DC

  • 13 Feb

    Operation Get Breakfast Get Home

    With a large amount of snow predicted to hit the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area, I made the decision to take the bus to the Metro for my last night of work for the week.  The idea was that in the morning I would have an easier time getting home on snowy roads if I could let someone else drive.

    Unfortunately, something went wrong with the plan.  It snowed A LOT.  Like, a lot.  Before dawn, the bus system announced it was suspending service until some unknown time.

    No problem, I had a plan.  I started a few blocks from the Capitol with a need to eat breakfast and kill a little time in hopes the buses would start running again and I could easily get home:

    I hope people had fun following this saga as it progressed on Twitter and Instagram.  I certainly endured some chilly fingers trying to post things and walk in the gloveless cold at the same time.  See, it was cold:

    I had a clear target in mind for the breakfast portion of my day.  There was no guarantee it would be open, but I had to try, and with time to kill it really didn’t matter.  After making my way north to Constitution Avenue, I got a little more efficient and utilized the wonderful diagonal street that is Pennsylvania Avenue:

    For most of my journey, the sidewalks were in immeasurably better shape than the roads in D.C.  Massive shout-out to all the people out there with shovels, snowblowers and small pieces of construction equipment that I could not accurately name.

    I turned north again on 7th Street, pausing to take in this nice scene in Penn Quarter and ponder making a snowman.  Unfortunately, the snow was on the dry side, so I skipped constructing Frosty:

    The cool folks at the Washington Post TV unit put together a montage of shots people took around the city and posted on Instagram.  They included the photo above.  Check out the whole thing here.

    As soon as I got going again, I tried to do my part in letting people know which places in the city were willing and able to take their money:

    Starbucks at 7th & Indiana is open. I have a more delicious spot in mind. #dc #operationgetbreakfastgethome
    — Chris Hannas (@cjhannas) February 13, 2014

    Finally, I made it up the immaculate sidewalks on 7th Street to the Chinatown area that houses both the Verizon Center and a number of restaurants, including Dunkin Donuts:

    On my way into the store, I walked by what the workers said was a CNN photog.  I was too cold to wave.  With one of my two main goals complete, I moved onto the “get home” portion of the operation.  Again, I went up 7th Street, turning left on H Street to head west across the city.

    Remember how I said I was posting things while walking?  Yeah, that’s a bad idea, even if there are practically no cars on the road and nobody on the sidewalks:

    Careful walking next to tall buildings. Almost got clobbered by a huge mess of falling wet snow on H St #dc #operationgetbreakfastgethome
    — Chris Hannas (@cjhannas) February 13, 2014

    It was while on H Street that I really appreciated my decision to not try to drive at all.  All but the biggest roads were awful:

    Even more snow-covered were pedestrian plazas that only I was interested in walking this morning.  Oh, and the statues:

    Of course, I couldn’t walk through all that white stuff and not make a stop at the White House:

    A few seconds after I snapped this picture, a tourist came over and asked me to take one of him with the Washington Monument and White House behind him.  Then he asked for directions to a particular Metro station, and it just so happened that I had just been there a little while earlier (see Penn Quarter picture above).

    Finally, it was time to get myself to the Metro.  I went to the nearby Farragut West station to grab the orange line to West Falls Church.  I may have ended up on the oldest car in the entire Metro fleet:

    Ignoring the crap on the windows, I felt very good about my chances of an easy ride home once we popped out above ground:

    I kept checking the bus service’s Twitter page to see if they would change their mind about reassessing at 2 p.m. and just open up since the highway looked so good.  At the very least, I assumed I would be able to get a cab from the Metro station.  There’s a highway that runs pretty much directly from there to my house.

    No bus or cab to be found after I got off the Metro…proceeding to another location. Hoping good karma from directing another guy to Metro
    — Chris Hannas (@cjhannas) February 13, 2014

    Hahaha, no.  I admit, there was a 10-minute period here where I basically just started walking down the snow-covered street not sure of what I was doing.  During this time I directed two more people toward the Metro.  Then I realized I had technology available to me, namely a little service called Uber.  I tried several times to get a driver to accept me, but finally, Souhail said he would be there in 13 minutes to pick me up and end this ordeal.

    I was one of about seven people at the station who were stranded without the buses.  Everyone else was calling cab companies, and the response they all got was, “We’re not sending anyone out there until the roads are better.”  Seven minutes into my 13-minute wait, I got a text saying Souhail had canceled.  My cell battery was at 32 percent.

