Say this three times fast:
In the middle of the journey of my life, I am--as always--a woman on a bike. Although I do not know where this road will lead, the way is not lost, for I have arrived here. And I am on my bicycle, again.
I am Justine Valinotti.
28 April 2024
23 August 2023
Pedaling In Smoke
Two months ago, Canadian wildfires singed the sky orange in my hometown of New York City. At times, you could actually smell—and see—smoke from the burning trees.
Such sights and smells didn’t enshroud the ride I took yesterday. I pedaled Tosca, my Mercian fixed gear, along familiar streets from my neighborhood to Brooklyn. While my nose didn’t detect the scent of incinerated wood and my eyes didn’t pick up ash or unusual hues on the horizon, I could sense the aftermath of a fire before I literally encountered it.
On Sunday, a fire destroyed a row of stores at the intersection of Lee Avenue and Hooper Street, by the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. Most of the stores were closed, which is probably the reason why no one was hurt even as the stores and their contents were destroyed.
Still, such a disaster is particularly devastating for the Hasidic enclave of South Williamsburg. For one thing, the stores and the spaces they occupied were owned by members of the community, who were also nearly all of those establishments’ customers. For another, some of those stores sold the clothing and supplies kids will need as they return to school, But most important, those stores catered to the specific needs and religious mandates of the community, particularly in food and clothing. (As an example, Halakhic law forbids the mixing of fabrics.) Those needs and requirements are sometimes difficult, if not impossible, to meet in other stores.
Anyway, I continued my ride. Sometimes it’s seemed as if I’ve been pedaling through smoke all summer.
19 January 2022
Extending The Day, And The Season
Yesterday I went for a late afternoon ride and noticed that, among other things, late afternoon is stretching later into the day. I shouldn’t have been surprised: Almost a month has passed since the Winter Solstice.
Something else I noticed also shouldn’t have surprised me, but did: It seems that Christmas decorations have remained on homes and businesses, and in public places, for longer than in any other year I can recall. I’m sure it has to do with the fact that nearly two years have passed since the COVID-19 pandemic arrived here. Some people, like health care workers, are tired in body; many more, I am sure, are fatigued in spirit. Perhaps putting up those decorations, or simply trying to muster up some cheer, sapped them.
Or they may simply want to cling to whatever flickerings of joy that are illuminating days that, while lengthening, are still followed by long nights.
I suspect that such is the story of the Toufous family, who gives our neighborhood one of the best and most extravagant holiday displays I’ve ever seen:
They’ve put on a great show for years, But I think they outdid themselves to honor the memory of a family member.
They, like so many people, have endured so much during the past year. If they want to leave that display up all year, even if only to make themselves feel better, I’m all for it!
03 March 2021
Permission To Roam
My orthopedic doctor and the Texas governor said, basically, the same thing yesterday.
Now, I don't know much about my doctor's politics, but he probably has never thought about Greg Abbott in his life. So how could they have echoed each other?
Well, the Governor told businesses in his state that, starting next week, restaurants and other businesses can open fully. "People want to go back to living," he said. He's declared that they can.
My doctor gave me the same permission. He confirmed what I suspected: My injuries from getting "doored" are healed, save for two still-visible scars. They'll take "about a year" to disappear, he said. In the meantime, I could use a skin ointment, but if I should I should "be careful" because I have sensitive skin. Looking at my helmet, he grinned and crooned, "Enjoy."
It's been more than a month since I did two of my regular long rides (Connecticut and Point Lookout). The reason is not my injuries: rather, it's the snow and ice that's covered many of the roads. Also, Marlee seems to be guided by her animal instinct to hibernate and takes any chance she can to curl up on me and doze. She's so cute, and calms me as much as a meditation or therapy session, that I want to stay with her.
I want to get out because, even on rides I've done dozens of times before, I notice something or another that previously escaped my attention--or wasn't there. During my ride to the doctor's office, a traffic light stop at Third Avenue and 17th Street brought this into my view:
I hadn't been inside that building in years--or looked at its exterior. Whenever I entered, I listened to music or poetry. I don't know whether its architectural details were covered, or perhaps I just hadn't noticed them because I always arrived at night, when throngs of people fronted and filled it.
Perhaps I will always think of that building--as long as it's still there--Fat Tuesday's, the jazz club/performance space that occupied it for years. It closed around 15 years ago, when the changes I've witnessed in this city accelerated. After that, it was occupied by a variety of venues, including a yoga and Pilates studio.
But, as you can see, the designers and builders of the edifice probably didn't envision any of the venues I--or most people living today--associate with it. Constructed in 1894-95, it originally served as a restaurant and beer garden. The latter is not surprising when you realize that the surrounding neighborhood--Gramercy Park/Irving Place--was, at the time, said to be the home of more Germans than any place outside of Europe.
The building would later host the German-American Athletic club and the German-American Rathskeller. Given this history, it's makes sense that it's named for Joseph Viktor von Scheffel, a German poet and novelist.
I don't know what "Allaires" refers to. Ironically, when I first saw that name, I thought of a village in Brittany, France (through which I've biked) and a park in New Jersey where I biked, hiked and camped as a teenager. That park was named for James Allaire, who owned an ironworks and village on the site. The metal produced there was shipped to Allaire's factory in this city, where parts for steam ships were made. He had a home on Cherry Street, about a mile from Scheffel Hall, so it's possible that his family owned all or part of the building or businesses that were in it.
One more thing: Given the building's literary and artistic associations, it's not surprising that O.Henry wrote some of his stories--and set one of them, "The Halberdier of the Little Rheinschloss" in Scheffel Hall.
Anyway, as you can see, I didn't need permission from a doctor or governor to go back to doing the things I normally do: cycling and learning about whatever I see along the way. Marlee doesn't always approve, but, hey, nobody's perfect!