Friday, March 19, 2021

Egg watch is on

Word from Tompkins Square Park this past week: There's at least one egg in the nest for the resident red-tailed hawks Amelia and Christo. (And all photos here by Steven.)

Goggla is putting the first egg date at March 13. 

So...
The hawks usually lay three eggs, but we have no idea what's going on up in the nest, so we will just have to wait and see. Going by the first egg date, we can expect a hatch in about six weeks, so around the end of April or first week of May. When that happens, we won't be able to see anything, but Christo will start bringing food to the nest. In the meantime, there won't be much for us to watch except for Christo and Amelia taking turns brooding.
Below: Viewer discretion is advised

Leading up to this point, the two were spotted mating... a lot...
... even on top of St. Nicholas of Myra Orthodox Church on 10th Street and Avenue A...
In this post, Goggla provides egg-laying dates from the last seven years, going back to Christo's first nest on the Christodora with (sob) Dora. (BTW Dora is fine, likely on permanent rehab on Long Island.

The new location of FlyeLyfe opens today on 1st Avenue

Photo from Wednesday by Stacie Joy

The new location of FlyeLyfe has its grand opening today at noon at 215 First Ave. just south of 13th Street.

This is a big move for East Village-based artist and entrepreneur P.J. O’Rourke, who had been selling his original design T-shirts, hoodies, sweatshirts, hats, masks, prints, patches, bags, magnets and caps from a small storefront on 11th Street between Avenue A and First Avenue.

O’Rourke first started selling his creations on the L train via a mobile art cart in September 2012.

And now he's set up in a two-level space that was previously occupied by a Dunkin' Donuts

Previously on EV Grieve:

Yes, Sophie's is reopening today

There has been activity in recent days at Sophie's, the bar that someone once started a blog about here at 507 E. Fifth St. between Avenue A and Avenue B. 

This photo from yesterday shows a beer delivery ahead of its reopening this afternoon. 

Sophie's along with its sister bars Josie's on Sixth Street and Mona's on Avenue B return after closing in December when Gov. Cuomo did away with indoor dining at bars and restaurants. (Indoor capacity in NYC is at 50 percent as of today.) 

There was never any doubt that these neighborhood bars would reopen at some point. 

Still, there were some freakout moments in recent weeks ... like when Google temporarily listed Sophie's as "permanently closed" ... 😱🤯

Stanton Street CSA accepting sign ups for the 2021 summer season

The Stanton Street CSA has opened up enrollment for the upcoming summer season that begins on June 10. 

Per CSA organizers: "We're proud to announce that this summer will be our 17th year offering organic, local, seasonal produce to residents of the East Village and LES — though of course, anyone can join, not just those who live right nearby." 

And they're offering the following summer shares: veggies, fruit, eggs, maple, and maybe mushrooms (the mushroom share would be new and they're still sorting details). The veggie season lasts 22 weeks starting on June 10. 

Their distributions take place rain or shine on Thursdays from 5:30-7:30 p.m. at the M'Finda Kalunga Garden on Rivington and Forsyth. 

You can sign up online here. And you can find the Stanton Street CSA website here. If you have questions, then there's a Zoom session coming up on Saturday, March 27 for prospective members who have questions about their offerings, want to know how to qualify for a subsidized share or have bad veggie puns for the group.

Signage arrives for Luna Cafe Lounge on 2nd Avenue

A few weeks back we noted that a new restaurant was in the works for 166 Second Ave. between 10th Street and 11th Street. 

And here's the first sign of, uh, the signage for Luna Cafe Lounge. (Thanks to Steven for the photo yesterday afternoon.) 

Not sure what all this will be about (a cafe by day and lounge by night? A cafe and lounge by day and night?). 

Nothing has had much staying power here since the Dunkin' Donuts closed in early 2010 ... we've had Meyhane, Medina's Turkish Kitchen, Entrez Bar & Grill, Farfasha, Dinah and Pomodora.

Thursday, March 18, 2021

Thursday's parting shot

A new wheatpaste by @SacSix as seen on Fourth Street and Avenue A... photo by Stacie Joy!

