Posted by: David Giacalone | March 10, 2012

March 1st snow

 Early on the morning of March 1, 2012, I found myself taking Snowy Stockade photos for the first time this winter.  The snow didn’t stay long on the ground, but it will be around here at suns along the Mohawk for an an internet eternity.

– 1st Reform’s Peace Pole-

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Posted by: David Giacalone | February 14, 2012

only memories of pink flamingos this year

Posted by: David Giacalone | January 27, 2012

fog and puddles and favorite things

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 Who could ask for more on a mild January afternoon: fog and puddles, and playground fixtures, in Riverside Park, along the Mohawk River in Schenectady, New York?

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. a few playmates and waterproof boots would have made my day .

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. . puddles add to the allure of my favorite swingset, which is featured in this posting . . and in the book trailer for The Fault in Our Stars . .

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. . click here and there for more fog in the park from prior postings . .

Posted by: David Giacalone | January 18, 2012

Our Town Schenectady shares a glimpse of the Stockade

Last night’s preview of Our Town Schenectady at Proctor’s GE Theater made it clear that WMHT has created an interesting, enjoyable, and informative look at the City through the words, eyes and lenses of its residents.  Even natives and longtime residents of Old Dorp will surely discover new reasons to appreciate their City.  As Stockade resident Linda Muralidharan, who is the storyteller for the segment on the Stockade and its Walkabout event, put is: “We’re ornery but we’re fascinating.”

 Our Town Schenectady has its broadcast premier tomorrow, Thursday January 19, at 7:30 PM, on our PBS Channel 17, and in about three months you will be able to view it online. ; or purchase the DVD.  At the bottom of this posting, you’ll find a list of the 19 segments that make up Our Town Schenectady, which is narrated by Ernie Tetrault. See The Saratogian for more coverage; TU Arts Talk blog, too.

    The Stockade segment of Our Town Schenectady gives some background history and then uses the annual Walkabout event to tell more of the story and show what makes our first-in-the-state historic district unique and inviting. The one-person staff and editorial board of suns along the Mohawk was proud to be asked to contribute to the Stockade segment, and most pleased to discover last night that WMHT’s production staff selected two dozen of our images for inclusion in the show.  Below is a Slideshow of the pictures from suns along the Mohawk that help tell our Stockade story in Our Town Schenectady.  In choosing the photos, I’m glad Joanne Durfee and her staff at WMHT decided to focus on the people who make the beautiful historic Stockade a living neighborhood — especially the residents who participate in events like the Walkabout, and the non-residents who come to share in the fun and inspiration as re-enactors and visitors.

The photos in the Slideshow were taken from our 2010 Walkabout or 2011 Walkabout postings, each of which has a Gallery that includes the photos used in Our Town Schenectady and dozens of additional images.  You can click on a Gallery image for a larger version and permalink, and scroll over the photo for a description of the picture.

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– share this posting with the short weblink: http://tinyurl.com/OTS-Stockade

Here is a list of the segments and storytellers in Our Town Schenectady, in the order of their appearance:

Mabee Farm – Kim Mabee
Stockade Walkabout – Linda Muralidharan
Engineering Solving Problem (Schenectady Museum) – Chris Hunter
Empire State Aerosciences Museum – Kevin Millington
Vale Cemetery – Bernie McEvoy and John Sowa
Little Italy – Maria Papa
Hibernians – Michael Glenn
SCCC – Patricia Frazier and Martha Asselin
Vibrant Arts Community (SCP, SLOC, SSO, Proctor’s) – Mardy Moore
Schenectady High Chamber Choir – Ben Butryn and Raya Malcolm
Hamilton Hill Arts Center – Iris Williams and Penny Holmes
Youth Media Arts – Mike Feurstein and Shawn Minarik
Roots and Wisdom – Debbie Forster (Cornell Coop Extension)
Schenectady Green Market – Betsy Henry and Dick Shave
Jackson’s Garden, Union College – Andrew McLain
Central Park Rose Garden – David Gade
Central Park Disk Golf – Justin Hoffman and Andrew Butryn
Ultimate Frisbee and Moon & River Open Mike – Dan Goodspeed
Holiday Parade – Gail Kehn

Posted by: David Giacalone | January 1, 2012

New Year’s sunrise 2012

  No words needed, except to wish all visitors to suns along the Mohawk a New Year fill with peace, prosperity and a little pizzazz.  Here’s a slideshow of photos taken at sunrise, just past 7:30, New Year’s Day 2012, at Riverside Park along the Mohawk River, in the Schenectady Stockade.  And, yes all the pink seemed to be in the western sky this morning.

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Posted by: David Giacalone | December 17, 2011

shooting “Stars” in the Park (updated)

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– “Hazel” & “Augustus” from “The Fault in Our Stars“, the upcoming novel by John Green, on the Riverside Park swing-set –

update: click to see the resulting book trailer from Penguin Young Readers –

follow-up (Feb. 5, 2014) the blockbuster book is being made into a 20th Century Fox movie (Official website) to be released June 6, 2014. Click for the Movie Trailer.

A photoshoot for best-selling author John Green‘s upcoming teen-romance novel The Fault in Our Stars  (Dutton Juvenile, January 10, 2012) took place as promised this afternoon at the swing-set in the Stockade’s Riverside Park.  I’m pretty sure that producer Stacie and her crew, including the models representing the novel’s two young lovers, felt the swings, the Park, the Mohawk, and the CSX train trestle made their drive from New York City well worthwhile.  The return of cold, blustery weather made their hours in the Park a little frosty.

