So, today is the day. It has crept upon me like a nicer version of impending doom. No more comfortable,  no more earning money, no more home, no more family.

Yes I am being melodramatic, it afterall, is only a seven week trip. But it is also the after that makes my heart a little sad (we are moving to Adelaide).

Tonight we are leaving for Tokyo via Syd-anee, and will arrive at 6.00 am tomorrow morning. We will spend the next 6 days exploring the city and taking photos. I am especially looking forward to sashimi and sake, and plan on taking advantage of as much of this as I can.

From Tokyo, we will be leaving Christmas day for New York. Why is it called the Big Apple? Anyway, I do have a feeling that NY and I’ll get along. I really like apples. Especially apple sauce. I would happily bury myself in it and eat my way out.

We will be here for just over a week, and then will spend until 1 February exploring Uh-Merica, before flying from LA to Fiji.

And yes, we will be back in Brisbane on Sunday 6 February, sometime around 10.00 am.

2 Responses to “Well, I’M Leaving! (or rather, WE’RE)”

  1. Dana

    For a while the origin was unknown and only utterly ridiculous myths were told. Now, thanks to wikipedia and amateur ethnologist Barry polik it is thought that it originated in the 1920’s to describe a large city.

    Still unclear us why an apple?

    Reply
  2. Kevin Barnes

    Why is NYC called the Big Apple?

    Answer
    The “Big Apple” is a nickname or alternate toponym for New York City. Its popularity since the 1970s is due to a promotional campaign by the New York Convention and Visitor’s Bureau. Its earlier origins are less clear.
    The most plausible explanation cited as of 2004 by the New-York Historical Society and others is that it was first popularized by John J. Fitz Gerald, who first used it in his horse racing column in the New York Morning Telegraph in 1921, then further explaining its origins in his February 18, 1924 column. Fitz Gerald credited African-American stable-hands working at horseracing tracks in New Orleans:
    “The Big Apple. The dream of every lad that ever threw a leg over a thoroughbred and the goal of all horsemen. There’s only one Big Apple. That’s New York.
    Two dusky stable hands were leading a pair of thoroughbred around the “cooling rings” of adjoining stables at the Fair Grounds in New Orleans and engaging in desultory conversation.
    “Where y’all goin’ from here?” queried one.
    “From here we’re headin’ for The Big Apple”, proudly replied the other.
    “Well, you’d better fatten up them skinners or all you’ll get from the apple will be the core”, was the quick rejoinder.”
    In the 1920s the New York race tracks were the cream of the crop, so going to the New York races was a big treat, the prize, allegorically a Big Apple.
    In 1997, as part of an official designation of “Big Apple Corner” in Manhattan, former Mayor Rudy Giuliani summarizes the rest of the story:
    A decade later many jazz musicians began calling the City “The Big Apple” to refer to New York City (especially Harlem) as the jazz capital of the world. Soon the nickname became synonymous with New York City and its cultural diversity. In the early 1970s the name played an important role in reviving New York’s tourist economy through a campaign led by the New York Convention and Visitors Bureau. Today the nickname “The Big Apple,” which replaced “Fun City,” is the international description of the city and is synonymous with the cultural and tourist attractions of New York City.
    Therefore, it is only fitting that the southwest corner of West 54th Street and Broadway, the corner on which John J. Fitz Gerald resided from 1934 to 1963, be designated “Big Apple Corner.”
    According to PBS’s Broadway: The American Musical miniseries, Walter Winchell used the term “Big Apple” to refer to the New York cultural scene, especially Harlem and Broadway, helping to spread the use of this nickname.
    A documented earlier use comes from the 1909 book The Wayfarer in New York by Edward S. Martin. He wrote (regarding New York) that the rest of the United States “inclines to think the big apple gets a disproportionate share of the national sap.”
    Etymologists have been unable to trace any influence that this use had on the nickname’s popularity.

    Hope this information helps!
    Read more: http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Where_did_the_name_Big_Apple_come_from#ixzz19YYlWe3P

    Reply

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