JQR’s secret city

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Sweet thoughtful reflections on a year bicycle commuting, courtesy Larry Littlefield

I can't let the week slither by without highlighting this fantastic blog post about bicycle commuting and exercise in general. Usually Larry writes these storm-and-stress pieces about Generation Greed and the systematic evisceration of state and local budgets by older people in their favor, but on his birthday on Monday he dropped this one, which I really like because he's not writing to persuade anyone that they should bike to work, as well.

Usually writing about bicycling ends up being overly strident and boring, with a save-the-planet message thrown in: "I am more virtuous than you because I'm on two wheels and you're not," kind of thing. Larry sounds almost apologetic that he's not more of a crackerjack cyclist:

What a great deal riding a bicycle to work has been! Until I actually tried it and found a way to work around the usual objections – work clothing, sweat, weather, traffic—it hadn’t seemed practical to me. Now, good health seems impractical without it. How else would it be possible for an overweight, middle-aged non-athlete, with a sedentary office job, a family and other responsibilities, to get that much exercise, nearly an hour per day?

Plus, he drops mention of one of my favorite things about Brooklyn (and Long Island in general), the ridge that runs down the center where the glaciers stopped on their last advance, the "terminal moraine."

I typically ride at about 12 to 15 miles per hour on flat ground, but intersections and hills bring the average down to about three times the speed of walking. And taking long walks is about what riding a bicycle that way is like, except for the up hill stretches on the bridges in both directions and up the terminal moraine in the afternoon.

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Filed under  //   biking   Brooklyn   commuting   glaciers   Larry Littlefield   moraine  

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You and me, canoeing the Lullwater

Definitely one of the sweetest toponyms in the NY archipelago, the
Lullwater is open for a guided visit in two weeks. My only question (and the reason this has
floated through my thoughts up to Posterous-worthy levels) is whether
I need to bring my own canoe.

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Filed under  //   boating   bodies of water   Brooklyn   canoe   Lullwater   New York City   Prospect Park   recreation   things to do   toponym   trailer parks  

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Jackie Mittoo vs. James Bond theme

Everyone who hears the version of the James Bond theme by (former
Skatalite) Jackie Mittoo & the Soul Brothers probably has the same
fleeting impression that I did just now on hearing it again: wouldn't
it be great if the movies had the same kind of grungy, two-tone energy
that the recording has?
 
Probably not; something has to remain shiny and airbrushed in order
for everyone to have a good comparison to the ordinary run of rusty,
grimy, mildewed, just plain chaotic things. I had some good pictures
of rust out on Staten Island to include with this, but in the search
for them, this one of huitlacoche from El Paisa on Myrtle Ave (right
under the el, oh fond memories of home...) struck my fancy. Buen
provecho.

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Filed under  //   Brooklyn   huitlacoche   Jackie Mittoo   James Bond   music   Myrtle Ave   photographs   ska   Skatalites   street food  

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