Free groceries and milk tomorrow at the Most Holy Redeemer Nativity Church

The folks at the Most Holy Redeemer Nativity Church on Third Street between Avenue A and Avenue B shared this information about a free food and milk pantry tomorrow (March 19) from 10 a.m. to noon ...
Three trucks will provide FREE a grocery box, a produce box and the third truck will provide a gallon of fortifying milk. Distribution will be in front of Most Holy Redeemer Church ... on a first come, first served basis, while supplies last. No pre-registration is required. 
Please observe social distancing and wear a face covering. We're looking forward to seeing our neighbors!

Plywood report at the former P.S. 64

On Monday, we noted that the high winds over the weekend took out a window atop the former (and long-empty) P.S. 64 building — on the 10th Street side between Avenue B and Avenue C. 

Now, a reader today points out another opening: on the plywood on the Ninth Street side. There have been reader reports of kids breaking the windows from inside the plywood perimeter...
And 20-plus years of history in two paragraphs:

Developer Gregg Singer, who bought the property from the city during an auction in 1998, has wanted to turn the building into a dorm called University Square. The DOB continues to maintain a Stop Work Order — dating to August 2015 — on the property. 

In years past several local elected officials, community activists and residents have asked for the return of the building for community use. The building became the Charas/El Bohio Community Center after the school left in 1977. The group was eventually evicted when Singer took over as the landlord. It has sat empty these past 20-plus years, causing locals to be concerned about its crumbling façade

Grant Shaffer's NY See

Here's the latest NY See panel, East Village-based illustrator Grant Shaffer's observational sketch diary of things that he sees and hears around the neighborhood and NYC ...  

Checking in on Standings (March Madness edition)


Standings is a small sports bar at 43 E. Seventh St. between Second Avenue and Cooper Square... where, since owner Gary Gillis opened the place in 2005, civil fans gather to actually watch a game and not use it as an excuse to, say, drink 300 gallons of beer.

Ahead of the start of March Madness today, one of the biggest events of the year for sports-bar owners, Gillis — a New York Mets fan — answered a few questions via email about the challenging past year and making it work with a few curbside seats.

After a four-month closure, you reopened with curbside service last summer, playing radio broadcasts before switching to TVs in August. How have you been able to make it work given the myriad restrictions (curfews, winter storms that forced a city-mandated closure on Super Bowl Sunday) that are out of your control?

We reopened on July 22 with a Best Buy radio as a substitute for TVs. Best Buy had one type of radio in stock and it was perfect — Howie Rose never sounded so good to me! 

We put TVs up in August in time for football and had good (well... good for a pandemic) crowds. Things were good when the weather was good — I lost a TV due to rain damage during a storm. 

After Thanksgiving was when business slowed due to the chilly weather. We have a few electric heaters but they don't do much when it's 20 degrees and windy. In fact, we were closed roughly the same number of days 

We were open in January and February. The 50-mph wind days were especially memorable! The 11 p.m. curfew stinks but to be honest we consider ourselves lucky to still be around given all the closures in the East Village and the overall horrendous impact of COVID on so many lives.
What has been the most challenging part of operating your business this past year?

The most challenging part of running the business in the past year is that COVID took away our main reason for being — talking/arguing about sports in close proximity with other fanatics. 

Standings has very loyal fans. What do you have to say about their support?

I can't say enough about the support of our loyal customers. Sun, rain, 80 degrees or 20 degrees they showed up. We had to close for the Super Bowl due to the "snowstorm" and they organized a Super Bowl Squares fundraiser for the bar. I get emotional just typing about it.

The NCAA canceled March Madness in 2020. What are your expectations for March Madness this year — from a bar owner's perspective? 

I expect much interest seeing as it was canceled last year. Due to our limited capacity with the pandemic restrictions, I anticipate we’ll have to turn some people away.

Any final 4 picks to share?

Final 4: Gonzaga, Baylor, Illinois, Connecticut.

And spring training continues. Anything to say about the Mets this 2021 season?

The Mets are going to finish 97-65 — mark it down.
Gillis is working on introducing limited seating inside Standings in the weeks ahead. Gillis also owns Burp Castle, the Belgian beer bar next door where patrons must keep their voices down. (No wooing!) Gillis also hopes to reopen with limited indoor seating there soon. 

All photos via @StandingsNYC