    I tried again, and again it took several battery-sucking tries to get a driver to commit to me.  Brian and his Honda Civic were coming in 10 minutes.  He called right away, we set a pickup spot and everything was gravy.  Until he called again not even two minutes later saying his car was stuck and he wasn’t coming.  Cell battery 24 percent.

    This time, it took many battery-sucking tries and re-loadings of the app to get a driver.  This one was named Mohammed.  He would be there in 24 minutes.  I barely had time to read that before another text came in saying Mohammed had canceled.  Cell battery 22 percent.

    I told myself I would try one more time, then make a new plan.  Uber hooked me up with Peter and his vehicle large enough that I had no doubt he would arrive.  He was there in less than 10 minutes:

    As we got close to my neighborhood, I told him he would probably have to drop me at the front since historically plowing is a pretty low priority.  Even the large vehicle of salvation got only a few feet into the neighborhood before he stopped and I got out, dropping my cell phone and its 19 percent battery on the ground in the process.  For everything that had happened on the way home, I was immediately validated in knowing that driving myself absolutely was not an option:

    I could have taken a shower and gone to sleep happy at that point, but there was still the matter of the giant pile of snow on the front porch, sidewalk and all around my car.  My roommate happened to be one his way out to start dealing with said snow, so we put in an epic tag-team effort to clear everything out.  We also got a visit from a friendly plow truck:

    After all of that extra effort, we decided we had earned a trip to Taco Bell. We piled into his larger car and made the quick journey down the street in search of magic to refuel us.  Alas, we were met with only utter, heartbreaking sadness.  A sign on the door said they were closed due to the weather.  We settled for a nearby Chipotle and the hope that maybe, somehow, Taco Bell will be open for dinner.

    And with that, 23 hours after I got up yesterday, I bid you good night.  And by that I mean a three-hour power nap before dinner and flipping my schedule back to being a regular person for the weekend.

    Happy snowy weekend.

    By cjhannas DC snow Uncategorized
  • 08 Dec

    Put A Mural On It

    Major League Baseball stadiums are kind of depressing in December.  Seriously, look at this and tell me something different:

    Fortunately there’s something going on nearby that’s pretty cool.  Diagonal from the stadium is a building formerly occupied by the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency and now sitting empty waiting for demolition.  It’s all part of the massive redevelopment in the blocks surrounding Nationals Park.

    What do you do with a lame duck building?  Let artists have at it.

    I brought my camera into work last week to take pictures of the area around the Capitol all decked out for Christmas, then read an article in the Washington Post about the art project (reminding me of something my mom had already told me).  So after work, I hopped the Metro down there and found three of the giant murals:

    After walking by this building a million times in the past few years, it’s great to see something other than an old ugly structure.  If only the art didn’t have to disappear when the building does.

    In case you’re curious, the site is due to become “office buildings, with ground-floor retail” according to the awesome website JDLand.com, which has more details about development in that part of the city than you could ever want to know.

    By cjhannas DC Uncategorized
  • 18 May

    Thousands of Words

    There’s a new feature here at the blog: a bar on the right side that shows the latest images I’ve uploaded to my Flickr account.

    I got a DSLR camera a few weeks ago and turned to Flickr as a place to share the pictures I’m taking.  It’s been fun already going on a few excursions as I learn the ins and outs of the camera.  Today I figured out the self-timer feature by having the camera take its own selfie.  Fortunately for the anti-selfie crowd, the photo only showed how much I need to clean that mirror, so I’m not posting it.

    On Friday, I went into DC on my day off to snap some higher quality shots of what those who follow me on any social media have seen from my frequent post-work walks.  I ended up with some cool ones, including involving this duck, who I followed along the Tidal Basin trying to get different monuments in the background:

    Even though I’ve been to the Tidal Basin a million times, I stumbled up on this angle I hadn’t notice before with the Capitol, and the statue inside the Jefferson Memorial:

    Check out the rest of the DC collection here.

    The day before, I walked around Frying Pan Park, a 1920s-1950s era farm near my parents’ house.  As soon as I got there they were letting out some baby sheep, who almost ran me over, but provided endless entertainment as they raced each other around their pen:

    One of the older sheep, in a different pen, had a different idea about how to spend his morning:

    This park is actually one of my favorite places to run.  Besides the animals, it has a lot of peaceful scenery that is a nice refuge from the hustle and bustle going on just outside the gates:

    The rest of this photo set is here.  There will definitely be many more to come.

