Archive for ‘Links’

Brooklyn E-Waste Recycling Days

By , 30 September, 2011, 1 Comment

Get rid of all your old electronics and tech equipment this weekend–the green way. Hosted by The Lower East Side Ecology Center, there will be two locations for e-waste recycling drop-offs in the BoCoCa area so load up and make sure to head over. Saturday, 1 October, you can stop by Smith Street between President & Union Streets in Carroll Gardens and Sunday, 2 October, Pier 1 at Brooklyn Bridge Park (at the vehicle turn-around) will be hosting the effort. Accepted is working and non-working equipment:
• Computers (laptops & desktops, servers, mainframes)
• Monitors
• Printers, scanners, fax-machines, copiers
• Network devices (routers, hubs, modems, etc.)
• Peripherals (keyboards, mice, cables, etc.)
• Components (hard drives, CD-ROMs, circuit boards, power supplies, etc.)
• TVs, VCRs, & DVD Players
• Audio-visual equipment
• Cell phones, pagers, PDAs
• Telecommunication (phones, answering machines, etc.)
Unfortunately, home appliances such as microwaves, refrigerators, or air conditioners will not be accepted. For more FAQ’s, check here.

Before School Starts-Help Track Kid’s Facebook Activity

By , 6 September, 2011, 1 Comment

It’s that time. Back-to-school is finally here. And if you’ve got kids old enough to use Facebook, we wanted to let you in on an excellent way to help monitor what they’re doing on this popular social media site. MinorMonitor is a free, web-based tool that gives parents a quick, easy view into up to four children’s Facebook activities and friends. Using an intuitive dashboard view, you’ll be able to access either a snapshot, or full detail and specifics, of potentially dangerous activities such as bullying, hate crimes, drug use, and sexual references. Ok, it’s a little Big Brother, but sometimes you gotta do what you gotta do. Interested in finding out more? You can get started here.

Now That School Is Done: Summer Fun

By , 28 June, 2011, No Comment

A parent’s summer in South Brooklyn means a lot of hot playgrounds, sprinklers and finding some activities to keep the kids busy. So here are just a few things to check out as we head into July. More to come as we get it.

Pop into the New York Transit Museum Thursday afternoons this summer (7 July to 18 Aug) for a trip back in time with a performer on one of the museum’s vintage subway or elevated train cars. Each week a different costumed character brings transit history to life from 1:30 to 2pm.

Beginning 2 July, head to Prospect Park Saturdays at 1pm and 3pm to join one of Macy’s Fishing Clinics. The free program offers kids fishing instruction and an introduction to aquatic ecology, featuring recreational fishing, fishing safety, and fish-friendly techniques. To join in the fun, meet at the Audubon Center at the Boathouse (just inside the Lincoln Road/Ocean Ave. entrance to the Park). And not to worry, all fishing at Prospect Park is “catch and release” only. For more info, all (718) 287-3400, ext. 303.

The summer afternoon acting workshop at Young Actors Workshop will run from 5 to 15 July at Christ Church, Cobble Hill, corner of Clinton and Kane Sts. Variety is the key with a mixture of improv work, theater games, and rehearsal of a play to be determined. Recommended for ages 9 to 13, it goes from 3pm to 5pm and will cost $275.

And tipping their hats to the adults, Char No. 4 at 196 Smith St. is offering a Wed. night special with your choice of a fried oyster or fried shrimp po’boy dressed and served with a bag of Zapp’s and an Abita Resoration Pale Ale for $19 (Starting 6 July). Begins at 6pm and can be ordered at the bar or in the dining area.

Weekend Links and Stuff to Do

By , 10 June, 2011, No Comment

Almost weekend. And hot. Damn-it. Anyhow, here’s some stuff to plan for if you’re not heading out of town.

Brooklyn Folk Festival- Come check out the lineup of over 30 bands from all over the world. Tickets are $20 per day or $55 for the weekend. Film screenings are included in the admission price. Workshops are included with the weekend pass.

