Show Posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.


Messages - BLeafe

Pages: 1 ... 195 196 [197] 198 199 ... 278
2941
Hackensack Discussion / Photos: scary scene
« on: May 29, 2011, 06:10:05 PM »
I saw this from my living room, but I couldn't see what happened other than a man appeared to be injured at the northern end of State Street.

These three photos go from sympathy (someone's hurt) to horror (they're covering him with a sheet? Is he dead?) to relief (they never put the sheet down, a woman is smiling - they're shading him from the sun).


2942
Hackensack Discussion / Re: Anyone know why..........
« on: May 29, 2011, 05:52:39 PM »
It's a brand new flag, that's obvious, possibly they installed for Memorial Day...

... will they return to raise to the top of the staff at noon...?

I think you're right.

I didn't notice that it was a new flag, but if you look at the below picture from a week ago, it looks pretty ragged in comparison.

As for them raising it at noon tomorrow...........surprise us, Sears!


2943
http://cgi.ebay.com/1883-207-Grocer-cc-Hackensack-NJ-Trenton-NJ-/400218947514?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item5d2ee87fba

Description:

Banta Bros. Fine Grocers cc advertising on June 8, 1883 cover franked with Scott #207 w/fancy geometric cancel from Hackensack, NJ to Trenton, NJ with New York Transit b/s. Cover has couple small tears in top margin from opening.


2944
...AND another Red Lion Inn! (but forgets to post pictures)


2945
Hackensack Discussion / Anyone know why..........
« on: May 27, 2011, 05:10:56 PM »
............."and co" had their flag at 40%-staff today? Maybe for the Joplin tornado victims?

I called the store and no one seemed to know. Great management and great measurement.


2947
It's Fleet Week and the nautical event of the day was the Parade of Ships, led by the USS New York - the warship with salvaged World Trade Center steel in its bow.

Starting at 8:30am, the ships were to pass the Statue of Liberty, continue up the Hudson, turn around at the George Washington Bridge and get back to port by noon.

The only viewing location near the GWB mentioned by The Record was Fort Lee Historic Park, but that really doesn't have a good southern view, which might be a problem if the turning point was short of the GWB.

Ross Dock might have been an option, but I wanted a higher angle to shoot from (less bright sky in the frame would mean fewer dark shots from the auto setting), so the only place that made any sense to shoot from was on the bridge itself.

I guessed that the ships wouldn't get that far north until at least 9:30-10:00, so I got there at 9:15. I figured it would be crowded................nothing. I walked across the bridge looking for signs of the parade..............nothing.

I walked over to the 178th St bus terminal, went in and took GWB pictures from the upstairs bus platform exit and sat in the Platform 21 waiting area for a half-hour while taking cellphone shots before heading back to the bridge.

Back on the GWB, I still saw no sign of a parade of mighty ships. I DID see bridge flyovers by military jets, helicopters, and those goofy-looking Ospreys, but no big ships.

FINALLY, at about 11:15, I saw a distant lump on the water that wasn't there before. It was the New York. Ten minutes later, while it was still at least a mile away, it started turning around! And there were no big ships behind it!

By 11:35, it was all over, so I walked back to Fort Lee. I passed the exit for Fort Lee Historic Park and saw a line of cars leaving. I asked one driver if he saw the New York. Our Editor would not be happy if I printed the driver's response.

So at least I made the right decision and got a couple of halfway-decent shots from far away, but nothing like what I was expecting to get if the ship had turned around where it was supposed to (notice the good color in the closer shots).


The pictures:

1-3. The Flyovers (jets, helicopter, Ospreys). I'm pretty sure the helicopter is commercial, but it's the only aircraft flyover photo I got where part of the GWB is visible.

4. Crane barge. This colorful Italian-flavored barge came from the north and wound up right at the New York's turning point.............best seat in the house.

5. The USS New York starts turning. This was as tight a shot with the Empire State Building as I could get because I was too far on the NY side of the bridge.

6-7. My best shot of the New York. Blown up, you can see all the sailors on deck fairly clearly (remember, it's over a mile away).

8. The wide shot: included are the Empire State Building, a seagull, the USS New York, the Italian crane barge, New Jersey, and the only boat that actually turned around at the GWB (next pic).

