Friday, June 22, 2012

Start of Summer

Well, the summer has officially begun. And so far, it has not been nice - we nearly hit 100F today plus the usual unpleasant humidity. Ugh! Certainly hoping for better temperatures tomorrow - a fun day in New York awaits: Terracotta Warriors and Bioluminescent Creatures!
The Philadelphia Comic Con was a tremendous success, though a rather exhausting one (some things could have been certainly planned better). And now that the historical first appearance of the Five Captains has occured, I can honestly feel much better about not being able to go to London. Aside for my love for the city itself, I was actually bugging me that such a first was completely unreachable. But no more! Kudos to the Wizard World! I keep hoping to create a separate page for all my Star Trek-related stuff, and as per usual, I can never find time to do so.
And speaking of my usual summer activities, this year I will be going to the Big Brook location again with the AMNH (must be my 8th or 9th visit); last year the trip coincided with the Las Vegas Convention, and the fossil teeth were soundly beaten by demand for the Star Trek activities, but I did miss it.

Monday, May 21, 2012

Additional Things to See - Revised

Revised events:
April 27-29 - Chiller Theater (that was a neat signing event, not sure if it can be called a convention in true sense of the word; managed to get a few autographs, enjoyed the interestingly dressed crowds - figure a Star Trek convention only with skulls and blood :D)
May 10-13 - 2012 New York City Metro Show, (had to miss it, other things were planned at home)
May 31st - June 3 - Philadelphia Comic Con ((screaming in delight) the Five Captains will be there, I am so going!!!)
October 11-14 - New York Comic Con (will see about this one)
October 19-21 - Star Trek London (the first con to announce all Five Captains; terribly tempting but unfortunately too expensive - 95% of the convention budget has already been spent)
 
Meanwhile, there is a new awesome exhibition at Discovery Times Square - Terracotta Warriors! A must!