Last weekend for the Sanatorium by Pedro Reyes at 345 Jay Street (across from the NY City Transit building, between WC Arts & Drafting Supply store and Metro Cafe). From the website, “artist Pedro Reyes combines the best of New York’s existing therapy landscape with unexpected, short, experimental treatments. In two-hour windows, Sanatorium visitors experience up to three sessions from a roster of sixteen special “urban therapies.” Upon arrival, visitors will meet a receptionist who will assign the “therapies.” Balancing reality and parody, Sanatorium draws from Gestalt psychology, theater warm-up exercises, Fluxus events, conflict resolution techniques, trust-building games, corporate coaching, psychodrama, and hypnosis. While some of the sessions should be experienced alone, others are specifically catered to couples and larger groups.”


Brooklyn Historical Society (128 Pierrepont Street): ‘Baseball, Nationalism and the Civil War’
will be open to baseball and historical lovers alike. Sports historian George B. Kirsch will be speaking and the event coincides with Home Base: Memories of the Brooklyn Dodgers at Ebbets Field,” an exhibition on view through 14 August. Takes place 12 June at 2pm.

Whether you want to join in the fun–or make sure not to drive to Prospect Park–take note of Saturday’s Brooklyn Pride Festival. Check here for event times and locations.

NYC Playground Rant

By , 1 June, 2011, No Comment

Our friend Andrea Strong from the foodie TheStrongBuzz.com changes gears this week and talks about her experiences at NYC’s newest playgrounds (including Pier 6). Agree or disagree? Let us know your thoughts. Here’s what she has to say:

“Why NYC’s Newest Playgrounds are a Hazard to Our Kids”

I am going to rant — I warn you. And it has nothing to do with food. It has to do with the other part of my life. The “mom” part, which these days, is really all of my life.

Emily and I journeyed to Union Square Playground today, a playground that cost our city almost $3.8 million to build. Umm, how shall I say this tactfully? What a mistake! Sure there were some very cool gizmos and doo-dads, but Emily could not use any of them. Why? “TOO HOT! “As she said, several times after touching them and pulling her hands back quickly as though she had been pulling them out of a hot oven.

Here’s a question I’d like an answer to: Does anyone who designs playgrounds actually think about the fact that little kids aren’t into getting blistered sunburns or that they might not want to scorch their feet in sandboxes or their legs on slides because the sun has turned them into virtual skillets? I don’t need to fry my eggs and bacon for breakfast on a slide. I can do it at home, thanks!

Union Square Playground was a heat hazard today (Note: it’s only May). Moms, dads, and various caregivers were huddled under what shade could be found like refugees from a hurricane, sending their kids out and calling them back from more sunscreen and water, no one able to enjoy the park because it was the Sahara at noon. For a park covered in the lovely canopy of old oak trees, they stuck the playground in the north end in a space with NO SHADE at all.

That climbing dome of silver in the Union Square “Wonderland” that NY Magazine raved about? It’s a heat-seeking missile. It can’t be used because of the sun’s direct rays, so, after the fact, they added a sail over the top to partially shade it, and now only half of it is usable. Can we get half our money back?

Why not just burn our tax dollars instead of spending it on hiring fancy architects who can’t design a playground and think about the logistics of sun and shade? How about adding an umbrella (or 10) so that we can play without risk of frying to an overdone crisp. If you can’t play on their fancy designs in the summertime what good are they?

Brooklyn’s well-publicized Pier 6, which I live quite close to, is even worse. There’s a giant sandbox, a place called Sandbox Village, which sounds very sweet and fun, but it’s Death Valley. The place is big enough for about fifty kids and their entourage of various nannys and parents, but as soon as the summer temps hit 80, you can’t sit in it. The sandbox becomes a fire pit. Plus, there are the boulders that dot the sand’s surface. They often get covered up by the sand that gets kicked around, so this is a common scene: Hey, friend, let’s run to the other side of the sandbox, oops, giant boulder, trip, fall, forehead hits rock. Lovely! They should keep a team of Paramedics nearby to stitch kids up. I am being completely serious.

