At Rockaway Beach, you could see how the today's bright sunshine and cool breezes just barely concealed the fact that we had such a violent storm the other night. It was a great day to ride, but not very many people were. And those who were weren't the ones I expected, and they weren't riding in ways I ever anticipated.
They rode by as I was sitting on a bench, with Arielle propped against a railing. "Really nice bike!" he shouted as he passed me and her.
Somehow I have a feeeling that kid is going to be all right. After all, in taking him for a ride in such an unusual vehicle, the father is developing an independent spirit in him. Plus, his dad is developing his taste for fine bikes! ;-)
But everyone else at Rockaway, it seemed, was surfing. The tides seemed more rough than high, which is probably a reason why nobody was swimming or bathing in the ocean. Also, the temperature just barely made it to 70F. Then again, the water is still a few degrees warmer than that.
The tides weren't the only evidence of the storm. I rode by this at Juniper Valley Park:
And near the park was this almost surreal scene:
As you can imagine, I had to make a few detours during my ride today. I'll probably be making more for a while: The cleanup is going to take weeks, according to officials.
As to when the tides will be normal again, nobody is saying.
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.
Showing posts with label Juniper Valley Park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Juniper Valley Park. Show all posts
18 September 2010
05 June 2010
Juniper Valley
Today was hot and humid and I woke up late. So I did a short ride, albeit on my fixed-gear bike. I had no specific destination; I just knew I wanted to get home about two hours after I started riding.
I sluiced through some of the deserted industrial side streets of Woodside and Maspeth to Ridgewood. Then I took another ski-slalom route through streets that intersected, at varying angles, Fresh Pond Road, Myrtle Avenue and Cooper Avenue, out to Forest Park. But I didn't go into the park; instead, I turned around and let my wheels spin my cranks and legs down the gradual slope of 88th Street to St. John's Cemetery, where I turned back on to Cooper Avenue to 80th Street.
Up to that point, it was a pleasant enough ride. But on 80th Street, one of those black cars that are status symbols to no one but their owners (who regard them as such only because they spent much more than they should have) tailed a van until the driver--a woman of 60 or so who, thirty years ago in my old neighborhood, would have been driving a Lincoln Continental--tried to pass the van, but couldn't. And she was leaning on her horn.
At the other end of the cemetery, I stopped for a traffic light. Her passenger rolled down the window. The driver yelled, "Waddaya doin? Ya gonna get killed out here."
"The way you're driving, yeah, I just might."
The light turned and that driver slammed the horn as the van turned in front of her. Although I had planned to turn in the same direction, I went straight just to avoid her.
That, actually, was a good turn of events, if you will, for it brought me to Juniper Valley Park. If Central or Prospect Park had been located amidst suburban developments, it might have been something like Juniper Valley. Riding in or around that park, you could forget that you are in New York City, or even Queens: The neighborhoods around them are full of houses that have real lawns and backyards where people plant flowers and shrubs. And, the park itself is pretty in the way a country cottage might be, rather than architecturally stunning as Central and Prospect Parks are.
Don't get me wrong: I love Central and Prospect, having spent many hours walking, cycling and seeing performances of one kind and another in them. But pedaling or strolling in or around Juniper Valley is somehow a less self-conscious act than cycling or walking in those other parks. Maybe it has to do with the more suburban character of the neighborhoods around Juniper Valley: They are full of families with young children, and even the parents who work in the professions or on Wall Street can't properly be called yuppies. Many who don't have such jobs or careers are union plumbers, electricians and such.
What that all means is that nobody goes to Juniper Valley to be seen. They might go to meet friends or aunts and uncles and cousins to whom they might want to show off, but, really, they can't improve their actual or perceived social status in such a meeting.
It's funny that I used to avoid such people and situations. I guess, in a way, they were like my family in a parallel universe, and the last thing in the world I wanted was Family: the institution or my own particular clan.
But now I find that the people I meet there are friendly, or at least obliging. One of them took the photo of me with my bike. It's the first photo anyone's taken of me with any of my bikes since my operation. Try not to notice the weight I've gained through months of inactivity--please!
I hope that by the end of the summer, I'll be in better shape! But at least I had a pleasant (crazy driver not withstanding) ride today.
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