Posted by: David Giacalone | August 27, 2011

a day for eyeing Stockade daisies

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 Inspired by a handful of red Gerbara daisies I’ve been tending in a planter on my front porch, I headed out yesterday in search of more “day’s eyes” in our Stockade neighborhood.  [Many thanks to Loraine and Devin for salvaging the flowerless mystery daisy plants from a remainder bin at Lowe’s and entrusting them to me back in mid-June.] This posting is the result of my discoveries, on a hunt ranging from Cucumber Alley and Riverside Park, to the 1st Presbyterian Church cemetery and the Union Street entry to the Stockade District.  Even drooping or past their peak, Stockade’s daisies were lovely. If you can name any of the daisy varieties shown, or if I have mistakenly identified a flower as a daisy that is another specie, please let me know with a comment or email message.

. . share this post with this short URL: https://tinyurl.com/DaisiesStockade

 – nomenclature follow-up (Sept. 2, 2011):  I caught Sam(antha) Couture last Sunday while she and Aaron were packing up their car to “evacuate” their Cucumber Alley home as Hurricane Irene was approaching.  Sam informed me that the spectacular pink and yellow flowers in their flower bed were called “echinacea or coneflowers.”  I confirmed her information at the Wikipedia article on Echinacea, where I learned that the genus Echinacea is a full-sun, perennial “genus of herbaceous, flowering plants in the daisy family, Asteraceae.  The nine species it contains are commonly called purple coneflowers.”  [emphases added] Some of the species are used in herbal medicines.  They are close relatives to Rudbeckia (which include the black- eyed Susan). Find more about Echinacea-coneflowers here and there.

 . . As always, you can click on any of the free-standing photos for a larger version, and right-click on an image in the Slideshow below to View the Photo separately.

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– above: daisies [L] at 16 Washington Ave. and [R] in Riverside Park –

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– daisies along the curb at 236 Union St. –

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– more than one shade of red at the corner of Washington Ave. and Front St. –

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– a bed of yellow daisies brightens the 1st Presbyterian cemetery and parking lot  (click on the collage to enlarge it) –

Posted by: David Giacalone | August 8, 2011

granting Walter Wilie’s wish

– the last stanza of Walter Wilie’s Schenectady ballad etched in granite –

– Walter Wilie’s wish that his 1690 Ballad of the Stockade Massacre survive him was fulfilled last month, thanks to Doug Thorpe and Ammiel Alcalay, when they installed two granite slabs on a door at 109 S. Ferry St. containing and preserving the entire 20-stanza poem.  (Click on a photo for a larger version.)

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– it’s part of a complete restoration inside and out of the building:

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– façade of 109 S. Ferry St. (Aug. 8, 2011) –

The story of Walter Wilie’s wish and the restoration of 109 S. Ferry St. can be found in today’s Schenectady Gazette (“Traditional methods makes old Stockade house new: Building nears poet’s verse”, by Gwen Gordansky, Aug. 8, 2011, p. B1; available online by subscription).  According to the Gazette, tradesman/carpenter Doug Thorpe has been working on the restoration of Prof. Alcalay’s building since 2009, with the goal “to accurately restore the house, not only cosmetically but structurally. This meant that they tried to only use period methods, techniques and as many authentic items as possible.”

  . . Doug Thorpe’s reflection in his special “gift” . 

As part of that process, Doug has done in depth research about the building and other aspects of the Stockade.  In that search, he discovered a “ballad” by Walter Wilie, written about the 1690 Stockade Massacre a few months after the event.  As a gift to Mr. Wilie, and the people of the Stockade, Doug commissioned the engraving of the ballad by Mike Volans on two slabs of black concrete that now hang on a “tombstone door” — its windows have an arch shaped like grave markers — at the south end of the building’s façade.

 A functioning door surely could not take the weight of the 1.5″ slabs, but this is a false door, covering an addition to the building that replaced an alleyway between 109 and 113 S. Ferry Street. See p. 5 of the October 2010 Stockade Spy.

  Despite four visits taking shots with my Canon, problems with reflections off black granite aborted my plan to present each stanza of the ballad at this weblog photographically, so that you could read the entire ballad, and “hear” Wilie’s authentic voice.  I hope this posting will inspire you to stroll over to see for yourself.

update (8 AM 09Aug2011): At Mr. Thorpe’s request, I’ve taken down the text of the ballad. Don Rittner has Wilie’s complete ballad at his weblog; see “Being in tune with Schenectady” (October 16, 2010). Our County historian says it is perhaps the oldest ballad about Schenectady, and:

“Local folk musician and songwriter George Ward put it to music and it appears on his album, Pea Soup and Port.  The ballad was originally published in “Annals And Occurrences of New York City And State in the Olden Time” by John F. Watson in 1846.”

Watson’s book can be found here; at p. 29, Watson calls Wilie’s poem a “curious memento of the calamity” and points out — before setting forth the stanzas — that “the writer designed that it might long survive him, and it is certainly curious, that his wish has been so well fulfilled.” (emphasis in original).  You can also find it in “History of the County of Schenectady, from 1662 to 1886” (1886), by George Rogers Howell, John H. Munsell.  At 27, the authors opine somewhat uncharitably that “The following ballad, though without much literary merit, has some value for the facts set forth therein.”

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 Prof. Alcalay told me this morning that he really wants his project to have a low profile.  I apologize to him for my wanting to spread the word and the image of his impressive restoration of a building that was in terrible shape.  Thanks to Prof. Alcalay and to Doug Thorpe for their hard work and commitment.  Special thanks for reviving Walter Wilie’s wish, so we will not forget his contemporaneous account of agony and dismay over the bloodiest day in the history of our neighborhood and City.

