Saturday 19 September 2009

New York City - Rediscovered

A year ago to the day, I was running up and down Manhattan trying to get a Malaysian visa (I'd initially planned to travel via Malaysia on my round the world trip because Malaysia had a visa-on-arrival for Indians. They changed that rule shortly after I'd bought tickets!!)

I'd been to NYC before, as a 9 year old (for 2 days, all I remember from that trip is how cool it was to be on the 24th floor of a hotel!) and then again in 2005 (when I stayed with my uncle and aunt who had a flat in Manhattan for a year).

This time was different in many ways - I was not trying to see things (having already ticked the major attractions off my list on previous visits) - but was happy to just hang out with Chitra and Swati and Mukul and Rahul. The highlights of this trip were the Staten Island Ferry (ok, so I lied about not wanting to do the touristy things :-)), an evening at the MoMA (where I absolutely loved the Picasso sculptures, and the micro pre-fab housing display), and pizza at America's first official pizzeria!

See the pictures below for more:

2008 NYC

Chinatown bus, Boston to New York, a year ago to the day

It's been 7 months since I've been back in Edinburgh, and 8 since I posted anything on this blog. But yesterday, as I was walking back from the lab, I got thinking about how exactly a year ago (to the hour, accounting for the time zone difference) I had been boarding a chinatown bus to get from Boston to New York.

I'd heard about the Fung Wah bus (one of the chinatown bus companies - i.e buses that ran between the chinatowns of the US east coast). Business school case studies have been done on this low-cost barebones model and I'd heard and read horror stories of how drivers were sometimes rude, and passengers were sometimes even left stranded by the highway if something happened to the bus.

But things had changed, they now ran from the Boston bus terminal rather than picking up passengers from the side of a main road, offered online ticketing and even wifi on board. Still, I was prepared for the worst, but ended up travelling very comfortably in only 4 hours to New York for $15 (I got to the station and there was a bus about to leave - it wasn't Fung Wah, but Lucky Star, and ticketing/boarding was super efficient - it took only 3 minutes from the time I spotted the bus company's desk to the moment that the bus pulled out of its bay).

In New York City, the bus lived up to its name and dropped passengers in chinatown rather than at the official bus station, and it was fun to walk past the brightly lit streets and stalls selling Chinese food. Interestingly, a lot of the shops selling bags and clothes seemed to be run by Indians/Pakistanis/Bangladeshis. Odd.