April Fools Day came a day late

We woke up to about four inches of snow now this morning. Usually when it snows we just step out onto the patio and take a picture. What this means is that we keep taking pretty much the same picture over and over again. This time, however, I decided to go down to the dock to see if I could get something a little different.

This forlorn little guy sits on a wall by the dock. After an early very cold start to Winter, followed by four Nor’easters in three weeks, and now significant accumulating snow in April I know exactly how he/she feels.

Taken with a Sony A77II and Minolta Maxxum AF 50mm f1.7.

Turkeys in our meadow

We seem to be getting a lot of wild turkeys this year. I was just waking up when I heard a loud ‘gobble gobble’ sound from downstairs. I grabbed a camera and went down to find these four (I’ve seen as many as 16 at one time) just outside our sun room. Of course they quickly noticed me and started to take off, but I was able to get a few shots (including this one) before they disappeared over the horizon.

Taken with a Sony Alpha 500 and Tamron A18 AF 188-250mm f3.5-6.3.

Lamp on a wrought iron gate

Taken from the Lotte New York Palace Hotel looking across Madison Avenue towards St. Patrick’s Cathedral.

According to Wikipedia:

The building was constructed in 1884, designed by architect Joseph M. Wells of the architecture firm McKim, Mead and White. It is considered to be a Roman design with specific Renaissance touch points. Among the artists who worked on the building’s elaborate interior were artist John La Farge, sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens and painter Maitland Armstrong.

The houses were commissioned by Henry Villard, then president of the Northern Pacific Railway, shortly before his railroad empire began to crumble. Ownership of the building changed through many hands throughout the century. The houses themselves are now owned by the Sultan of Brunei, while the land remains the property of the Archdiocese of New York under a 99-year lease.

In 1968, the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission designated the complex an historical landmark. A combined restoration/new hotel complex construction project was proposed by real estate developer Harry B. Helmsley who constructed the 51-story New York Palace Hotel tower directly behind the original building. The project was designed by architects Emery Roth & Sons and Hardy Holzman Pfeiffer in 1977 and completed in 1980.

The original building was restored in 2003 and office space was furnished for city preservation group The Municipal Art Society, as part of an agreement to save the building from demolition. As a part of the renovation of the hotel, part of what is now known as the Villard Mansion is available as an event rental.

In 2014, the residences were available for public viewing when they hosted the annual Kips Bay Decorator Show House program to raise money for the Kips Bay Boys & Girls Club.

Curiously I’ve already posted about the Helmsley mausoleum and the Villard Memorial, both of which are in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery.

Taken with a Sony NEX 5n and Canon 50mm f1.4 LTM.