Monday, October 08, 2012

The Things New York Taught Me

During my trip to NYC (Sept 30-Oct 7, 2012) I learned many things; listed below are some of them...
  • The majority of New York smells like pee and/or garbage water.
  • There really are rats in the subway tunnels.
  • New Yorkers are not as unfriendly as they are made out to be. However, there are still some who will cut other people off when racing for a subway door.
  • Nothing will compare to the size of New York. Toronto seems so small and tame now.
  • Some subway station tunnels look like garbage dumps. This is probably heaven for the rats.
  • If you don't need to ride the subway during rush hour...don't. I will never look at Toronto rush hour the same ever again.
  • Harlem / Hamilton Heights / Washington Heights are not as bad/scary as they are made out to be.
  • For $2 you can get the best coffee, toasted bagel with cream cheese and banana from any local bodega and it's the best breakfast you will ever have.
  • Starbucks are EVERYWHERE and are a saving grace for a full bladder or technology in need of recharging.
  • New York is always busy. Always.
  • You can actually buy alcohol in pretty much every local/corner/major store. In DuaneReade (a Shoppers Drug Mart-esque store) you could fill your prescriptions, get a ready made pasta dish or salad, pickup up snack food, a frozen pizza, a pack of smokes, hairspray and some beer or a cooler.
  • Be very specific with the taxi driver that is taking you to the airport or you could end up walking in the rain to the correct terminal.
  • People from all over the world are in NYC; in any given spot at any given time. I thought Toronto was a melting pot of cultures...heh!
  • You need to be very watchful of where you are on the bus as they don't call out stops unless you ask. On the subway it's a toss up for stop notifications. However, there are ALWAYS maps at every station and in every subway car.
  • You can get cellphone reception on the subway.
  • 4am garbage pickups and 6am store deliveries.
  • There is a wide variety of street food vendors catering to everyone's needs and wants.
  • Staying in people's homes might not be as private or swanky as a hotel, but it makes the whole experience more personable and welcoming.
There are more things I learned, for sure, but for now that is the list. My trip was excellent and really opened my eyes. I am so going again...hopefully soon!