I got up late today and had to run a couple of errands--including a trip to the farmer's market on Roosevelt Island. As the day was a hot and humid day, I waited until it was almost over to go for a ride.
So I let Tosca take me wherever she wanted. Being a fixed-gear bike, she tends to favor flat areas. As I am still not in my best shape, I am happy to go along with her.
Among other places, we went to this:
And this:
In Newark, there's a section of the city called "The Ironbound" because railroad tracks form its borders. That's not where I rode today. But the part of the Bronx shown in the photos could just as easily have been so named. It's ringed, bound and criss-crossed by elevated highways and railroad tracks, all in steel of one kind or another.
I don't spend enough time in the neighborhood on weekdays to know whether or not the tracks shown in the photos see very many trains. I know that the neighborhood is still an active industrial area: the fleets of trucks and vans parked in lots and on streets are testimony to that. But on the weekends, it could just as well be one of those ancient Greek and Roman ghost towns I've seen along the Mediterranean and Aegean coasts. The people are gone, but the looming monoliths stand, and probably will stand for some time to come.
As you might expect, on the other side of the tracks and highways are low-income neighborhoods populated almost entirely by people of color. Hip hop music was born on those streets. Someone, I forget who, referred to the Bronx as the "Atlantis of Hip-Hop."
Sometimes I feel as if I am cycling in Atlantis, or among shipwrecks. However, the viaducts and buildings, while gritty, are hardly ruins: They're intact, and on Monday they will be full of people and vehicles. But, for now, they're empty.
All of the neighborhood is near water--specifically, the East River, which is really an inlet of the ocean. However, you wouldn't want to swim in it, even if these guys do it:
Actually, they're in the Bronx Kill, which is a branch of the East River. It separates the Bronx from Randall's Island and may be the most polluted waterway in the United States. I took the photo from a spur of the RFK/Triborough Bridge.
If you're in the neighborhood and want to swim, this is where you go:
It's a floating pool in Barretto Park. I always thought the idea of swimming in one body of water that floats on top of another was rather surreal, though, in practice, it's not much different from swimming in any other kind of pool. Well, I don't know whether I can generalize. I've swum in only one floating pool: the old Piscine Deligny. Going there was more like going on a cruise than it was like going to any other pool I've ever seen.
I understand that a new Piscine Deligny is being constructed to replace the one in which I swam. But that's not the reason why it's being replaced: The old pool sank in 1993. (I had absolutely nothing to do with that!)
And so people will continue to swim in one body of water that floats on another. Then again, any journey-any bike ride-- we take is a bit like surfing the march of time.