A couple of cars – snap!

Anyone reading this who may remember me during my time in Geneva, Switzerland may recall that the car above was my car, seen here with my late wife, Eirah in front of our house in Cologny. I loved that car, but unfortunately couldn’t bring it to NY when I moved. Fast forward 20 plus years or so. I was walking around in my village, Briarcliff Manor, NY when I came across the second car. It’s for sale too.

The first picture was taken with a long forgotten film camera, the second with an Iphone SE II.

A red truck

This was taken from the train during a trip into New York City (Manhattan). I think I was attracted to two things.

First the bright red color of the truck contrasting with the rather dour look of the buildings, and second the way that the rather large truck was dwarfed by the buildings. So much so that it looks a little like a toy.

Taken with a Sony Nex 5N and adapted f2 Jupiter 8 (a manual focus vintage lens)

A walk to Ossining – Albany Post Road (Route 9)

As I was walking past the house in the preceding post three men doing garden maintenance turned on their really loud leaf blowers. I continued walking along the road very much aware of the noise of the cars racing along it. Then I heard the sound of a passing airplane before a flight of blackhawk helicopters roared overhead, no doubt on their way to West Point.

“The Post Road followed the original Wickquasgeck Trail, carved into the brush of Manhattan by its Native American inhabitants. This trail originally snaked through swamps and rocks along the length of Manhattan Island. Upon the arrival of the Dutch, the trail soon became the main road through the island from Nieuw Amsterdam at the southern tip. The Dutch explorer and entrepreneur David Pietersz. de Vries gives the first mention of it in his journal for the year 1642 (“the Wickquasgeck Road over which the Indians passed daily”). The Dutch named the road “Heerestraat”.

In 1669, the provincial government of New York designated a postal route between New York City and Albany, the colony’s two most important settlements at the time. It was little more than a narrow path in many places, following old trails used by the Wiccoppe and Wappinger tribes. Stagecoaches headed north originally started from Cortlandt Street in lower Manhattan; later the starting point was moved up to Broadway and Twenty-first Street.

In 1703, the legislative body provided for the postal road to be a “public and common general highway” along the same route, starting in Kingsbridge, Bronx and ending at a ferry landing in present-day Rensselaer. It was called the Queen’s Road, after Queen Anne.

The King’s Bridge was built as a toll bridge in 1693, by Frederick Philipse, a wealthy merchant and major landholder in the Bronx and Westchester. The bridge, the first connecting Manhattan with the mainland, spanned the former Spuyten Duyvil Creek at what today is Kingsbridge Avenue. At Kingsbridge the Post Road split with the eastern spur heading to Boston, and the northern branch heading to Albany.” (Wikipedia).

I’m very interested in the history of the US Revolutionary War and I couldn’t help but wonder what this road was like during the revolution. A lot quieter I imagine. We certainly pay a price for the convenience that 21st century living brings to us.

Taken with a Fuji X-E3 and Fuji XC 16-50mm f3.5-5.6 OSS II

Mazda MX-5

My late wife used to own one of these, except that hers was the earlier model with the flip up lights and it was bright red in color. She first bought it when we were living in Geneva, and was heart broken when she had to leave it there when we moved back to New York. Then one day I noticed an advertisement for an identical model, same year, same color on a notice board at the office. I drew it to her attention and of course she bought it immediately. It served her well until it finally gave up the ghost many years later and was replaced by a BMW convertible.

Taken with a Sony A7IV and Sony FE 28-75 f3.5-5.6 OSS.

Still more New York City pictures

A few pictures taken while walking from one destination in New York City to Another. Above: Blue bicycles.


Skyscrapers. I liked all the different shapes and lines.


Abstract composition in an iron girder?


Street people. I don’t usually take pictures of street people, but there were so many of them along this one block near St. Patrick’s Cathedral. I found myself wondering why they were there?

Taken with a Fuji X-E3, Fuji XC 16-50mm f3.5-5.6 OSS II and Fuji XF Fuji X-E1 and Fuji XF 35mm f1.4 R.