The scene from the book that will be represented by the photo images to be used in the resulting PR material is a March day in the Mid-West.  I think our snowless December scene will be a good substitute.

The crew, which had taken rooms at the Stockade Inn for staging their shoot, were eager to finish by the time I arrived around 4 PM.  My hands and brain soon became too cold to remember to get more names or information, but I’ll supplement this posting when I get more. If you click on the author’s name above, you can found out more about his prior books and awards and prior books (such as Looking for Alaska, An Abundance of Katherines, and Paper Towns). You can read about the plot and pre-order the book at Amazon.com by clicking here.

. . see my photo tribute to “our special swing-set” . .

Here are images from my shooting of the photoshoot for “The Fault in Our Stars.”  Below the Slideshow there’s a Gallery of the same pictures.  I’m glad Monica Hoenig found our swing-set through this weblog and pointed her comrades in this direction.

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follow-up (Jan. 4, 2012): Some interesting facts about The Fault In Our Stars (see Wikipedia) : Last June, on the day John Green announced the name of the upcoming novel (and before he had finished writing it), a combination of social media reactions by his fans resulted in an eruption of pre-release sales that put the novel in the #1 sales spot at both Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble.  See “Tweeting from a La-Z-Boy, an Unfinished Book Hits No. 1” (The Wall Street Journal Online, by Jeffrey A. Trachtenberg, July 1, 2011).  The WSJ article lists the many social media connections Green has in his “digital toolbox”.  Among others, they include 1.1 million Twitter followers, and more than half a million more at the video weblog Green shares with his brother, vlogbrothers.

TFIOS has, as of today, been on the Amazon.com Top 100 Best Sellers list for 130 days.  Also, B&N mistakenly mailed out copies of the book prematurely a few days before Christmas, and Green has asked that recipients not leak the content before the January 10 release date, so that his fans can all read the book together.  It looks like they have complied with the request.

update (January 10, 2011): Click for Green’s vlogbrothers video  The Fault in Our Stars Is Here Edition.

– Click on a photo in the following Gallery for a larger version; scroll over it for a description –

Read More…

Posted by: David Giacalone | December 16, 2011

our special swing set

  It’s no secret that I’m often lured to the Riverside Park swing-set — for playing and shooting photos along the Mohawk River.  This week, our swings and park have been attracting attention from out of town, too.  Here are a few images that show why the swings are so special.

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A big Stockade welcome to the photo-crew from New York City! See photos and description in the posting “shooting ‘Stars’ in the Park” (Dec. 17, 2011) . . .

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. . . and, there’s even a swing set for tykes who love to swing:

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. share this posting with this short URL:

http://tinyurl.com/StockadeSwings

.. and find more shots of the swingset in the fog here (January 2012) . .

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 . . . the swings were inundated by Irene floodwaters (Aug. 29, 2011; seen from the Western Gateway Bridge)

Posted by: David Giacalone | November 20, 2011

the 2011 Stockade holiday tree (and predecessors)

 – this posting has photos of the 2011 tree, from selection to erection, decoration and lighting, plus a complete Slideshow below –

  update (7 AM Dec. 5, 2011):  The lighting ceremony and refreshment party were inspiring and a lot of fun yesterday evening — another special tradition for and by our special community.

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 . . . the 2011 Stockade Christmas Tree: [L] trimmed and ready for lighting (Dec. 4, 2011) & [R] still beautiful the morning after (sunrise Dec. 5, 2011) . . .

– the 2011 Stockade Tree is especially tall  (click for larger version) –

– see the 2010 Tree and the 2009 Tree

– plus, arrival of the 2012 Holiday Tree & the 2013 Tree

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– 2011 Stockade Tree seen standing tall at sunrise, December 2 –

– click on a photo for a larger version –

update (Dec. 1, 2011):  After a crew of City workers installed it next to Lawrence yesterday (Wednesday, Nov. 30.), Connie Colangelo and friends decorated the new Stockade tree.  As you can see directly below in photos taken at sunrise, the tree tilted a bit due to strong overnight winds.

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– by this afternoon, the tree was upright again, with a few more bows; the tree lighting is Sunday at 5 PM –

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– in search of the 2011 Holiday tree –

  Thanks to our Stockade neighbor — and Stockade Association director — Susannah Hand, the NYS Tree Nursery at Saratoga (on Facebook) is donating this year’s Stockade Holiday-Christmas tree.  Susannah works at the 200-acre Nursery on Rt. 50, and she arranged for a tour for Stockade residents that took place on Thursday, November 17.  Mary D’Alessandro (Association President), Connie Colangelo (Tree Maven), Sylvie Briber (Spy editor) and myself (humble, un-affiliated tag-along) were the only Stockade residents lucky enough to take part in the tour.  To my surprise, we not only got to see this year’s Tree, we got to select it.

. . . top of 2011 Stockade Tree on site at the Tree Nursery . . .

Due to another one of my “Senior Moments” (a/k/a Boomer-Brainos), I forgot to bring my camera.  So, we can thank Susannah for yet another aspect of this story: she took the photos with her iPhone of our group choosing the tree, pressed into service unexpectedly under a very bright sun.  You can see the selection process and Susannah’s photos in this Slideshow; read more about the Saratoga Tree Nursery in the upcoming December Spy, and join in the celebration at the Tree Lighting Ceremony on Sunday December 4.  After the Slideshow, I’ve inserted images of our 2009 and 2010 trees in the Lawrence Circle.

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.. Slideshow photos at the NYS Tree Nursery taken by Susannah Hand, Nov. 17, 2011 . .

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– 2010 Stockade tree (L) and 2009 Stockade Holiday tree –

– see more photos of the 2010 tree here

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