Did I mention the rocky runways that line the perimeter of the sandbox that seem to actually trip kids and scrape their knees up and good (with little pebbles that get buried deep in the nooks and crannies of their skinned knees which make for lots of fun in the clean-up stage), and the uneven wooden deck which also seems designed for implementing the most falls per hour (plus they burn your feet). Oh, I could go on and on. Okay, I will.

The neighboring playground, Swing Valley, is just as bad –dozens of fun swings, from ropes to tires, but not one tree to shade you from the sun. It’s just not usable as a practical matter unless you are immune to the sun’s rays.

These new playgrounds may look pretty and may seem fantastic but they are useless, and what’s more a waste of money. Spend it on our schools. Spend it on our libraries. Spent it on free ice cream! Spend it on something that makes sense and won’t hurt our kids who just want to play and have fun in the summertime. (How about a bulk order of umbrellas from Crate and Barrell, to start?)

For the most shade and fun, stick to the old parks, without the fancy architects, places like Pierrepont Playground, and Harry Chapin Playground. Places with lots of shade, lots of fun and no eggs frying on the slides.

Thank you. Rant over.

Could Kardashian Crash Cobble Hill?

By , 27 May, 2011, No Comment

Sadly, my husband broke the news that Kim Kardashian is engaged. Yes, his time on SportsCenter elicited a better update on the country’s favorite porn/reality/sports-loving gal than my fleeting ten minutes of BBC News. And guess what? Her hubby-to-be is a current NJ Net–and will be moving to our borough come 2012 to become a Brooklyn, um, New Yorker? Yes, Kris Humphries will be heading to our neck of the woods, and I appreciated the Wall Street Journal’s take on it.

And because this is Brooklyn, the baby watch will be on. Maybe they will have two babies, pushed in a diamond-encrusted Bugaboo. The Cobble Hill playground will be on high alert, with jealous parents clucking over lattes from Ted & Honey. Are the Humphries-Kardashian kids really having a birthday party at Carmelo the Science Fellow? Where will they go to school? St. Ann’s? Packer? Berkeley-Carroll? 321? Are Khloe and Lamar coming in for the weekend?
Kim will be everyone’s new best friend, the newest smug name drop. “Oh, you saw Jonathan Safran Foer at BAM? Well, I just went shopping at Bird with Kim Kardashian and then I took her to the Red Hook soccer field.”

Of course, we all know she’s no Michelle Williams. If you’re celebrating your engagement party with glitter-covered miniature horses (oh yes she DID), you are firmly staying in the land of Manhattan. Though I’m pretty sure I saw a diamond-encrusted Bugaboo parked outside Barney’s just last week…

More Weekend Stuff To Do

By , 20 May, 2011, No Comment

Fleece Festival at the Prospect Park Zoo is pretty much what you’d expect. Take the kids to see the sheep and alpacas get their annual haircuts, and meet local artists who will demonstrate weaving, knitting, and spinning techniques. Musical guests will also perform. Event is both Saturday and Sunday.

Family Day: Phenomenal Festival of Flags! at BRIC Rotunda Gallery is tomorrow, 21 May, at noon (33 Clinton St. between Cadman Plaza W and Pierrepont St). Kids and their adults can make their own flags.

Meet the Authors: Diane Kredensor and Thomas F. Yezerski at DUMBO’s Powerhouse Arena (37 Main St.). Emmy Award–winning children’s television director and animator Diane Kredensor reads from her new book Ollie and Moon, then Thomas F. Yezerski talks about the recovery of New Jersey’s wetlands from his book Meadowlands. Begins at 4pm.

Sunday at 11am, head to BookCourt (163 Court St.) for a reading by Laura Lee Gulledge from her tween book Page by Paige, about a girl having trouble adjusting to the big city. Kids 10 and up can stay after for a quick course on how to write a graphic novel.