Posted by: David Giacalone | August 7, 2011

Stockade kids at Central Park

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. . .  Three Stockade families with pre-schoolers and toddlers got together on Thursday at Central Park for tennis lessons, a picnic, and kids’ music at Music Haven (with Ruth Pelham), and I tagged along.  After a bit of extreme bocce on a hillside, I took a break from sampling the pot luck meal to snap a few pictures, aided by some great sunlight angles.  Click on the collages or the above photos for a larger version.

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Posted by: David Giacalone | July 26, 2011

a lovely evening for the 2011 neighborhood picnic

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. . .  picnic traditions . . . 

 Severe thunderstorms came early enough today to leave a gorgeous, sunny, mild evening in Riverside Park for the 2011 Stockade Neighborhood Picnic.   The picnic was again “happily sponsored by the Stockade Neighborhood Watch with assistance from the Stockade Association”.  Many thanks to Beverly, Linda, Carol, Mary and everyone else who organized and labored on this neighborly event, and to all who contributed and attended.  And, thanks to the mosquitoes for staying home.

. . I got there too late to see the dinner crowd (and share a hotdog with Devin), but not too late to catch neighbors playing, schmoozing, and snoozing in pre-sunset lights and shadows.  The slideshow gives you a small taste of the event.  If anyone wants a larger version of any of the pictures, let me know.

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Posted by: David Giacalone | July 1, 2011

a Stockade view of the 2011 Jumpin’ Jack’s fireworks

 

It was a lovely night and an enjoyable show over Scotia and the Mohawk. Thanks to the folks at Jumpin’ Jack’s and the other sponsors.

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 – the slideshow was shot from the end of Cucumber Alley, across from the Isle of the Cayugas – in the Schenectady Stockade; each photo is also presented in the Gallery at the bottom of this posting and you can click on a Gallery photo for a larger version –

update: Click here for our coverage of the 2012 fireworks


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. here are some of my favorite bursts and blossoms (click on it for a lager version):

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 . . . . . . You can use this URL to share this posting:

http://tinyurl.com/2011JJFireworks

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Click on any photo in the Gallery below for a larger version. You may use any photo for a  noncommercial purpose.

Read More…

Posted by: David Giacalone | June 20, 2011

rose garden in June

 Yesterday’s article and interview in the Sunday Gazette reminded me that the past two years I have visited Schenectady’s much-honored Central Park Rose Garden past its peak weeks, which are thought to be mid-June to early July.  So, this morning I grabbed my camera and headed [or, as Carl Strock likes to say, “hied“] over to the Wright Avenue gateway of Central Park for a brief visit.  I found a crew tending the flowers and a few other strollers in the garden.

– click on a photo for a larger version –

  The Gazette interviewed Matt Cuevas, president of the Rose Garden Restoration Committee, for yesterday’s piece.  My continuing thanks goes out to the Committee for all of its hard work and fund-raising efforts to make the Rose Garden a special part of Schenectady.

My only gripe after visiting today: The little signs identifying each grouping of roses were not in evidence today.   They are sorely needed by we who are florally-and-botanically- challenged.

   I hope this short slideshow will encourage you to take the short trip (less than three miles from the Stockade) and see for yourselves.

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– former entryway sign (July 31, 2010) –

Last year’s posting here at suns along the Mohawk, “July ends gracefully at the Rose Garden” (August 1, 2010), and the 2009 version, “rose garden escape” (Aug. 4, 2009), have many more photos of the Central Park Rose Garden, and demonstrate that — like other forms of beauty — the Garden is lovely and inspiring even past its prime.

– here are a few more images captured on June 20, 2011 –

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– click to see the bee (L) –

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– if you go, don’t forget the Rules of Etiquette:

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– click above to see the “Strictly Enforced” Rules/Guidelines –

Posted by: David Giacalone | June 16, 2011

cloudy but lovely

 

– clouds over Scotia, seen from the end of Schenectady’s Washington Avenue (May 21, 2011) –

    We’ve had a lot of cloudy days this Spring in Schenectady and all of upstate New York.  Nonetheless, cloud formations with contrasting grayscale shades, cloud reflections on the river, and flowers in muted light on overcast days, have made for lovely views along the Mohawk in Riverside Park.

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– clouds filled the sky and the river –

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– the petunias have been looking good at the west end of Riverside Park –

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– above: grayscale glory over Isle of the Cayugas-

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– view north from rear of 16 Washington Ave. (June 17, 2011) –

. . . follow-up: petunias aglow on a sunny afternoon (June 16, 2011):

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bonus: Two sunset shots from the rear of 1 Cucumber Alley (Jun 3, 2011):

– a painterly rose across from the Isle of the Cayugas –

Posted by: David Giacalone | June 4, 2011

a sunny sidewalk circuit

– looking for the 2012 Valentine Flamingo posting? go here.

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– 21st Annual Stockade Sidewalk Sale –

Perfectly sunny early-June weather, and lots of friendly neighbors, made my walk around the Stockade delightful for the 2011 version of our neighborhood-wide sidewalk sale.  The slideshow below has a couple dozen photos taken at random this morning.   Many thanks to Diane DeMeo for all her hard work organizing the event.

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Let me know with an email or a Comment, if you’d like a jpg. version of any of the photographs in the Slideshow.

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Somehow,  I resisted bringing the Briber’s Birthday Bear home . . .

– click to see our 2009 and 2010 Sidewalk Sale postings –

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