(First published in The Dominion Post, November 27.)
My wife and I just returned from a month in the United
States. These are some of my observations:
■ New York has a reputation as a pushy,
every-man-for-himself sort of place. In fact it’s anything but. We lost count
of the number of New Yorkers – young and old, male and female, black and white
– who noticed us peering at maps and offered assistance. If anything
distinguishes Americans from New Zealanders, it’s their readiness to engage
with strangers. New Zealanders might have the same impulse to help, but our
British reserve holds us back.
■ There can be few more magnificent sights than the
Manhattan skyline, viewed from Brooklyn Heights on a still, clear autumn
evening. But Brooklyn “Heights”? Come on. It’s just high enough to see over the
East River, no more.
■ I can understand, at a stretch, why American switches are
upside-down. The rationale is that it’s harder to turn things on by accident.
But can there be any plausible explanation as to why American plumbing is so
primitive and downright contrary?
■ Americans have an extraordinary tolerance of noise. They
talk loudly, they shout a lot (in a friendly way) and they have an ongoing love
affair with noisy V8s and those potato-potato-potato Harley-Davidsons. In the
Californian town where our son lives, each new day is announced by a symphony
of rumbling V8s as people head to work. Manhattan must be one of the noisiest
places on earth; those sirens you hear constantly in TV drama series are not
some scriptwriter’s invention – they really are part of the city’s soundtrack.
■ You can tell which part of the US you’re in by the
vehicles on the roads. In the south and west, the pickup truck is ubiquitous; the
Ford F150 has been the best-selling vehicle in the US for 32 years. But you’d
be hard-pressed to see any F150s in the cities of northeast, where bikes are
more popular these days than Detroit iron.
■ In Washington we stayed in the charming, historic
neighbourhood of Georgetown. Henry Kissinger lives here, as did Jackie Kennedy
after she was widowed. It’s said that Kissinger once went out to buy some
household items and couldn’t find his way home again. When a cop asked him how
he could not know where he lived, Kissinger explained that normally his driver
took him home. Even if not true, it’s a nice story.
■ Walking through the grounds of Harvard University, I heard
a man mention the word “quantum” in conversation as he passed. That’s one stereotype
obligingly confirmed.
■ Sometimes the serendipitous discoveries are the most
enjoyable. So it was with New York’s Old Town Bar, which we stumbled on in East
18th Street. It gives the impression of being
little changed since it opened in 1892, and I wondered whether some of our
fellow drinkers were original fixtures too.
■ American food is a problem. It’s not that it’s uniformly
awful – far from it. There’s just far too much of it. We all hear about
American obesity, but considering the size of the meals served, the marvel is
that they’re not even fatter. The other issue is variety, or lack of it.
Americans seem to exist on a diet of burgers, chicken, pizza and fries. Oh, and
copious quantities of cheese with everything. We have a far wider choice of
cuisine here.
■ Best meal? No contest. At Mario Batali’s Eataly in New
York (think Petone’s La Bella Italia, then multiply by10) I had a simple lunch
of ravioli stuffed with spinach and ricotta and served with a lemon sauce and
pistachios. Superb, and not expensive.
■ On the other hand, you can fall in love with the idea of
something and find the reality doesn’t quite match. That was the case with the
famous Oyster Bar at Grand Central Station, through whose closed doors we had
gazed longingly on a previous visit to New York. Our long-anticipated lunch
there was just so-so.
■ Tipping can be a tricky issue when you’re not accustomed
to it. Do you tip regardless of how good the service is? If so, how much? I
generally tipped about 15 per cent, but I noticed that not all Americans
automatically tip, and I was reassured to hear a Boston radio host complaining
that he was never entirely sure whether to tip either.
■ Viewed from a passing train, some of the once-great cities
of the northeast – Philadelphia, Baltimore, Wilmington – look wretched and
moribund. Only the gleaming high-rises of the CBDs give any hint of prosperity.
Elsewhere, though, America gives the impression of being one giant construction
site. And you can’t repress that natural American optimism, even where
buildings are boarded up. It seems to be in their DNA.
1 comment:
In the north-east I would suggest that bikes are seasonal. In Ontario, Canada where we lived bikes and especially motorbikes disappeared during winter. People did tend to have summer vehicles and winter vehicles if they could afford it. During the winter cars suffered greatly from the salt on the roads and didn't last long.
Certainly agree about the friendliness in the States and people are interested in where you are from as soon as they detect the accent. Love New York.
Agree as well about the food-a sandwich is this huge pile of food - often my wife and I shared one and even then it was usually too much.
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