    By cjhannas DC Uncategorized
  • 19 Jul

    Carou-sel(l) Yourself

    I’ve had a number of job interviews during my lifetime.

    Some of them are pretty straightforward, needing only to establish simple, straightforward information like, “Can you mow our lawn?” or “You’ve sold shoes before?”

    Others were more typical, involving dressing up, doing my best to say all the right things and passing a current events quiz (non-journalism people definitely miss out on that fun…seriously).

    But there’s one that definitely sticks out as memorable.  It happened on a bench.  Next to a carousel.  On the National Mall:

    This was an interesting conversation for several reasons.  Obviously being next to a carousel was different, but imagine it actually running and a horde of little kids gathered around.  On the other end of the line, my then-future, now-former boss was driving after picking up her son from daycare.  He chimed in at times.  I felt like he and I had a good rapport.

    For the record, I don’t remember knowing exactly when this call was coming, and happened to be checking out some museums when it did.

    In the end it went well, establishing either that it’s easy to sell yourself when you’re sitting next to a colorful, spinning disk of pure joy or that Jacksonville, Fla., is a really kooky place.

  • 20 May

    Gothamed Government

    Whatever you think about budget problems or political clashes, our government has one major problem nobody is talking about.

    Members of the president’s Cabinet who head the departments of State, Treasury, Defense, Interior, Agriculture, Commerce, Labor, Health and Human Services, Housing and Urban Development, Energy, Education, Veterans Affairs, and Homeland Security all get the title of “secretary.”

    There’s a certain status that comes with such a title, a force behind saying “I’m the secretary of Education.”

    But what about the Justice Department?  The guy with that Cabinet-level position is Attorney General Eric Holder.  Boring.  Ambiguous.  Without gravitas.

    How much cooler would he be as Secretary of Justice Eric Holder?  I can’t think of a more forceful line to have on your resume than “Secretary of Justice.”  You pretty much have to drop your voice a few octaves when saying that.

    Imagine the boost to morale at the Justice Department.  Right now, their boss is the attorney general.  Under my proposal, they go to work every day under the watch of the secretary of justice.  I discussed this idea with a friend, who said that would be like working for Batman.

    Big case involving the U.S. government comes up at the Supreme Court?  Turn on the Justice Signal.

    Come on, America.  Let’s make this happen!

    By cjhannas DC Uncategorized
  • 29 Dec

    Elegy for a Deli

    This morning on my way home from work I took what can definitely be described as the “scenic route.”

    Instead of going to the Metro station a block and a half away, I went to a station much farther down the line, walking down the National Mall past museums, monuments and the White House on the way.


    The Mall leading up to the Washington Monument

    I used to take walks similar to this all the time.  A few years ago both during a period in which I was unemployed and then later when my combination of a part-time job and a freelance gig left me with Fridays off, I made a point to go into DC a few times a month.

    I didn’t have any grand objectives, just to see and experience things on my day off that might in some way enrich my life.  Having grown up in this area and spent a lot of time at the various museums, I’ve seen pretty much all of the permanent collections at the major spots.  So before I left each time, I would browse the various museum websites and find one or two new exhibits that had just opened that seemed somewhat interesting.

    Maybe half the time these trips also included lunch with my friend who worked at the Corcoran Gallery of Art, near the White House.  I sent her this picture this morning, and told her that I considered stopping into her favorite lunch spot nearby to see if they served breakfast as well:


    The Corcoran Gallery 

    It was called Heidi’s Brooklyn Deli, and the food and the atmosphere were everything you could ever want from that type of place.  My friend could not say enough good things about how nice they were and how she made a point to observe “Heidi’s Fridays.”  That’s how I ended up going there so much.

    She told me a story once about how she stepped up to order her favorite sandwich — let’s call it the Lewis, since I don’t remember the name — and the guy behind the counter said, “I’m Lewis!” 

    [I’m now told it was a Cajun turkey with avocado sandwich.  “The best!!!!”]

    She was so excited to have met the guy who created it, the kind of experience you do not get at Subway.  That’s why it was so sad to get her reply message this morning: “Heidi’s has been closed almost a year!”

    So long, Heidi.

    By cjhannas DC food Uncategorized
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