Here's Ben & the girls by one of the many bridges in Central Park. The girls were amazed by the size of this bridge and enjoyed yelling and hearing their echoes.
One of our goals in going this trip was to do a little bit of letterboxing. This is a new hobby that we've found. It's basically like a scavenger hunt...you find clues online and it directs you to a letterbox. In the letterbox are a rubber stamp and a log. After stamping both logbooks (theirs & ours), you re-hide the box in the same place you found it for someone else to find. We've done this a couple times on hiking trails near us, but had found clues for a few in NYC that we thought it would be fun to find.
This letterbox is called Goliath and it was in Central Park. This was a hard one for us to find...we were directed to a certain section of the Park (near the "Loch") and from there we were supposed to find (in this order...) a rustic bridge, then a huge fallen log, a shelf of rocks, and then the tallest oak tree near said rocks. Well, as I mentioned above, there are MANY bridges in Central Park, so we found one, followed the path past a huge log, and found a tree near some rocks, but NO BOX. So, we kept walking and found a new bridge, log, rocks, & tree, and TA-DA, there was the box! We had almost given up, so we were all so excited to have found Goliath! (All except for Julia...she didn't have a care in the world beyond the crackers on the stroller tray...)
Our next purpose in going into the City was to take a boat ride past the waterfalls (these were man-made waterfalls put up as a public art exhibit over this summer). We had gotten tickets for this boat ride when Martin & Shelly were in town in July (we couldn't get on the boat then, so we got these tickets for now). We thought we'd left Central Park in plenty of time to get to the boat, but, between needing to switch subway trains to get there, a last minute bathroom stop, and having to walk about 15 minutes to get to the Pier (at a 3-year old's pace), we ended up being late... by about one minute. We saw them pulling up the gangplank and everything. We tried to buy tickets for a later boat ride, but since this was the last weekend for the exhibit, they were all sold out. We were all very disappointed...especially to have been quite so close. My niece Emma told us "If you had just not eaten breakfast, or eaten breakfast at a restaurant, then you would have made it onto the boat" Helpful advice...
The girls were fairly sad...until we promised them we'd find ice cream after lunch... So, instead of seeing the waterfalls from the boat, we saw them from the pier and then went and ate at a seafood restaurant at the South Street Seaport. Then we walked down to Battery Park (which overlooks the Statue of Liberty). There, we found ice cream and another letterbox. This one was called "I love New York" and was in Battery Park in the roots of a tree that looks like a "devil's pitchfork". This tree fit the bill perfectly.
We went looking for another letterbox, but this one didn't have as clear of a starting place, and we couldn't ever find it.
2 comments:
Sounds like a fun (and long!)day. I'm sad for you about the boat ride, but I'm sure the view of the waterfalls from the pier was pretty good too. We really don't make Emma skip breakfast to get places on time. She's got solutions to just about everything if you ever need advice :)
So neat that you had a nice day in spite of the disappointment about the boat ride. The letterbox hunt sounds fun.
Love, Mom
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