Showing posts with label libbytown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label libbytown. Show all posts

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Panorama from My Livingroom Window

From my bay window I can see:

The state's biggest hospital
I-295
Denny's
A 3-way stoplight
Airplanes coming in for landing
The entrance to the Amtrak station
A popular bus route
A real estate office
A dermatology office
A bank
A gastroenterology office
A diver down flag
A sporting goods/scuba store
A convenience store

Not bad for a 1000 sf ranch. Ah, yes, I've got the interstate running through my backyard, and screw you John Cougar, I do kinda think I've got it so good. Everyone is always making cautious comments about how they wouldn't want to live where we do, or on as busy a street, etc. but I like rather prefer looking at lights and buildings over being boxed in by nosey neighbors. I think our view is *exciting* and our livingroom is so well insulated that when we're indoors you'd never know there was so much going on out there. And when the power goes out there's plenty of traffic to keep us entertained, and a woodstove to keep us warm. And if all else fails, if we get sick of watching traffic and bathing by woodstove water...there's a hotel hiding behind the bank! =) So as you can see, as folks who value excessive convenience, we deserve no pity. At least not during the winter months when we don't find as many homeless drunk alcoholics curling up with 40s against our privacy fence. (Aaahhh, summer...you overrated beast.)

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Waterfront Property

Our property abuts a field, and in the field is a body of water. The veritable wetlands of Libbytown.




To think, the City doesn't tax us extra for the view (possibly explains the pollution in this lush oasis?)

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Four Day Foliage

I took this photo October 4.



Today it looks like this:



I also took this photo 4 days ago:



Today, it looked like this:


It's kinda like a page out of Highlights!

Four days ago my baby looked like this:



Then today, this kid came out of my camera.


Who is this little BOY?

I always figured I was just a lazy slob because my zippered hoodies always do this:


but it turns out the left-shoulder thing is hereditary! Whoa!

Jimmy wouldn't eat the leftover stuffed shells I served for lunch, but he did eat baseball field dirt.





Other stuff from October 8:


Pinecones,


Pineneedles!


Helicopter.



Mumma.


Freakishly large greenbean,

...and a whole bunch of other stuff I didn't have a camera for. I love Thursdays, Thursdays are my favorite!

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

The Vast Array of Sculpture in Libbytown

It was such a picture-perfect day when I took some photos for my 20 Things To Do in Libbytown post that I couldn't help noticing trends around the neighborhood. For starters, there's lots of sculptures!

There's plant pots.



Brighton Avenue Brick Colonial




There's circular sculptures.


Edwards Street

There's municipal sculptures,




Portland Water District's emblem of pride




Educator's memorial behind West School

Spiritual sculptures,


Beautiful angel in front of beautiful Bradley Street home


This peace sign lights up at night!

And religious sculptures.


St. Pat's Church




Former St. Pat's School, now St. Pat's Condos. Where's St. Pat?


Oh, there he is, 1/4 mile across the street at St. Pat's Church...silly roaming statue.



There's lions,






Elephants,



And bears! Oh my!




Johnson's Sporting Goods

There's the mean sculptures,



Hiss! On Massachusetts Street

And the benign.


So plastic, so peaceful



Some parts of architecture,



Jimmy luvs the bumpy terrain of bulging-root brick sidewalks

And last but not least, the eco-sculpture that dots our streets every Thursday morning.


Portland's blue trash bags and recycling bins



Even Libbytown Dumpster-, er, EcoSculpture-Diving has its rewards

You never know what you'll find in Libbytown!

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

A Summer to Love in Libbytown: 20 Things To Do without Needing Your Car

From Congress to Brighton, Douglass to Stevens, Libbytown streets are home to old single family houses, multi-units, tract houses, and mansions. Listed here are some suggestions for residents and visitors of our tree-lined Portland neighborhood to enjoy wholesome summer fun while leaving the car at home.

1) Watch a ballgame. Why walk to Hadlock when you can catch countless games at Douglass Field for free. Little league to summer corporate workplace teams, we've got it all right here!



2) Pick early season dandelions. Douglass Field is covered with them, enough to attempt to ferment into wine, even.

3) Enjoy the playground. A must-do for all Libbytown kids.