Don’t forget that Food Truck Rally at Prospect Park’s Grand Army Plaza. Goes from 11am to 5pm on Sunday, 22 May.

Come to Carroll Park Saturday at 11am to celebrate It’s My Park Day. Spend an hour or two weeding, painting, planting, and cleaning–then come in for refreshments at 3pm in the Robert Acito park house. Activities include sessions in seed planting @11am, long jumping @noon, drawing and painting plants @1pm, mystery mural @2pm, and a roving game of I-Spy @2:40pm.

A Few Links & Things To Do in South Brooklyn This Weekend

By , 13 May, 2011, No Comment

BookCourt at 163 Court St., is hosting three events for the kids this weekend. You can get the info and times for all of them here.

Shen Beauty (315 Court St.) is offering free mini facials and skin analysis by Annee de Mamiel and her amazing seasonal facial oils this Saturday. Or hop in this afternoon for eyebrow threading from 3pm to 6pm–$12 for brows and $20 for brows and upper lip. Call 718-576-2679 to make an appointment.

Come for the food, stay for the art at Slideluck Potshow XVI. The Beautiful Bountiful Brooklyn Tasting Hour begins at 5:30, with the slideshow, curated by Whitney Johnson, Director of Photography for The New Yorker, and potluck dinner scheduled for 7pm at DUMBO’s St. Ann’s Warehouse. More info and ticket sales here.

Join kiddie fave Karen K & the Jitterbugs for a concert at the Carroll Library (corner of Clinton and Union) Saturday morning, 14 May, at 10am.

Boerum Place Stop Sign Means D—K to Most Motorists

By , 28 April, 2011, 3 Comments

image via Carroll Gardens Patch

A friend emailed me today after she got a mighty scare crossing the street at Boerum Place and Dean St. After three cars rolled through the stop sign, someone finally allowed her to cross–until another car swerved around the first and almost hit her and her baby. We know this corner has been one of interest after Carroll Gardens Patch reported on a proposal for speed bumps around the neighborhood and specifically at this intersection. At the time, in late January, nearly 80 signatures were were collected for the project and a traffic task force was formed, with the last meeting in mid-March. Want to get involved? Call Hope Reichbach at 718-875-5200 or email her at hreichbach@council.nyc.gov. You gotta be in it to win it.
UPDATE
I woke up this morning to a story reporting the death of above-mentioned Hope Reichbach. According to The Brooklyn Paper,

The cause of death was not immediately released, but a source said Reichbach died of an overdose of prescription drugs. An autopsy was scheduled to take place on Friday.
Reichbach was a lifelong resident of Boerum Hill, though some wrongly labeled her as a young interloper when she challenged the Brownstone Brooklyn political establishment last year by running for district leader against Jo Anne Simon. Reichbach lost, but not by the usual landslide.

We are saddened by the loss and send our deepest condolences to her family.

Dine-In Brooklyn: The Real Deals in Bococa

By , 23 March, 2011, No Comment

As we mentioned earlier this week, we love that Brooklyn has it’s own version of Restaurant Week. And if it encourages us to get out and hit the town–all the better. But as a few of you have pointed out, getting a $25 dinner or $20 lunch at many of the participating restaurants isn’t saving much cash. Sure, nabbing a table at Le Cirque or River Cafe makes sense. But somewhere like Hana Cafe? Not so much. So to give you an even better reason to Dine-In Brooklyn, here are the eateries that are offering the reals deals in the neighborhood–two-for-one brunches, lunches and dinner (a full list is on the last page of the flyer):

La Flor Del Paraiso Restaurant & Bar (491 Atlantic Ave)
The Atlantic Chipshop (129 Atlantic Ave)
Jake’s Bar-B-Que (189 Columbia St)
JB Burgers (255 Smith St.)
Olga’s on Smith (407 Smith St.)
RICE (81Washington St.)