Spring

Can't believe that we are already in the second half of May! Just had an absolutely glorious afternoon last weekend, which is now unfortunately followed by a week of warm rains.
What a mild spring this has been! Sunny and rainy in good proportion, and not too humid. Granted April had not a particularly pleasant weather, too many rapid temperature jumps and quite a bit of rain. March, on the other hand, was unusually bright, fresh and very uplifting. As a matter of fact, this was one of the warmest Marches on record. Still, I don't think we actually had any typical crystal-crisp spring days when the air is so piercingly clear you get light-headed.
I just re-read the above - as the song goes, "nature has no bad weater" but what an imperfect being a human is. Never quite satisfied. What we had had so far in this first third of the year certainly makes the memories of the last year's weather excesses seem like a horrible nightmare. Generally speaking, last year was something else weather-wise, and it was true the world over. I read an article online some time ago - there were twelve (!) over-billion-dollar natural disasters in the United States alone in 2011, three of which hit the East Coast. Some experience, eh?
One can argue forever if the climate is heading into some extraordinary shift with all these freak storms and droughts and earthquakes. The Earth is everchanging whether humanity likes / accepts / believes it or not, and its geological history may be interpreted as a litany of woes. There is only hope that the worst can be somehow avoided with better science, timely warnings and appropriate actions.
So the three big ones: the snowstorm series that hit North Eastern states in the beginning of 2011 (I have written about them when I started this blog; truly bad, bad weather, that Nor'Easter had practically buried the coast); then, of course, the hurricane Irene happened in August, promptly followed by a short but nasty Halloween snowstorm. Between all that, the East Coast also got hit with a pretty far ranging earthquake and was one part of the country suffering under an extensive heat plume.
Irene was truly terrifying. Let's face it, the Greater New York area is not used to excesses of this nature (pun not intended). The preparations were extensive, some said too extensive due a scandal relating to a complete mismanagement of the winter storms earlier in the year. My opinion, given how deadly this sort of system could potentially be, better be safe than sorry. Yes, over three million people were evacuated and a ton of public money spent but had the hurricane moved the way half of the models predicted, the losses would have been staggering. And you know, until probably midnight the day before the hurricane made landfall, I still didn't believe that anything would happen. And it was obvious from TV reports that most people in the area didn't either. There was a bit of a growing dread as the first drizzles and rains arrived and wind gusts appeared. The main concern in Morris county was the flooding (there are plenty of little and not so little lakes and rivers and streams) and, of course, the high winds causing trees and wires to fall. I remember I woke up at 5am to check things out - all seemed rather quiet and normal, so I went back to bed. An hour later the firefighters were knocking on our door - the entire area was getting flash-flooded, our driveway and garage were already ankle-deep in water. We had to spend half a day at a local Red Cross shelter, and then the next couple of weeks cleaning and drying out the basement and the garage, and waiting for the power to come back on. All in all, the eye of the hurricane passed within 30 miles of us, right over Manhattan which, along with other boroughs, thankfully did not suffer too many ill effects (it was an eery sight - the empty streets of the City; for the first time, the entire transit system was shut down). I suppose one can say that with all the scientists' predictions on the big and bad one, New York has dodged the bullet yet again.
The earthquake certainly caught everyone by surprise. It has actually occurred in Virginia but was felt throughout most of the Eastern Seaboard. The geological crust composition here makes the earthquakes' epicenters very shallow, so their effects will propagate and spead much more widely than in the West. Very widely - quite a stretch from Atlant to Quebec City! On a personal note, the sensation of a rocking office building is highly unpleasant... Though thankfully no casualties were reported, this earthquake did cause quite a bit of damage. The Washington Monument is now closed indefinitely.
And then, of course, the Halloween storm. Talk about unexpected. After an already very wet August, topped with the water brought by Irene, the over-saturated ground could barely hold the hurricane-wind-abused trees. Plus it was only the end of October, and most of them still had leaves on. It was obvious that the enormous pressure brought by a significant snow dump will cause a lot of problems. You could literally hear creaking and groaning through both day and night. Thousands and thousands of trees fallen, snapped in half, limbs broken. Terrible sight!
I'll try to find some photos and maybe add some more details to all of the above.
Hmm, I only wanted to comment on the spring, and all of a sudden a whole essay came out.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Additional Things to See

Wow, we are already in April! 2012 is certainly racing ahead. A few more things peaked my attention recently:
April 27-29 - Chiller Theater (goodness, check out the guest list!!!)
May 10-13 - 2012 New York City Metro Show, first one, too. Have to miss it, unfortunately...
May 31st - June 3 - Philadelphia Comic Con (ditto!)
October 11-14 - New York Comic Con
October 19-21 - Star Trek London
Is this turning out to be a year of conventions?!

Incidentally, Happy First Contact Day!!!

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Things to See in the Upcoming Months

Well, let see:
January 18th - The Secret Science Club presents Astrophysicist and Cosmologist David Hogg (didn't work out but I find the concept of a Science Club very intriguing; definitely something to check out further)
January 21st - the tickets go on sale for William Shatner's Broadway one-man show Shatner's World: We Just Live in It at The Music Box Theater (got a good seat for the opening night!!!)
January 20-22nd - Antiques Show at the Armory (Lexington Ave & 26th St; pity but due to a cold I couldn't make it)
January 21-22nd - Americana & Antiques at the Pier (Pier 92 NYC; similar to above, still feeling quite blah)
January 23rd - A Universe from Nothing with Lawrence Krauss at Hayden Planetarium (fantastic presentation!)
January 28th - RUGM Open House (got some very nice specimens!)
February 1st - A walkthrough trip to a LEED-certified DAS showroom on 6th Ave, arranged through SKYed
February 2nd - No Bones About It with Carl Mehling at AMNH (as usual, a great program)
February 14th - Shatner's World opening night (hysterical!!!)
February 25-26th - The Morristown Armory Antiques Show (found the animal print I've really wanted to purchase!!!)
February (end) - the third Propworx Star Trek Auction (well, this is not really a physical location but a great event nonetheless - Update: turned out to be a bit less than great, the props were somewhat less interesting and much less affordable than last time)
March 6th - Museum Inside-Out with Sidney Horenstein at AMNH (fascinating things about the museum building itself!)
March 31st - New special exhibition opens at AMNH - Creatures of Light. Subject matter is bioluminescence!

