MLK Quote

MLK Quote

Nature's Inspiration Movie

http://www.flickspire.com/m/HealthierL433/NaturesInspiration -- Nature's Inspiration Movie: The photographs in this short video are from award-winning photographer, Ken Jenkins, and they are breathtaking. However, this video is much more than beautiful photographs! Peggy Anderson has compiled beautiful quotations from the likes of Emerson, Thoreau, and many others that truly capture the beauty of nature and solitude. Absolute must watch for nature lovers.

Friday, June 11, 2010

A Part of the Main Street in Boonton

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Boonton Tanks



I guess these are the water tanks of Boonton, not sure though what they are. This is one of the bigger shopping plaza in Boonton. The superstore Walmart, delicious IHOP, Quiznos Subs, Subway, a Pizza Kithchen and other smaller restaurants are located here along with Wine Store, Payless, Salon, etc, etc. The plaza is located on Wooton Street, a busy street in Boonton. Get out of the plaza, turn right, go down and Wooton Stret intersects the Myrtle Avenue, another busy road here. Turn right on Myrtle to go easily to either I-287 or Route 202, all extremely important thoroughfares of New Jersey.

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

A Very Foggy Boonton


A very foggy Monday (March 22, 2010) in Boonton. It started with rain from Sunday evening and suddenly became foggy. The fog continued almost throughout Monday and then started clearing up. It has been breezy and chilly since the last two days. Today is Wednesday, March 24, 2010.

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Lamppost



The picture was taken in December when it was cold and snow everywhere. Most (or should I say all) of the lampposts in Boonton look like this and I really love this old-looking lampposts. The lamppost is located on the Washington Bridge and underneath and behind it is the Boonton Water Reservoir. A little history about Boonton from the book Boonton, the Gem of Mountains by Edward J. Cahill :

The natural beauties of Boonton lead many to believe that they were the reasons for its selection for a town site. However, such is not the case; it was the building of the Morris Canal and the iron in the adjacent mountains to the north that led the New Jersey Iron Company to select Boonton as the place to locate its iron works. Boonton dates as a settlement back to 1825, although the first settler of whom we have any knowledge in what is now Boonton was Christian Loweree, who built his little house in 1766 on the side of sunset Hill, where is now the corner of Barnet Street and Woodside Avenue..........The original settlement, called Old Boonton, and located about 500 feet south from the corner of the Washington Street Bridge, the site of which is now 90 feet under the water of the Jersey City Reservoir, was a settlement of over 200 years ago. Old Boonton was first named Boone-Town after Thomas Boone, Governor of the province of New Jersey, 1760, '61, '62 and a friend of David Ogden of Newark, the original owner of the tract.

The above book was original published in 1910.

Saturday, March 20, 2010

Spring is Here





Spring is arriving, though we are supposed to have frosts again. But at least it's arrival is being announced by all the new growths on ground and the new buds that are appearing everywhere. Also, the air is fresh and fragrant, vibrating with numerous bird songs.

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Almost Armageddon - March Saturday the Thirteenth

For the last couple of months, it seems like Armageddon has come earlier than 2012 :-). We had been experiencing one of the harshest winter with snow accumulating, sometimes, close to two feet. With snow everywhere - thick slabs on the roofs, knee-high snow on the porch and the patio, the trees and the branches bowed down with the weight of the snow - it seemed like the Ice Age was here. I could imagine how it would feel if an Ice Age really came.

With the winter hardly behind us, pockets of snow still frozen solid on the ground, we are experiencing an ominous stormy day with chilly temperature, howling wind blowing at about 65 miles per hour and heavy downpour. The day has been dark since morning; gusty wind slamming against the house, rattling the roofs and shaking the house. Two huge evergreen trees toppled over in the lawn of our neighbor and destroyed the front part of her house :-(.


Thursday, March 11, 2010

A typical scene on Cornelia Street



Today it is cloudy and a bit chilly here. But, it doesn't matter if it is snowy, rainy, sunny or cloudy, this part of the cornelia street is all the time calm and quite like this. The most traffic one will have on this street is those of people walking their dogs.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

The Thief is Caught Red-Handed




They abound in numbers here in Boonton. In fact, I think more wild animals and birds, than human beings, live in Boonton. Feral and wild cats, deer, bear, opossum, raccoons, squirrels, chipmunks, birds like blue-jays, cardinals, chickadees, titmouse, nuthatch, sparrows, doves, woodpeckers, juncos, finches and what not lives here. Who would say that New York City and other metropolitan areas like Jersey City, Newark, Elizabeth are so close by that Booton is almost considered a suburb of NYC. But it is a laid-back, quite, typical American village with a wild river, waterfalls, woods and forest and wild animals. With rising population, I wonder how long it will remain like this?

We have two bird-feeders and the food, often time, goes away quite fast from those two feeders. Then, suddenly one day we solved the mystery. Squirrels come and either stretching their bodies or standing tall they steal the sunflower seeds.

Peas

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Forest on Fire or Sunrise?




This is the scene behind our house. The sky takes on different hues of colors and shades, every day, from red to dark purplish, orange to yellow and purplish blue and and what not as the sun rises.

Flow of Life

Saturday, February 27, 2010

The Rockaway River



The river and the waterfall in December. The waterfall was almost getting frozen, forming stalactites. The path through the forest and towards the fall was quite treacherous with frozen but slippery snow. The river was still swollen and flowing rapidly, though, with the melting snow feeding into it.