* * *

In December 2023, I belted out Bobbie Gentry songs as I drove through her name-checked towns of Kosciusko and Okolona and Tupelo. I took in the lay of her land, imagining it in her time. But it is still Gentry’s time: it will always be Gentry’s time. In America, every day is the third of June.

Over the last four years, as cruelty flourished and creativity fell under fire, I turned to Gentry. She didn’t compromise; she didn’t cut and run. She outwitted the industry that sought to suppress her. She had faith that her work would endure after she left the stage — and it did. Gentry destroyed respectability and then did the most scandalous thing of all: abandoned fame for freedom.

[1] Quote from Tara Murtha, Bobbie Gentry’s Ode to Billie Joe.

[2] Quote from Tara Murtha, Bobbie Gentry’s Ode to Billie Joe.

My Train Travel Help Site Is Being Attacked

I have been getting messages from my Train Travel Help Website, as I mentioned on THIS post.

I did what I could, in regard to blocking the attack, and it worked for several weeks.

On Sunday it became horrid, an attack every minute or so.

I went back in and increased the lock-out time, and only let the attacker get one chance to log in.

It did get better, finally, but in the morning I did more research.

What I was experiencing is something called a Brute Force Attack, and I guess Wordpress (dot org) gets hit with it often, according to this VIDEO.

If my adjustments hold, I won't have to do the next thing the video recommends, which is adjust the code to disable the xmlrpc.

I would prefer to leave the code the way it is, but if I have to, at least I now know what to do.

I really love my website, and would prefer keeping it, but if all else fails, I have to take down every post and page, to kill it. There is no easy way to take down a website on Wordpress dot org.

Ugh!

Monday, June 2, 2025

The Hudson River In 2025

My Water Post For Today.

A really beautiful view of the Hudson River, from our recent trip through Albany, NY.

I love the fact that the river is so calm and it reflects the scenery, so well.

You are looking at the I-90 Hwy going over the river, just north of us.

I hope you enjoy.

Sunday, June 1, 2025

Train Boards At Moynihan

I have traveled through Penn Station for my entire life.

It was always a chaotic place, with the board that had flip cards for the stations.

The new Moynihan train hall has these easy to read boards, with the machines where you can purchase your tickets, for both Amtrak, and the Long Island Railroad.

You used to have to go to a window, to buy a one-trip pass, at Penn.

Life has improved, for the better in NYC.