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Tom says...

           
Click here to download:
Lunch_at_Continental_in_Philad.zip (11462 KB)

I had lunch with a friend, formerly my work colleague, yesterday.  He moved to Philadelphia recently and was nice enough to come to my office and take me to a really hip and trendy lunch place called "Continental."  It's an easily recognized restaurant from the street, it has a big green olive as a sign and the outside walls are red hexagonal shaped tiles.  

Inside things looked comfortable but funky, everything reminded me of a 50's or a Mad Men episode, something about it just screamed the "lush life."  We ended up in a booth upstairs, right in front of a swanky looking bar, and next to these tables that had chairs suspended from the ceiling and looked like bird cages cut in half!

For  lunch I ordered a Midtown Quickie, which is the daily special and happened to be a Buffalo Chicken sandwich and salad that day. Chris ordered a Crab Pad Thai.  After a Quickie meal I followed up with a lime sorbet for dessert.  The food was delicious, great service, and the ambiance made this a fun place to eat!

We spent the rest of the lunch hour catching up and I ended up getting the scoop on some cool places to eat around the office.  Chris also told me that the Amish and food markets are nearby, including an Art Museum!  I can't wait to go exploring the Center City in the next few weeks. So far, Philadelphia has been surprising me a lot!

Time well spent with a good friend if you ask me!

Location: 1801 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, PA

Filed under: Explore

Testing Posterous here. Seems clean and neat. Just type in your name and you are good to go. Nice. I like it. Though I can't see how u post pics and audio files from here - are they through E-Mail attachments only?

Still time - will explore and update!

Until then, CIAO!

Filed under: Explore

keemo says...



The Baymont. Indianapolis, IN. 9.28.09 - Room Key Series #5

Click

Travel. I love to travel. I like being out of my element. I like finding myself in situations that I don't know the outcome before I arrive. I often pack up the paints and ink and paper and work while traveling. (It sure beats flipping channels through bad tv shows alone in a hotel room waiting for the morning.) I have been trying to think of a way to incorporate the places I go directly into my artwork. Well, it hit me when I returned from a stay in Canton, MI last year and found the room key still in my pocket from the hotel I had checked out of earlier that morning. Thats it! So with that, here is to travelling and letting yourself experience new things, meeting new people and being flexible enough to try and enjoy everything... Enjoy

www.KeemoGallery.com
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Filed under: explore

cainejohn says...

So I decided that I'm going to be using Posterous from now on. Still trying to work the various levels of customising Autopost options. Hopefully this post will go only to places that I want it too.

Much love to the universe.
Caine.

Filed under: explore

vshirazawa says...

Wildlife Conservation Society's Mannahatta Project was first brought into my attention by my Grandpa when he handed me the September National Geographic just the other week. I soaked up all the pretty pictures of a historically fictitious Manhattan & spent a good chunk of time flipping between the 1782 city map & the current satellite map. Come to find out, you can also explore the project using the cool interactive overlay on the website, through a NYTimes bestseller book by ecologist, Eric W. Sanderson and/or a museum exhibition designed by the exciting firm Pentagram [Fun fact: I would love to work for them]!

So, Murray Hill was an actual hill & Bowery follows an old main road through what I believe are orchards. Huh! Turns out my apartment in Stuytown was on the site of a sandy beach by a stream leading to the East River!

More reasons to ♥ NYC:

Take the gentle rise of Fifth Avenue as you walk past the New York Public Library. "There's a reason you can stand on the sidewalk here and see the tops of people's heads a few blocks away," Sanderson said. "This was near the top of Murray Hill, where the Murray family had a farm and orchard in 1782. During the battle for New York, the British landed at Kips Bay on the East River and marched up here, cutting off half of Washington's army, which was trapped in Lower Manhattan. There's a legend that Mrs. Murray offered tea to the British officers. So they stopped here at the farm, and while they were having tea, Washington's troops slipped past them on the Bloomingdale Road, which is now Broadway, and escaped." - http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2009/09/manhattan/miller-text/4

 

"What was Manhattan like 400 years ago, before the first settlers arrived? Designed by Abbott Miller, the new exhibition Mannahatta/Manhattan: A Natural History of New York City at the Museum of the City of New York reconstructs the ecology of the small wooded island originally known as Mannahatta (“island of many hills” as the Lenape Indians called it) before it became one of the most densely built places on earth. The exhibition is presented in collaboration with the Wildlife Conservation Society and is based on the Mannahatta Project, scientist Eric W. Sanderson’s decade-long research of the ecological history of the island, its geological features, as well as its flora and fauna. The exhibition has been mounted as part of the museum’s celebration of the 400th anniversary of the arrival of Henry Hudson in Mannahatta (September 12, 1609) and is on view through October 12." - PENTAGRAM


Also, the NYT has published an article with a podcast, a book review of Eric W. Sanderson's, Mannahatta: A Natural History of New York City & a review of the exhibition.


IMAGE CREDITS:
The exhibition Mannahatta/Manhattan reconstructs the ecological history of Manhattan Island
Manhattan, 1609 and 2009 from “Mannahatta”; photograph by Yann Arthus-Bertrand/Corbis

   
Click here to download:
I_the_island_of_many_hills.zip (172 KB)

Filed under: explore

Riker17 says...

Today is the day that we mark the historic landing of man on the moon.  Forty years ago, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin stepped out of the lunar module and placed footprints on a foreign celestial body.  A very riveting time for our nation and the world as a whole.  I applaud NASA for replaying the tapes from those history-making days in real-time, I have been listening to them and have found much interesting material.  No doubt that Buzz and Neil were very excited about the important and improbable feat that they were to accomplish on this day.  

As I have been listening to the real-time feed that I mentioned above, I have also been following along with the transcript that is posted of the communications between Houston and the Apollo spacecraft.  Though at times the 40-year-old live feed and the transcript do not match up time wise, it is still fun to read along as the crew goes about flipping switches and pressing buttons to be able to land on the moon.  As for historic points on the trascript, I have found a few.  The separation of the lunar module from the command module occurs on page 318, the landing occurs on page 337, and the first footprint by Neil occurs on page 382.

I encourage everyone to pause for a moment today to reflect upon the masterful and unlikely events of today and send a message to Congress that we need to return to the moon and go to Mars and beyond.  It is our destiny as humans to seek out what is beyond our grasp and to explore what is beyond our reach.  Godspeed Neil and Buzz and all of our astronauts.

Filed under: explore

Mel and Art says...

Congrats to Arthur for getting his latest picture Explored on Flickr!

He's the reason for getting me more involved with photography. I know, I've always taken pictures, but I never paid any attention to details. Photography allows me to express myself and capture those special moments. It's another great outlet for fun and creativity.

I hope to capture more special moments this weekend. I have my first Relay For Life event in Willow Glen. It's going to be a HUGE event. I'm excited to see it in person and experience it. All these months of planning, recruiting, scheduling is coming together nicely. I'm looking forward to seeing kid's expression, fun games and activities, inspirational hope shining from cancer survivors, and community love and support.

Look out for pictures and a recap after I recover from the weekend!

The only catch is, it is Arthur's birthday and yet again for the third year in a row, I won't be able to share and spend his special day with him. He is also participating in Bay to Breakers on Sunday.

Filed under: explore

nam says...

A great new way to explore the different personalities on Posterous.com.

http://posterous.com/explore 

I have found a many more interesting people to follow now with this tool, meet new people and just to observe.

 

Try it out if you haven't already.

Filed under: explore