For years one of my bucket list experiences was to celebrate New Year’s Eve in Times Square. Then I moved to New York. Now you couldn’t pay me to stand in that mob of people for hours waiting for the big ball to drop. I also avoid 34th street and all its miracles unless it’s between the hours of 1:00am and 5:00am when the tourists are generally asleep. And that big beautiful tree in Rockefeller Center? I’m not going anywhere near it. I promise I’m not Ebenezer Scrooge or the Grinch, it’s just that I prefer to actually enjoy my amazing city during the holidays without fighting my way past the mobs that descend on the city for the season.
Here’s a few things we locals enjoy during the holidays. There will always be crowds – it is New York City after all ��� but these are less of a mob scene and are all utterly charming.
During the holiday season Union Square transforms into a European-style winter market with over 150 local and national vendors. Choose gifts or a souvenir from the impressive array of artwork, leather goods, jewelry, holiday ornaments, wooden puzzles, board games, and more.
There are plenty of food vendors on hand to keep your hunger pangs at bay. Dive into a Belgian waffle by Wafels & Dinges, or satisfy your sweet tooth with cookies from Momofuku. If you need a break from the cold, warm up with a cup of hot chocolate at nearby Max Brenner’s Chocolate Restaurant. In fact you can have hot chocolate, chocolate pizza, chocolate cookies…pretty much any kind of chocolate you want to keep you in the holiday spirit.
While Rockefeller Center has the biggest and most famous tree and ice skating rink, the Winter Village at Bryant Park has as its centerpiece a 170’ x 100’ ice skating rink. Admission is free and rental skates are available. There are also skating shows and special events throughout the holiday season. The ice skating happens in the shadow of another spectacular Christmas tree all dressed up for the season.
Located along Bryant Park's alleys and terraces, Holiday Shops housed in custom-designed, "jewel box" kiosks feature over 125 artisans from around the world.
During the holiday season New York Botanical Gardens transforms into a winter wonderland complete with an enchanting Holiday Train Show. Model trains weave through a display of 150 landmarks including Grand Central Station, the Empire State Building, the Brooklyn Bridge, and Yankee Stadium, each re-created with bark, leaves, and other natural materials all under a canopy of twinkling lights.
For the grown-ups there are designated cocktail nights throughout the season. On these nights the wintry landscape of the gardens sets the scene for holiday cheer. With an expanded Holiday Train Show as the centerpiece, sip a cocktail as you wander through a series of station stops, including pop-up acts featuring some of NYC’s favorite street performers.
Continue the holiday train theme with a ride on a vintage subway car when the NYC Transit Museum’s rolls out the "Shoppers Special," a train consisting of eight vintage subway cars from the 1930s. The vintage trains operate between 10am and 5pm each Sunday in December on the Sixth Avenue Local line between Second Avenue and Queens Plaza. It’s not uncommon to find passengers onboard in period dress snapping photos with vintage cameras.
There’s plenty of holiday cheer in the faces of surprised subway riders when the vintage cars arrive instead of the normal subways they’re expecting.
As a child I loved driving around looking at the decorations on all the houses in town. Today when I get a hankering for lavishly decorated homes with millions of twinkling lights, I head to Dyker Heights in Brooklyn. Clark Griswold’s light display in the movie Christmas Vacation pales in comparison to the extravagance of these homes.
Since the 1980s this annual display has grown with each passing year. There are massive professionally designed light displays, lawn ornaments, motorized displays and more. Over 100,000 people flock to Dyker Heights each year to check out the holiday spectacle. Bus tours are available or you can take the subway combined with a 20 minute walk or a short taxi ride to do your own walking tour through the neighborhood.
As I mentioned before, celebrating New Year’s Eve in Times Square sounds like a great idea – until you actually see the crowds standing for hours waiting for that ball to drop. Instead of fighting the crowds, I celebrate New Year’s Eve in Central Park where a brilliant fireworks display lights up the sky at midnight as a 5k race kicks off. And you don’t need to arrive early. In fact you can have a leisurely dinner, drinks, stay in a place where there are restrooms when you need them (beats a Port-A-Potty in Times Square) and then walk to the park just before midnight. It’s a sane and civil way to ring in the new year in New York’s most iconic park.
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Terri Marshall is a New York City based freelance writer whose work includes travel, spirits, and all things chocolate. Terri's work appears in several publications. She has been a featured guest on Peter Greenberg's Worldwide Travel radio program and Denver's KZKO Radio Morning Express show. Terri will not hesitate to go to the source for great chocolate - even if that means hiking through the jungle and picking cacao pods herself.
Happiest when she's globetrotting, Terri has covered destinations all over the United States, Europe, and into Central and South America. Favorite adventures include reindeer driving in Norway and fishing for piranhas in the Amazon jungle of Peru. You can keep up with Terri's adventures on her website www.TrippingwithTerri.com. You can also find her on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
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