9. The Three Forty Three - a FDNY fireboat - makes the turn at the GWB.

Imagine the pictures I could have gotten if the New York had done the same. Of course, the river is at its least widest point at the GWB - that's why it was built there - but with all the barges pushing the New York into its turn with lots of room to spare, it could have made it.

Anyway, thanks to the FDNY for getting it right.


2948
Hammy would probably prefer that the wasp be first swallowed by a nice juicy pigeon before he dines on it.


2949
http://cgi.ebay.com/1936-AD-SALE-SOUTHERN-COLONIAL-HACKENSACK-/140554101623?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item20b9ad6377

Description:

You are bidding on a 1936 AD FOR SALE OF 10-ROOM, 4-BATH SOUTHERN COLONIAL HOME IN HACKENSACK for $22,000. This piece measures approximately 3 1/4 by 3 3/4 inches and is in very good original condition, ready to be trimmed, matted and framed.



2950
A two-fer shot!

I was in my kitchen today and saw this weird flying insect with a loooooong tail sitting outside the window. I grabbed the camera, went out on the roof and got a couple of shots before it took off.

Here's what I learned:

This is a female Ichneumon wasp. Its long “tail” is an ovipositor - an egg-layer. Typically, it will wander over the surface of logs, and tree trunks, tapping with its antennae, searching for the scent of wood boring larvae of the horntail wasps.

Upon sensing the vibrations emitted by a wood-boring host, the female wasp will drill her ovipositor into the wood until it reaches the cavity wherein lies the host. She then injects an egg through the hollow tube into the body cavity. There the egg will hatch and the resulting larva will devour its host before emergence.

How a female is able to drill with her ovipositor into solid wood is still somewhat of a mystery to science, though it has been found that there is metal (ionized manganese or zinc) in the extreme tip of some species' ovipositors. The adult insect, following pupation is faced with the problem of extricating itself from tunnels of its host. Fortunately, the high metal concentrations are not limited to the female's ovipositor as the mandibles of the adult are also hardened with metals and it uses these to chew itself out of the wood.



On a seemingly-unrelated note.............every May, without fail, I get some tiny red mites in my bathroom. I think they get in via a very old skylight. They're harmless, but DO leave a semi-indelible bright red stain if crushed.

There's one in the picture to the left of the end of the wasp's abdomen. I found out yesterday that it's a clover mite (and not a spider mite, which has two spots).

Clover mite and Ichneumon wasp - two terms I didn't know two days ago.


2951
Hackensack Videos / Re: Hackensack River County Park
« on: May 24, 2011, 01:25:37 AM »
I had never been to this park before, so I went on April 17 and it was a disappointment. Part of that was my own fault for going the day after heavy rains, so I couldn't go very far in any direction.

I took a total of 3 pictures and 2 involved shopping carts.

I remember reading a couple of years ago about certain activities that went on there and thought that was all in the past. That was before some guy with a latte strolled up to me and asked me several times how I was and seemed concerned that I might be leaving because the trails were blocked by water. Maybe he was the cop mentioned in the video.

I didn't stick around to find out.


2952
Hackensack Discussion / Re: Sears gets a facelift
« on: May 23, 2011, 06:14:10 PM »
Here's how the sign will look tomorrow:

(BTW - I corrected the subject)

2953
Hackensack Discussion / Re: Sears gets a facelift
« on: May 23, 2011, 10:40:20 AM »
Here's what it looked like at 8:30 this morning. They must have done this work super-early and just stopped at a certain time with an unfinished wall and only 5 letters painted.


2954
I took these yesterday:


1. Love the outfit - especially the gloves. Looks like she's marching in the Arbor Day parade.

2. Kipps Bend

3. You need a really strong truck for this load.

4. The balloons reflect as someone who I hope is not an airhead.

5. Dad was in the shot (he kicked the ball), but it looks more interesting this way (sorry, Dad).


2955
Hackensack Discussion / Sears gets a facelift
« on: May 22, 2011, 04:07:09 PM »
This occurred early this morning. My guess is that it's time to repaint the letters. You can see that this procedure removed a lot of the blue paint and that the cherry-picker sports a painting company's website address.

The last time I saw them paint the letters was when they changed them from red to blue 17 years ago, as you can see in the second image (taken from my site).


Pages: 1 ... 195 196 [197] 198 199 ... 278
anything