In addition, a whole host of fantastic new exhibitions are opening at the Metropolitan! Hopefully, I will eventually get to post further info on all of my trips.

Generally speaking, lots of plans as usual; the to-do list has grown to the size of a small notebook. Shoot, trying to get everything sorted and organized seems to be an exercise in futility half the time!

Sunday, January 1, 2012

Happy New Year!!!

HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL!!! HERE'S HOPING TO A KINDER AND GENTLER YEAR!



P.S. Also hoping to publish some updates with photoes from last year. There is no denying - 2011 was a rough year but it also had plenty of moments worth to be remembered fondly. As Albert Einstein said: "Learn from yesterday, live for today, hope for tomorrow."

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Adele

Well. So, the concert I was so looking forward to did not happen... What a pity!
There are still issues with Adele's throat. I do not know what the powers that be are thinking but this has been going on for months now, and this is yet another string of concerts that had to be cancelled due to her illness. I am torn between feeling bad for her and wondering where the hell common sense is in this situation.
I do hope she gets well soon and the concerts resume at a later date. Meanwhile, I am glad that I found out about the tour cancellation quickly enough and cancelled my hotel reservation in time.

Friday, September 30, 2011

Morris Museum

Last Friday, I had a chance to drop by the Morris Museum. Haven't been there in quite some time. It is one of those little museums which, even with their limited resources and exhibition space, can still harbor a golden nugget of wonder.
In this case, it is probably one of the best exhibitions this museum has ever had - Musical Machines and Living Dolls: The Murtogh D. Guinness Collection of Mechanical Musical Instruments and Automata.
Fascinating excurse into incredible mechanical prowess of XIX to early XX centuries. The "living" dolls were like little snapshots of their time period. But the musical machines were particularly interesting. I loved the timeline presented at the end of the hall, placing the mechanical musical machines as the forefathers of the music carriers that followed (i.e. vinyls, tapes, CD's).

Thursday, September 29, 2011

The Millionairess

What a fantastic performance!!! Truly exceptional! Even though this was not an actual play - it was a reading, not a full production - the actors were still playing. Amazing! Kate Mulgrew was incomparable and brought the house down on several occasions!
This was one of the monthly Project Shaw readings (the 65th one, by the way), and was held at The Players Club in Gramercy Park.
There is some more information, as well as helpful links and wonderful photos here.

Monday, September 12, 2011

Lots of Plans

Lots of plans for this fall. Generally, this has turned out to be one eventful year...
...sigh...I really need to do more posting.

September 26th - The Millionairess with Kate Mulgrew
October 6th - Shatner signing his new book at Barnes & Noble on 5th Ave - MISSED :(
October 7th - Adele's concert in Atlantic City (Borgata!) - CANCELLED :(
October 12th - Scenes Behind Paleontology visit to AMNH with Carl Mehling
October 16th - a fossil-collecting trip to Saint Claire, Pennsylvania with the Rutgers Museum of Geology
October 19th - potentially (no confirmation yet), a site visit to Ground Zero as part of a AACE meeting
October 28th-30th - yet another Morristown Antiques Show
November 5th - Explore Lower Manhattan walk with AMNH's Sidney Horenstein
November 28th - Andre Rieu's concert in Newark

Hopefully, between all this, I'll be able to fit a trip to Philadelphia I have been promising my relatives for a while now. And then we nicely move into the holiday season! Can't wait!