4) New to town? Learn English! The West School campus of Portland Adult Ed hosts ESL classes, along with exercise classes and others.

5) Enjoy a sunset.



6) Scuba dive! I'm not sure how scuba-worthy the Fore River is, but you can learn to SCUBA at Johnson's Sporting Goods. I know you can do this not only because the sign tells me so, but because my brother got certified here and seems to remember his experience fondly. Get three birds stoned at once, you can also buy your shark chum and your pepper spray at the same stop.

Plug your nose!


7) Finance your gastroenterology. More one-stop shopping! Even weirder, this photo was taken from my living room.


From hand to mouth to......um.... All in one building!


8) Take a dip! Portland's Kiwanis pool is right here in Libbytown. We've yet to swim here but can see that it's a well-staffed, well-managed pool complete with scheduled adult lap swims.

9) Celebrate Jewish High Holidays! There is a Shul with a nice website here in Libbytown. This is an active community, we often see Hasidic residents and children in the neighborhood, especially on the High Holidays. According to the website this year celebrations will be held at The Clarion near Thompson's Point--home of my Wedding Night, and the only bar I know in Libbytown (besides Espo's.)

10) Worship Tiki gods. Right here, in Libbytown!

Tiki-tiki of Elizabeth Street-iki-iki-iki


11) See if the wooden cows will moo back. We keep trying, even late into the night!

Moooooooo-ing on Whitney Street



12) Enjoy the fruits of the labor of others. Libbytown hosts some eye-popping landscaping and bountiful gardens. Eyes only on the veggie gardens, please! ;)

13) Savor impromptu barbecues. Shaw's Libbytown location allows us all to end a gorgeous summer day by topping it off with a scrumptious outdoor meal. No chicken, no fish, no hot dogs, no sauce, no veggies, no charcoal, no beer, no corn, no kebab skewers, no fresh fruit, no unflavored Knox gelatin in the fridge, you say? No excuse! It's all right there at Shaw's. For those of us on the opposite end of Libbytown, we like to make a walk out of it down Elizabeth Street to minimize our stroller exposure to Congress Street during busy hours.

14) Take a glimpse at history. This is a gas lantern in front of a 1730 colonial here in Libbytown. SEVENTEEN THIRTY. Libbytown's old!




15) Buy a brand new condo! Now that St. Patrick's and St. Joseph's have consolidated into one school, St. Pat's old building is being converted into (of course) condos.

16) Pay your water bill. Instead of mailing the check or paying online, a nice summer walk could lead to the friendly people at the Portland Water District where they will happily take your payment during business hours, or you can simply leave it outside at the drop box.



17) Get out of town! Libbytowers can go anywhere in the world from the steps of their front door. Thompson's Point is home to the Portland Transportation Center where able-bodied residents can wheel luggage aboard Concord Trailways or Amtrak's Downeaster straight to Bangor to Boston and beyond. More adventurous residents could wheel their luggage to Portland International Jetport, but if it's too much, Metro's Number 5 bus will take you there for $1.25. In the event that carlessness is unavoidable, Libbytown has its own exit to I 295 which quickly leads to Interstate 95. You CAN get there from here!

18) Nosegrind. Douglass Field is apparently the future home of Portland's public skate park.

19) Enjoy something toddleriffic. This feature is not found in Libbytown but is an easy walk for all Libbytown residents, and it's my favorite summer activity of all. The Deering Oaks Wading Pool is a closeby, wonderful respite for hot, sticky toddlers (and hot, sticky mamas) on hot, sticky days. We love it!



20) The Donut Legend! Did you know donuts were invented in Maine?? Tony's Donuts is city-renowned and a proud neighborhood fixture. Next door is Anania's, our local convenience store of choice.

Weird hours never stop the Christmas at Tony's Donuts


Honorable Mention: Portland Trails at Thompson's Point. Jimmy and I really wanted to enjoy this trail, and I believe we would have were I not constantly on the brink of terror. It's a beautiful neck of land and I plan to return if not only to get photos, but I think I will lug a big honking man with me. I've never been spooked or intimidated by other Portland Trails, but here the threat of rogue, drunk miscreants lurching out at us was just too much to handle (see: empty beer cans and creepy industrial grassy overgrowth for sources of uneasiness.)